German Archive Releasing Photos of Dachau Camp Survivors

BERLIN (AP) —
An elderly man walks over the memorial site for the former Nazi concentration camp in Dachau, southern Germany, Sunday, during an event to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the camp in 2015. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader, File)

A repository of Holocaust-era documents says it has uncovered a trove of photographs of survivors of the Nazis’ Dachau concentration camp and will make them available online in a searchable archive this spring.

The International Tracing Service said Monday the 2,000 photos of survivors were taken in the first year after the war to help Nazi victims who needed proof of their imprisonment to receive help from relief organizations.

The photo provided by the Digital Archive of the International Tracing Service shows Stanislaw Galka, one of the survivors of the Dachau concentration camp whose faces can be found in the photo index of the former concentration camp Dachau. (ITS Digital Archive, Bad Arolsen via AP)

The ITS was established by the Western Allies in the final days of World War II and initially run by the Red Cross to help uncover the fates of Holocaust victims and others.

The photos help put faces to the names of Dachau inmates, but ITS said they went unnoticed for decades because they weren’t relevant to efforts to trace individuals.

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