13 million Holocaust documents are published online

The International Tracking Service (ITS), created by Allies at the end of World War II, has commissioned more than 13 million documents from Nazi Internet concentration camps. These documents include prison records and death certificates to help Holocaust researchers search for [...]
These documents include prison records and death certificates to help Holocaust researchers search for the fate of the victims.
The service, which was later managed by the Red Cross, changes its name to “Archivy Arolsen ʹ International Centre for Nazi Persecution”, headquartered at Bad Arolsen, Germany, and acts thanks to Yad Vaesey's contribution to Israel.











