The highlight of a visit to the Sydney Jewish Museum is the opportunity to meet and engage with Holocaust survivors. Occasionally, a survivor might roll up their sleeve and show visitors their permanent mark: the tattoo from Auschwitz.
Tatooing in Auschwitz began when the rapidly increasing death rate caused problems in identifying prisoners. Various methods were tried, but ultimately a system of two piercing needles of differing lengths dipped into ink with an attached wooden grip was considered. Most survivors who were branded by the Nazis like cattle do not see it as a badge of shame; rather, they feel that it demonstrates the inhumanity of the Nazi perpetrators.
Only in Auschwitz were ‘new arrivals’ selected for work tattooed - as a rule, onto their left forearm. No document has yet been retrieved that sheds light on the introduction of this physical emblem, displaying in dark blue or black colours the camp serial number of the inmate. The question as to why tattoos were never imposed on prisoners of other concentration camps is unanswered.
The tattoo had three distinct functions: to mark and humiliate prisoners, to prevent their escape and to expedite the identification of corpses already stripped of their uniforms, particularly following mass killings or deaths.
Survivors never forgot the intense pain caused by the tattooing procedure.
Lotte Lotte Weiss, 2065 (detail) (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Number 2065
Lotte Weiss
Lotte Lotte Weiss, 2065 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Lotte arrived in Auschwitz March 28, 1942 on one of the first transports from Slovakia. After 34 months of incarceration, she was transferred to Gross-Rosen, then Flossenburg concentration camps, and finally liberated in Theresienstadt on May 8, 1945.
She and her sisters were shaved, registered, tattooed...
"We were first registered and each girl got a number. My oldest sister, Lily, she got 2063. Erika, my second sister, 2064, and I was the third one, 2065."
"The man who tattooed me, I knew from Bratislava. When he recognised me, he said, ‘Have you seen my cousin?’ I said, I don't know your cousin. He wasn't allowed to speak because the SS man was behind him with his submachine gun and so he only whispered...
...but in that he made my number twice as large as the others, because he still wanted to talk to me." Lotte Weiss
Of the six siblings in the Frank family, Lotte was the only one to survive.
Susan Susan Rosza, A/B20770 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Number A/B20770
Susan Rosza
Susan Susan Rosza, A/B20770 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Susan was registered in Auschwitz on August 10, 1944 after arriving on a transport from Hungary.
Occasionally the tattooist made a mistake!
"Tattooing happened twice because they changed the number and it involved queuing up for half a day each time." Susan (Zsuzsanna) Rozsa (nee Benko)
Susan now creates art as a means of dealing with her experiences.
Mala Sonnabend Mala Sonnabend, 74260 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Number 74260
Mala Sonnabend (nee Israel Rekant)
Mala Sonnabend Mala Sonnabend, 74260 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
"We stood outside naked. Then they gave us some clothes to put on and sent us to a place where there was a long table, with girls sitting behind the table and they were tattooing numbers on your arm."
"My number is 74260, with a little triangle underneath it. The triangle meant Jewish."
Eddie Eddie Jaku, 72338 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Number 72338
Eddie Jaku OAM
Eddie Eddie Jaku, 72338 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
"In Auschwitz, you had to remember your number, if you didn’t remember and they would call your number you would get two lashes. My block supervisor didn’t know my name, he knew my number and that’s how he called me."
Olga Wachtel Olga Wachtel, 72675 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Number 72675
Olga Wachtel (nee Ehrmann)
Olga Wachtel Olga Wachtel, 72675 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
"The tattooist said, ‘Give me your left arm’. They had sharpened pieces of wood which they dipped into liquid and pierced my skin with lots of tiny holes to make my number 72675...
... My mother was tattooed after me with the next number 72676. My husband came to Auschwitz six months later and did not get a tattoo."
Ruth Widder Ruth Widder, A4144 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Number A4144
Ruth Widder (nee Perlhefter)
Ruth Widder Ruth Widder, A4144 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
"No one knew what was going on...
and so when asked to hold out our arm for the tattoo, it was just another order we had to obey. There were quite a few 'artists' all tattooing the large amounts of people at the same time. Not all of the tattoos looked the same."
"My tattoo is quite neat, but I remember one tattooist who couldn't see very well - all the people who were done by her had messy numbers."
Margaret Margaret Odze, 4344 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Number 4344
Margaret Odze (nee Brennerova)
Margaret Margaret Odze, 4344 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Margaret was one of the first 5,000 deportees from Slovakia, arriving in Auschwitz on May 1, 1942.
The visibility of the tattoo elicited different reactions
Some people were bewildered, not knowing what it meant. Others realized that the tattoo bearer had managed to survive the horror of Auschwitz.
"When he was young, my grandson asked, ‘What’s that?’ I joked with him, it’s a telephone number. Later on, he came home from school and said, ‘Nana I know what that number is!'" Margaret Odze
Naftal Naftal Sieff, 132852 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Number 132852
Naftal Sieff
Naftal Naftal Sieff, 132852 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Naftal arrived in Birkenau in June-July 1943. He underwent the "usual procedure"...
Selection...
"Take off all clothes, delousing, painted with carbolic acid, shaved you everywhere. And then we got a striped uniform and a number.
I was 19 at the time... I remember the tattoo artist was uncaring in the use of his needle and I bled."
Naftal Naftal Sieff, 132852 (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
"I had no particular thoughts about the tattooing event as everything which was happening to me at that time was nothing but complete confusion." Naftal Sieff
Lotte Lotte Weiss, 2065 (detail) (2011) by Andrew HarrisSydney Jewish Museum
Following liberation some survivors hastened to have the physical reminder of their humiliation removed; only a scar remained.
Others used their numbers as pin numbers or as lucky betting numbers, especially at horse races or Lotto games.
In recent years, as part of an upsurge of tattooing amongst young people, grandchildren of survivors have elected to have the Auschwitz tattoo of their grandmother or grandfather as their chosen tattoo.
The debate is ongoing: is it morally and ethically acceptable to transform the Nazi Auschwitz tattoo into a Jewish symbol of Holocaust memory and remembrance?
Explore their stories
Discover more from the Sydney Jewish Museum collection on Google Arts and Culture or delve into our complete online catalogue here
In 2011, Sydney Jewish Museum curators commissioned Andrew Harris to document some of Sydney’s Holocaust survivors with tattoos. Photographs were taken of Eddie Jaku, Margaret Odze, Naftal Sieff, Susan Rosza, Mala Sonnabend, Olga Wachtel, Lotte Weiss and Ruth Widder – depicted going about their lives, living with their painful memories, and bearing the Auschwitz tattoo on their forearms.
Photography: Andrew Harris
Historian: Prof Konrad Kwiet
Curators: Roslyn Sugarman and Erin Ramsay
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