An Israeli court suspended on Wednesday the auction of a partial tattoo kit billed as having been used on inmates at the Auschwitz death camp, following an outcry from Holocaust survivors.
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Obtained from a private collector, the eight fingernail-sized steel dies, each lined with pins to form numerals, would have been pressed into prisoners' flesh with ink to brand their serial numbers, according to auctioneer Meir Tzolman.
His website had deemed it "the most shocking of Holocaust items", with a projected sale value of $30,000 to $40,000.
Bidding reached $3,400 by Wednesday when Tel Aviv District Court granted a request by survivors to order the auction halted pending a Nov. 16 hearing on whether it should proceed. Tzolman's website was amended to show the sale had been suspended.
More than 1.1 million people, most of them Jews, were killed at Auschwitz, among a number of camps run by Nazi Germany on occupied Polish soil during World War II. It was the only facility that tattooed inmates.
Israel has no law against private sales of Holocaust relics. A court spokesman's statement did not specify the legal basis for Wednesday's injunction.
The Yad Vashem World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Jerusalem said it should have possession of items like the auctioned dies.
"The trade of these items is morally unacceptable and only encourages the proliferation of counterfeits," said Yad Vashem Chairman Dani Dayan.
Interviewed before the injunction was issued, Tzolman said he was the grandson of Holocaust survivors who had been tattooed. He defended the auction, from which he would take a 25% commission, as a means of ensuring the kit reached "the right hands".
"The seller is determined to sell any way necessary," he said. "We received calls from tens of people who want to bid on this item and donate it. Each one noted a name of a different museum related to the Holocaust."
Tzolman said the dies had been certified as having come from Auschwitz.
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's website says some Auschwitz tattoos were applied by stylus and others using "a special metal stamp, holding interchangeable numbers made up of needles approximately one centimeter long".
The Auschwitz Memorial in Poland said photographs of the dies appeared similar to those in its collection.
"If they would be authentic, then the very fact that such unique historical items are put up for auction – and not given to an institution that commemorates the victims and educates about the tragedy of Auschwitz – deserves the words of protest and condemnation," said memorial press officer Pawel Sawicki.
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