Källinformation

JewishGen
Ancestry.com. Förintelsen: Register över överlevande; tryckta i Sharit Ha-Platah, 1946 [webbaserad databas]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.
Originaldata: Volunteers of the Registry of Survivors at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, comp. Shārit ha-plātah (Volume 1, revised). An extensive list of survivors of Nazi tyranny published so that the lost may be found and the dead brought back to life. Munich, Germany: Central Committee of Liberated Jews in Bavaria, 1946. This data is provided in partnership with JewishGen.org.

 Förintelsen: Register över överlevande; tryckta i Sharit Ha-Platah, 1946

Boken "Sharit haPlatah" innehåller namnen på de 61 387 judar som överlevde Förintelsen. Den information som finns om varje person som överlevde är bland annat: namn, födelseort, födelseår och aktuell (1945/46) bostadsort.

Sharit Ha-Platah, translated into English as "Holocaust Survivors" or literally as "Counted Remnant", was published in 1946 by the "Central Committee of Jews in Bavaria", in Munich, Germany. The frontispiece says, "an extensive list of survivors of Nazi tyranny published so that the lost may be found and the dead brought back to life." The book contains the names of 61,387 Jews who survived the Holocaust.

This collection largely reflects the efforts of Chaplain (Rabbi) Abraham Klausner, who visited many of the camps in southern Germany where survivors had gathered in late 1945 and 1946. During these visits, he collected lists of the persons residing there which were originally published by region. Subsequently, these lists with additional names not limited to Germany were combined into a single publication.

About the Database:

The information provided consists of:

  • Family surname

  • Given name

  • Maiden surname in some instances

  • Birthplace (where available, usually a city name)

  • Year of birth

  • Current (1945/46) location, which is usually a country name or name of a displaced persons camp

Also included are ID, page and line number of each record. Utilizing this basic information, it is often possible to establish where these persons subsequently went.