Lodz Ghetto Work ID Cards To Be Indexed


ALEC ASTOR Z”L
born AJZYK ABERSZTAJN 

Richard J. Astor, has generously funded this significant project to honor the memory of his father, Alec Astor, who was born in Lodz in 1915, lived through the Holocaust and died in London 2006. 

Work in the Lodz Ghetto was the gold currency. Without a labor force, the sealed community could not obtain money for food and other necessities. Everyone, from the youngest child to the elderly, needed to work to survive. These workers obtained Identification Work Cards. 

Those forced into the ghetto were not only from Lodz and surrounding towns; many were brought there from other areas in Poland as well as other occupied Eastern European countries. This database will provide family researchers with detailed information about what their family member did on a daily basis in the ghetto in order to (try to) survive.  It also provides scholars, educators, and students of the Holocaust with the variety of  labor that existed in the ghetto.

We will create a computerized index of the Identification Cards, which are on 23 rolls of microfilms in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). The file will become a searchable database in the Holocaust Database on JewishGen at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Holocaust. This database will also serve as a finding aide for the Museum. With the ID number and worker name, researchers will be able to request a copy of the ID Card.   

There are between 800 to1200 frames on each of the 23 reels of microfilms.  The cards contain some or all of the following information: a worker number, gender, date of birth, age as of 01-Jan-1943,  ghetto address, a signature of the card owner, date of employment, the learned and trained profession, the type and place of work, and sometimes the name and signature of the job manager. Some cards specify if the worker was allowed on the streets during curfew hours.  Warnings about how the cards should be protected and what to do in case of loss are printed on all the cards.  Some cards are stamped with dates of death or transport.  Many cards include photographs, but these photos cannot be included in the project (although they will be on the copies of the ID cards requested from the USHMM).

This project would not be possible without the generosity of Richard J. Astor.  Nolan Altman and his experienced cadre of indexers graciously agreed to undertake the enormous task of indexing the cards.  A council of proofreaders will be created to do the quality control.   

Roni Seibel Liebowitz

Sample Work ID Cards

Sample One -- Front

 

Sample One -- Back

 

Sample Two -- Front

Sample Two -- Back

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