An auction of Holocaust-related items and documents in Neuss, western Germany, was canceled following widespread condemnation from international and domestic figures. The Felzmann auction house had planned to sell artifacts including worn Stars of David, Nazi documents, and personal papers of Jewish victims and survivors. The International Auschwitz Committee (IAC) called the sale 'cynical and shameless,' arguing that such items belong in museums or memorials, not private collections. Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski and German officials, including Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer, also criticized the auction, emphasizing the moral duty to preserve victims’ memory respectfully. The auction, titled 'System of Terror Vol II,' included documents from 1933–1945, such as forced sterilization records from Dachau and identification papers of Jews who escaped to South America. Following the backlash, the auction house confirmed the event’s cancellation and removed the listing from its website. Officials have called for measures to prevent similar sales in the future.