Reward offered for Auschwitz sign 

Published: 7:54AM Sunday December 20, 2009

Source: Reuters

Reward offered for Auschwitz sign (Source: Reuters)

Source: ReutersThe gate at the entrance to the Auschwitz death camp

Poland is offering a reward for the return of the German-language sign Arbeit macht frei, or Work makes you free, whose theft from the former Nazi Auschwitz death camp has shocked many Poles.

The Prime Minister's office also has ordered an investigation, according to the PAP news agency.

It says the reward of 115,000 zlotys (about $55,000) is being offered by the Auschwitz museum, police and anonymous donors for information leading to the return of the metal sign which hung over the entrance to the death camp.

"I am shocked and outraged by the theft of a recognisable symbol of Nazi cynicism and cruelty," President Lech Kaczynski said in a statement.

"Everything must be done to find and punish the offenders... and I appeal to all my compatriots who can help the law-enforcement authorities."

The sign, intended to delude Jews and others who were brought to the camp to be gassed to death into thinking they were entering a work camp, was stolen on Fr iday, sparking an international outcry and soul-searching within Poland.

About 1.5 million people, most of them Jews, died at the camp during World War II as part of Nazi Germany's extermination programme, and Auschwitz has come to symbolise the Holocaust in which six million Jews perished.

Following talks with Israeli President Shimon Peres at the Copenhagen climate conference, Prime Minister Donald Tusk told TVN24: "Clearing up this matter is a top priority. I am sure those responsible will soon be caught."

His aide Tomasz Arabski has told PAP that Tusk has ordered the interior minister to mount a major investigation into the theft.

Jaroslaw Gowin, a leading lawmaker of the ruling Civic Platform party, says he believes the theft was meant to disgrace Poland internationally.

"I think that behind this theft was cold calculation designed to entrench the view that anti-Semitism is widespread in Poland."

Szewach Weiss, Israel's former ambassador to Poland, has called the theft "a disgraceful act" but adds "I do not blame the Polish nation for it."

Provincial police spokesman Dariusz Nowak says four museum guards have been questioned but there are no leads in the theft of the sign from the former camp, now a museum, in the southern Polish town of Oswiecim, near Krakow.

"There has been no breakthrough in the case, but the investigation is being vigourously pursued," Nowak says.

He says the gate from which the sign was removed is not directly monitored by closed-circuit cameras.

Museum director Jasroslaw Mensflet has said the site's security system is undergoing modernisation, but the project has not been completed.

"On the site of the former Auschwitz camp a global fibre-optic system is being developed, and part of it is already in place. The system will combine the Internet, visual monitoring, motion sensors and a modern fire-alarm system."


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Provocative, unflinching, Thursday 9:30pm
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