Archival access
An in-depth look at why access to the Holocaust archives is important, both for Holocaust research and beyond, and how you can take part.
An in-depth look at why access to the Holocaust archives is important, both for Holocaust research and beyond, and how you can take part.
Nearly 80 years since the end of the Second World War, it remains difficult to locate and gain access to documentation related to the Holocaust. Ensuring full and open access to Holocaust-related material is not a niche issue – it is essential to fostering open and democratic societies that deal openly and accurately with the past. Taking all necessary steps to facilitate the opening of archives is one of the important commitments Member Countries have made under the Stockholm Declaration.
Open access means researchers and the public can find and use Holocaust-related documentation for commemoration, education, and research purposes. Access to archives means access to the truth. And the truth has an impact far beyond Holocaust research. The Monitoring Access to Holocaust Collections IHRA Project developed recommendations that help to ensure policymakers and stakeholders know the steps that should be taken to provide open access to Holocaust collections.
Access to Holocaust-related materials has been central to the IHRA’s work for more than a decade and is an IHRA priority. Under the 2020 Ministerial Declaration, Member Countries have underlined the importance of identifying, preserving and making available archival material for educational purposes, commemoration and research. The Nazis and their collaborators not only murdered Jews, Roma, political enemies, and others; they did so with the intention of erasing all traces of their existence. Each document pertaining to life before, during, and after the Holocaust is therefore extremely valuable. Soon, survivors will no longer be with us, and access to Holocaust archives will be one of our only tangible links to the stories they leave behind. These stories are of paramount importance in Holocaust remembrance, and archives allowing access to them ensure that the facts of the Holocaust will be protected – and accessible – for generations to come. This increased interest for the identification, preservation, access and use of archives should contribute to humanist and democratic values at the service of global peace.
Common obstacles include:
At the EU level, the GDPR is a set of uniform rules and principles relating to the collection, processing, and storing of personal data. EU Member States have also adopted national data protection legislation, which complements the GDPR.
Such legislation is an important response to the requirements of an increasingly global and rapidly changing digital landscape. However, this legislation is general in scope and may have unintended consequences in other areas – including historical research.
As the GDPR regulations reached their final stages in the European Union, the IHRA identified that these privacy regulations would unintentionally restrict access to Holocaust documentation. The IHRA intervened and added Recital 158, a directive that protects access by giving exceptional status to Holocaust-related documentation.
However, it soon became clear that Recital 158 was not sufficient. Because recitals are not automatically implemented into national legislation, many documentation collections remain closed and inaccessible. The IHRA adopted Guidelines for Identifying Relevant Documentation for Holocaust Research, Education and Remembrance to empower researchers, archivists, and civil society to identify Holocaust-related documentation using a broad approach.
The IHRA has launched FAQs to help navigate the GDPR and Recital 158 when accessing Holocaust-related material.
Understand which material needs to be accessible by reading the IHRA’s working definition of Holocaust-related material.
Read the full text of the IHRA’s working definition of Holocaust-related materials which can provide archivists and researchers with a helpful starting point.
In order to deal with privacy regulations and GDPR obstacles, the implementation of Recital 158 in national law should be promoted. To help navigate the GDPR and Recital 158 when accessing Holocaust-related material, read the FAQs.
As a means of navigating more obstacles, we recommend legislation amendment to provide an exception for Holocaust records, exercise discretion in favor of access and exercise Parliamentary power to obtain Holocaust-related records.
IHRA experts have identified that risk factors to the archival holdings include: environmental conditions, political decisions and uncertainty, socio-economic aspects, and inherently unsustainable media. IHRA delegations are to support archives to develop procedures and measurements in case of emergency, as well as prioritize funding for digitalization. IHRA Member Country governments are to provide sufficient funding and support for better access and preservation of archival materials.
To state archives and other archival entities, IHRA recommends to digitize collections and standartize metadata. To use existing tools, join professional networks such as EHRI, Arolsen Archives and others. Refer to IHRA Guidelines when identifying documentation and translate general information on access to materials in addition to finding aids.
Organize an event to highlight the importance of access to Holocaust-related archives.
Holocaust-related documents are spread over archives, depositories, and continents. They are open-ended both geographically and in their time frame. When dealing with the archival record of the Holocaust, there is no institution that holds all records or that has the expertise on all the sources. Therefore, networks to support all efforts to adequately preserve, describe and open up the records on the Holocaust are of crucial importance.
It’s like building a huge puzzle when each piece is held by a different person or entity. Only by networking and working together can the puzzle become whole and the picture clear. Networks help connect the actors who hold pieces of this puzzle; they create communities. And these communities can then work together to share information and good practices. The more the sources can be made accessible, the stronger the communities can become, and vice versa.
The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI) provides tools to build your archival network.
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