Jewish News

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Poland’s foreign minister announced Sunday that a planned German auction of Holocaust-related items has been called off, calling the sale “offensive” and confirming the cancellation after protests from survivors.

Radoslaw Sikorski shared the update on X, explaining that he and German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul “agreed that such a scandal must be prevented.” Sikorski expressed gratitude to Wadephul for confirming that the auction would not proceed.

The sale had been scheduled for Monday and drew sharp criticism after a Holocaust survivors’ organization demanded that German auction house Felzmann stop the event, which included hundreds of personal artifacts — among them prisoner letters and documents listing victims by name.

By midday Sunday, listings for the auction had disappeared from the Auktionhaus Felzmann website. The auction house did not respond to phone calls, emails, or text messages seeking comment.

According to the German news agency dpa, the collection included more than 600 items for sale in Neuss, near Düsseldorf. The pieces included letters sent home by concentration camp prisoners, Gestapo index cards, and other documents tied to the Nazi regime. The auction was titled “The System of Terror.”

“For victims of Nazi persecution and Holocaust survivors, this auction is a cynical and shameless undertaking that leaves them outraged and speechless,” said Christoph Heubner, executive vice president of The International Auschwitz Committee, in a Saturday statement.

“Their history and the suffering of all those persecuted and murdered by the Nazis is being exploited for commercial gain,” he added. The committee noted that many documents contained full names of identified victims.

Heubner emphasized that these historical records “belong to the families of the victims. They should be displayed in museums or memorial exhibitions and not degraded to mere commodities.”

“We urge those responsible at the Felzmann auction house to show some basic decency and cancel the auction,” he said.