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Jewelry Seized by Nazis From Concentration Camps Returned to Families

September 11, 2024
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Jewelry Seized by Nazis From Concentration Camps Returned to Families
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In a ceremony held in Warsaw this week, personal belongings of 12 Polish inmates from Nazi German concentration camps during World War II were returned to their families.

The items are part of a larger initiative to reconnect families with valuables stolen by the Nazis.

The Arolsen Archives, an international center focused on Nazi persecution, organized the return of confiscated jewelry and mementos.

Among those present was the family of Stanislawa Wasilewska, who was captured by Nazi troops on Aug. 31, 1944, during the Warsaw Uprising.

Stolen jewelry
The director of Germany’s Arolsen Archives, Floriane Azoulay, talks to the relatives of 12 inmates of World War II Nazi Germany’s concentration camps at the start of a ceremony in which the relatives were given…
The director of Germany’s Arolsen Archives, Floriane Azoulay, talks to the relatives of 12 inmates of World War II Nazi Germany’s concentration camps at the start of a ceremony in which the relatives were given back personal items and jewelry that the Nazis had seized from them during the war and which were recently stored at the archives, in Warsaw, Poland, Tuesday Sept. 10, 2024.

Czarek Sokolowski/AP

She was sent to Ravensbrück, a women’s concentration camp in Germany, before being transferred to the forced labor camp at Neuengamme.

Wasilewska had her valuables confiscated upon arrival at the camp.

On Tuesday, her grandson and great-granddaughter received her jewelry—two amber crucifixes, part of a golden bracelet, and a gold wristwatch engraved with the initials “KW” and the date March 7, 1938, likely commemorating her wedding to Konstanty Wasilewski.

“This is an important moment in our lives, because this is a story that we did not fully know about and it came to light,” said Malgorzata Koryś, Wasilewska’s great-granddaughter, during the ceremony.

Stolen jewelry
Amber crucifixes and golden jewelry that were confiscated by Nazi Germans from Stanislawa Wasilewska, pictured in the family photos, who was captured by Nazi troops during Warsaw Uprising in 1944 and taken to a forced…
Amber crucifixes and golden jewelry that were confiscated by Nazi Germans from Stanislawa Wasilewska, pictured in the family photos, who was captured by Nazi troops during Warsaw Uprising in 1944 and taken to a forced labor camp. The items that had been stored at Germany’s Arolsen Archives, were returned to Wasilewska’s relatives in a ceremony in Warsaw, Poland, on Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024, in which 10 other families also had belongings of their relatives returned.

Czarek Sokolowski/AP

The archives hold records on 17.5 million victims and have amassed around 2,000 confiscated items from concentration camp inmates across over 30 countries.

The items include wedding rings and watches, and were stored in envelopes marked with the prisoners’ names, allowing for their eventual return.

For Adam Wierzbicki, the ceremony brought a bittersweet connection to his family’s history.

He received two rings and a gold chain once belonging to Zofia Strusińska and a tooth filling from Józefa Skórka, two sisters of his great-grandfather who were interned at Ravensbrück and Neuengamme.

The items were a reminder of his family’s struggles.

“History will catch up with you,” Wierzbicki said, adding that it felt as if his aunts were “looking at me from the past.”

The ceremony is part of the archives’ broader campaign, “Warsaw Uprising: 100 Untold Stories,” marking the 80th anniversary of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising against Nazi occupation.

This initiative aims to reach the families of 100 victims, reconnecting them with mementos left behind by loved ones who fought or were captured during the uprising.

Many of the families had little knowledge of the items’ existence before being contacted by volunteers.

Floriane Azoulay, director of the Arolsen Archives, emphasized the importance of these items.

“Every object that we return is personal,” she said.

“It’s the last personal thing a person had on them before they became a prisoner, before they became a number. So it is a very important object for a family.”

This article includes reporting from The Associated Press

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