To mark Holocaust Memorial Day, the UK announces its records
related to the Holocaust will be made available for the public
domain for research and study.
The UK government is to make all its records related to the
Holocaust available to the public for the first time, for
research and study purposes, it announced today (January 27) to
mark Holocaust Memorial Day.
This includes the collection of 787 books in the St. Lambrecht
collection, once looted by the Nazis, which will be accessible to
the public for the first time.
The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) plans
to move them to London’s Wiener Holocaust Library, subject to
legal agreement.
In addition, the governments of Guernsey and Jersey have
committed to making their Holocaust records publicly available as
well.
The UK Government is now urging others, throughout the world, in
possession of collections of Holocaust-related material/records
to adopt a similar approach.
In an age where some deny or distort the Holocaust it is
important to make documents of the era as freely available as
possible.
, Prime Minister’s Special
Envoy for post-Holocaust issues said:
I am grateful for the full and friendly cooperation of the
governments of Guernsey and Jersey. I also thank the diligence of
the FCDO staff for their recent work on the St. Lambrecht
historic book collection. There can be no better place to keep
the collection than the Wiener Holocaust Library.
Lord Ahmad, FCDO Minister for Human Rights said:
The FCDO is working to release any Holocaust-related material it
may hold and to make that public. We are committed to the
continued review of our holdings, including those held by our
Embassies overseas, and working with other government departments
where relevant.
Chief Minister of Jersey John Le Fondré said:
A large amount of work has been undertaken by Jersey Archive to
collate, digitalise and display the records that it holds related
to the Holocaust and more broadly the German occupation of
Jersey. Jersey is committed to transparency and to ensuring that
our records from this dark period are available and accessible to
all.
Chief Minister of Guernsey, Peter Ferbraché said:
Guernsey is committed to ensuring that the records it holds
related to the Holocaust, and more generally the Nazi Occupation
of the island, are accessible. A substantial amount of work has
already been undertaken over the years to collate and index the
records held by the States of Guernsey on this matter, and the
Island Archives, where the majority of these records are held,
continually works on improving ease of access.
Director of the Wiener Holocaust Library, Dr. Toby Simpson said:
The Wiener Library is proud of its long history of throwing light
on the darkest chapters of history, and on the Holocaust in
particular. It is crucial to ensure that the past is not ignored
or locked away, but confronted and used as a tool for building a
better future. We applaud the British government’s recent efforts
to improve access to vital records, and look forward to future
cooperation.
Notes to Editors:
- The St. Lambrecht historic book collection comprises 787
published works dating from the late 16th century up to 1943. The
following languages are represented; Czech, Latin, Hebrew,
Italian, German, Hungarian, Russian, Romanian, English, Greek,
French, Polish. The subject matter includes history, law,
theology and scientific or pseudo-scientific topics, such as
anatomy, alchemy and pyrotechnics. The collection had been hidden
in St Lambrecht Abbey in Austria, where it was discovered by the
Allied Commission for Austria (British Element) in September 1945
and sent back to the UK.
- To mark Holocaust Memorial Day [27 January], the FCDO will be
lighting up its buildings in purple.
- The Wiener Holocaust Library is one of the world’s leading
and most extensive archives on the Holocaust, the Nazi era and
genocide.
- As a founding member of the International Holocaust
Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), the UK is committed to the tenets of
the 2000 Stockholm Declaration and the 2020 IHRA Ministerial
Declaration.
- The Foreign Secretary virtually attended the October
2021 Malmö International Forum on Holocaust Remembrance and
Combating Antisemitism on behalf of the UK. During the forum,
the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance pledged to
develop recommendations on identifying Holocaust-related
materials, so that victims, survivors, and their descendants
can reclaim their histories and their identities.