Names still in LDS database, Jews say
Researcher locates Holocaust victims despite '95 pact
"We've been dealing with it for 11 years, since 1995, and we continue to deal with it," said Ernest Michel, a Holocaust survivor and founding member of the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors.
A cross-referencing of more than 1,500 Dutch Jews whose names should have been deleted from the church's International Genealogical Index remain in the database, Michel said.
Over the past three months, the entries were matched by Salt Lake City researcher Helen Radkey against a 1995 list of deleted names provided by church leaders to Michel's organization, which has contracted with Radkey for research services since 1999.
Michel, whose parents were posthumously baptized, said Wednesday he is in talks with church leaders and is working on a July meeting date to discuss the latest findings.
LDS Church spokesman Mike Otterson said Friday that no meeting had been scheduled but that Michel is encouraged to bring his concerns before a working group of church staff and Jews set up in April 2005 to continue to work out database issues.
Posthumous baptism is a sacred rite practiced in LDS Church temples for the purpose of offering membership in the church to the deceased. Church members are encouraged to conduct family genealogy research and forward their ancestors' names for baptism.
LDS Church President Gordon B. Hinckley has said the baptismal rite is only an offer of membership that can be rejected in the afterlife by individuals.
"So, there's no injury done to anybody," President Hinckley told the AP in an interview last November.
But Jews are offended by the practice and in 1995 signed an agreement with LDS leaders that should have prevented the names of Holocaust victims from being added to the genealogical index. The agreement would also have limited entries of other Jewish names to those persons who are direct ancestors of current church members.
Also that year, church family history officials gave Michel a compact disc which they said contained 380,000 Holocaust victims' names removed from church records.
An analysis of the CD by New Jersey-based Jewish genealogy expert Gary Mokotoff, however, showed the CD contained only 247,479 names, of which 31,688 are duplicates. Since then Radkey has documented thousands of database entries that indicate the practice of adding names hasn't stopped.



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