I just feel like I aint never did nothing foul in the game. My ghetto report card has always been straight A's across the board. So I said let me go ahead and name this "My Ghetto Report Card," and I'm touching down on all 4 angles of the game you smell me? I'm touching it from all basis. The album aint banana's, it's coconuts.
3. The result of the work between 1968 and 1972 of the Jewish Committee for Terezin [Juedisches Komitee fuer Theresienstadt] in Vienna (Austria) was made available in the form of a microfilm listing nearly 120,000 prisoners of the Terezin "ghetto." This database made use, inter alia, of the records in the Prague central card index (noted in 1, above), and microfilms of records held by the International Search Service [Internationaler Suchdienst] in Arolsen (Germany). Copies of this listing were presented to the Pamatnik Terezin [Memorial "Terezin"] in Prague, the International Search Service in Arolsen, Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, and other institutions. The names are grouped by countries from which the deportations took place, including Austria, Czechoslovakia, Germany, and the Netherlands (all in the pre-1938 borders), and other "Foreign" according to citizenship of the prisoner. It was expected that the various countries of origin of the victims would carry out further work on the listings, and the first printed database, for Austria, was published as Totenbuch Theresienstadt (Wien: Juedisches Komitee fuer Theresienstadt, 1971) and an enlarged and corrected edition, Totenbuch Oesterreich - Deportierte aus Oesterreich (Wien: [Mary Steinhauser and] Dokumentationsarchiv des oesterreichischen Widerstandes [DOW], 1987). The entries include given name, surname, date of birth, prisoner's number for the transport to Terezin, and date of death in Terezin, rarely recorded when following a further deportation.
4) The original card index of the Terezin "ghetto": In most cases two cards were completed for each person: one for identification purposes, the other for "residential" ones. It is highly probable that this card index includes only persons liberated from the Terezin "ghetto," including those arriving after 20 April 1945 with the death marches. Information recorded is similar to that recorded in 3), with the addition of religion. The "residence" card includes information of the address of the prisoner in Terezin and of the departure from or date of death in Terezin after liberation.
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