Panel Agrees To Open Nazi Files
Shroud Of Secrecy To Be Lifted On Stories Of 17M Holocaust Victims
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Searching For Answers
Ralph Hemecker and thousands of other relatives of Holocaust victims are finding the truth about their loved ones through a vast archive of documents in Bad Arolsen, Germany.
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An Archive Of Evil
A large storehouse of Nazi documents was opened to historians and scholars for the first time since World War II. As Mark Phillips reports, the archive has detailed records of the Nazi death machine.
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View of a "Working Book For Foreigners" seen at the International Tracing Service in Bad Arolsen, Germany. (AP)
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But first the draft must be signed by government ministers in Berlin — a date has not been set — and be sent back to the countries for ratification, said Paul Mertz, the Luxembourg Foreign Ministry official who is the chairman of the commission that oversees the archive.
The process is likely to delay the opening of the 50 million files to researchers until at least the end of the year, Mertz said.
The move to unlock the storehouse in the German town of Bad Arolsen came amid pressure from the dying generation of Holocaust survivors and victims' families who feared their histories would be lost forever unless the rules were changed.
The breakthrough came last month when Germany, which had said that access to the files by Holocaust researchers would violate the country's privacy laws, agreed to soften its secrecy rules.
Under the changed language agreed upon Tuesday, each country will be able to receive copies of the files and apply its own privacy rules.
The countries on the International Commission are Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Israel, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, Britain and the United States. Some of them will require parliamentary approval of the agreement, but the U.S. State Department can endorse the amendments without involving Congress.
The documents in the archive include the registration of concentration camp inmates by the numbers burned on their arms, stacks of crumpled identity booklets and meticulously kept records of executions.
"Bad Arolsen is the most complete file. On many subjects it is unique," Mertz said.
The files also will be available to Holocaust survivors and families of victims whose fate may not be clear.
Having visited the archive, CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips describes it as the mother lode of Holocaust material. At a time of growing skepticism and denial of the Holocaust, that's no small thing.
Says Paul Shapiro, of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, "When you have a situation as we do today where a chief of state, the president of Iran, denies the Holocaust ... When you have records of 17-and-a-half million people, and their fate's recorded, including millions of Jews who were destroyed during the Holocaust, that's a very strong response to Holocaust denial."
The files, indexed and cross-referenced, contain the names of Jews, Roma, homosexuals, the mentally ill, "patients" subjected to cruel medical experiments, and millions of people forced into slave labor.Mark Phillips interviews the grandson of a Holocaust victim about what he learned from the archive.
The card indexes alone occupy three massive rooms at Bad Arolsen, a spa resort in central Germany. The documents themselves, some yellow and crumbling, fill row after row of metal filing cabinets in six buildings.
The International Tracing Service, the arm of the International Committee of the Red Cross which is the archive's custodian, says it has scanned 56 percent of the files since 1999, but it cannot move faster without more funding.
"We have only a restricted budget, and we get the budget only for humanitarian work," said Maria Raabe, ITS spokeswoman in Bad Arolsen.
The service, which now has 400 employees, was founded after the war to trace missing persons. Later, survivors eligible for compensation applied to the archive for documentary evidence of their mistreatment.
But the service has lagged behind the number of requests for information, which still flow in by the tens of thousands every year. It now has a backlog of more than 400,000 inquiries.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Mark Phillips interviews the grandson of a Holocaust victim about what he learned from the archive.


