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das_mervin ([info]das_mervin) wrote in [info]unfunnybusiness,
@ 2009-12-18 14:55:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
The Auschwitz "Arbeit Macht Frei" sign has been stolen.



OSWIECIM, Poland – The Nazis' infamous sign declaring "Arbeit Macht Frei" — German for "Work Sets You Free" — was stolen Friday from the entrance of the former Auschwitz death camp, Polish police said.

The 5-meter-long (16-foot-long), 40-kilogram (90-pound) steel sign at the Holocaust memorial site in southern Poland was unscrewed on one side and torn off on the other, police spokeswoman Katarzyna Padlo said.

The theft from the entrance to the camp — where more than 1 million people, mostly Jews, died during World War II — brought condemnation worldwide.

"The theft of such a symbolic object is an attack on the memory of the Holocaust, and an escalation from those elements that would like to return us to darker days," Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev said in a statement from Jerusalem.

"I call on all enlightened forces in the world who fight against anti-Semitism, racism, xenophobia and the hatred of the other, to join together to combat these trends."

The sign disappeared from the Auschwitz memorial between 3:30 a.m. and 5 a.m., Padlo said.

Police deployed 50 police, including 20 detectives, and a search dog to the Auschwitz grounds, where barracks, watchtowers and ruins of gas chambers stand as testament to the atrocities of Nazi Germany.

Police said they were reviewing footage from a surveillance camera that overlooks the entrance gate and the road beyond, but declined to say whether the crime was recorded.

Auschwitz museum spokesman Jaroslaw Mensfelt said it might have been too dark for the camera to have captured images.

He said the thieves apparently carried the sign 300 meters (yards) to an opening in a concrete wall. That opening had been left intentionally to preserve a poplar tree dating back to the time of the war.

Four metal bars that had blocked the opening were cut. Footprints in the snow led from the wall opening to the nearby road, where police presume the sign was loaded on to a vehicle.

Poland's chief rabbi, Michael Schudrich, said he had trouble imagining who would steal the sign.

"If they are pranksters, they'd have to be sick pranksters, or someone with a political agenda. But whoever has done it has desecrated world memory," Schudrich said.

He said the theft could have been committed by neo-Nazi extremists, or even people scheming to sell the sign of the black market.

"There's a market for everything," he said, adding that it was "like stealing a Picasso. Even a hot Picasso you could try to move after 10 years — but not this."

An exact replica of the sign, produced when the original received restoration work years ago, was quickly hung in its place.

In Brussels, European Parliament president Jerzy Buzek, a former Polish prime minister, appealed to the thieves to return the sign.

"Give it back out of respect for the suffering of over a million victims, murdered in this Nazi camp, the biggest cemetery of humankind," Buzek said.

Polish President Lech Kaczynski said he was "shaken and outraged" by the theft of a "world-known symbol of Nazi cynicism and cruelty." He appealed to all Poles for help finding it.

Police were offering a 5,000-zloty ($1,700) reward for public tipoffs about the thieves.

In Jerusalem, the International Auschwitz Committee said the theft "deeply unsettles the survivors."

"The sign has to be found," said Noach Flug, an Auschwitz survivor and president of the committee. "The slogan and the camp itself will tell what happened even when we won't be able to tell anymore."

After occupying Poland in 1939, the Nazis established the Auschwitz I camp in the southern Polish city of Oswiecim and initially used it for German political prisoners and non-Jewish Polish prisoners, who began arriving in June 1940.

Nazi guards ordered Polish inmates to make the original sign shortly thereafter in the camp's workshop, museum spokesman Pawel Sawicki said.

Two years later, hundreds of thousands of Jews began arriving by cattle trains to the wooden barracks of nearby Birkenau, also called Auschwitz II, where most were killed in gas chambers.

The slogan "Arbeit Macht Frei" appeared at the entrances of other Nazi camps, including Dachau and Sachsenhausen. The long curving sign at Auschwitz is considered the best known.

Today the Auschwitz site attracts more than 1 million visitors annually.

This week Germany pledged euro60 million ($87 million) — half the estimated amount required — to a new endowment that will fund long-term preservation work.

This was the first major act of vandalism at the site, which previously has suffered graffiti including spray-painted swastikas.

Other Holocaust memorials have suffered neo-Nazi vandalism. Sachsenhausen on the outskirts of Berlin was attacked in 1992, when two barracks were set on fire. That crime remains unsolved.




Just.....what. Sad thing is I'm not sure if that's neo-Nazi vandalism or some idiot who decided that would make an awesome piece of memorabilia. And it's even worse because neither would really surprise me.


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[info]quantumreality
2009-12-19 09:58 pm UTC (link)

WHAT?



Oh MFSM, what would possess someone to steal a thing like that? This isn't even close to stealing a STOP sign or a street sign. This is a recognized historical artifact that encapsulates a very dark period of humanity's history.

I can only hope that whoever took it has the decency to return it unscathed.

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[info]lady_ganesh
2009-12-20 02:51 am UTC (link)
what would possess someone to steal a thing like that?

This is where I get stuck. I attempt to be sad or angry and instead, I'm just too busy being BOGGLED.

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[info]finchbird
2009-12-19 10:52 pm UTC (link)
This... is....

Words can't even describe how angry I am.

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[info]realbooted
2009-12-19 11:02 pm UTC (link)
I've been talking about this with my mother just today, and I wonder if it actually was stolen so the thieves could get it melted and sell the steel, since it's not a rare thing at all. All possibilities are really sad, either way. It's absolutely beyond horrible and disrespectful.

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[info]shadwing
2009-12-20 07:20 pm UTC (link)
I remember reading an article on how lots of the brass/bronze decorations in Central Park were actually replicas of the originals. Many people stole the pieces to be melted down for cash. But those pieces were smallish and not instantly reconizable.

This is a whole other ball of wax, and it's NOT small the fact that it appears they took it down in one piece and carried it out in one piece tells me that want this thing intact. My guess is somebody put the word out that they wanted the sign and hired people to do the dirty work.

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[info]realbooted
2009-12-20 08:27 pm UTC (link)
I know over here people have dismantled part of a monument in the past in order to get it melt, which is why I thought about that possibility as well. I do believe it's a lot more likely for it to be a collector, but I just thought that was also a possibility.

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[info]realbooted
2009-12-20 08:29 pm UTC (link)
But really, thinking about all the reasons it could have been stolen and for what, it still makes me sick. When it comes down to it I really don't understand why someone would do it.

Uuugh I accidentally pressed enter button before finishing writing, sorry for the two replies

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[info]ladysphinx
2009-12-19 11:34 pm UTC (link)
What on earth would you do with such a thing? You can't sell it, it's too recognisable. You can't exactly display it anywhere. It's huge, so the average person would have trouble keeping it in their home. The challenge, perhaps?

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[info]anonyrat
2009-12-20 01:04 am UTC (link)
I dunno, collectors are weird. WW2 memorabilia collectors doubly so. I've been studying book crime lately and seen the lengths people will go to to get things they will never be able to sell or show to anyone...so, it doesn't seem all that ridiculous to me that someone would do this, sadly.

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[info]eleutheria
2009-12-20 04:23 am UTC (link)
This exactly. My first thought was someone selling to the illegal collector's market, where I'm sure it would fetch a very good price. It certainly could be a prank or Neo-Nazis, but I definitely do think you can sell it. (And the buyer wouldn't be the average person, but the very wealthy-- who might very well have somewhere out of sight to put it.)

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]shadwing
2009-12-20 07:22 pm UTC (link)
Or this was stolen to order. Somebody wanted it and hired somebody else to steal it for them, so they already have a place for it.

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[info]brennalarose
2009-12-20 07:49 pm UTC (link)
I'm not sure what's more disturbing. That there's a market for it, or that it might be a prank.

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[info]persona
2009-12-20 08:09 pm UTC (link)
At first, I thought that it might be a prank was more disturbing, but then I thought about it some more, and now I really can't decide which unnerves me more.

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[info]iamnotyourmuse
2009-12-20 05:00 am UTC (link)
Did you read about the guy who snuck into restricted areas of libraries by climbing up into the ceilings, then licking off the book plates (which he then kept in boxes) and filing off stamps on the edges of the pages?

Cause that was my favorite book theft story from my History of the Book class in grad school.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


[info]snarkhunter
2009-12-20 04:35 am UTC (link)
I heard today Poland has closed its borders in an attempt to retrieve the sign, but...

(Reply to this)


[info]fashi0n_mistake
2009-12-20 08:29 am UTC (link)
Some days, I really hate the world.

(Reply to this)


 
   
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