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The Florida Holocaust Museum: History, Heritage and Hope Permanent Exhibition

Personal Items of Camp Prisoners

Letters and Postcards

Several labor and concentration camps permitted certain inmates to correspond with their families. Prisoners used stationery pre-printed with rules and restrictions. These rules limited the length of letters and postcards and required all outgoing mail to be written in German, despite the prisoner's native language. Prisoners could not describe the true conditions of the camp, and frequently wrote that they were in good health. Camp officials reviewed and censored all incoming and outgoing mail. 






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This page references:

  1. Identification Document
  2. personal items
  3. Audio File 129 - Personal Items of Camp Prisoners
  4. Letter from Oranienburg, 1941
  5. Letter from Breslau, November 25, 1938