A Woman At An Anti-Lockdown Protest Held A Sign From A Nazi Concentration Camp

The phrase "Arbeit macht frei" translates to "work will set you free" and was used on the gates of Auschwitz.

The Auschwitz Memorial in Poland has condemned a viral photo of a sign from an anti-lockdown protest in Chicago on Friday that bore a phrase from the Nazi concentration camp.

The sign reading "Arbeit macht frei, JB" was held by an unidentified woman at a "Re-Open Illinois" protest in the city's Loop district and addressed to Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who is Jewish. "Arbeit macht frei" translates from German to "work will set you free" and was used on the gates of Auschwitz, where at least 1.1 million people died during the Holocaust.

The photo was taken at around 12:30 p.m. by nurse Dennis Kosuth, who attended the event as a counterprotester.

Kosuth said several anti-lockdown demonstrators were trying to provoke him and other nurses by claiming they were actors or that the death toll from the coronavirus was not accurate. "My approach was to ignore people," he told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview on Saturday, "but then I saw her sign and said, 'That's pretty messed up. Why would you bring that here?'"

According to Kosuth, the woman defended her sign and said she had Jewish friends.

Kosuth, who had a friend and colleague die from COVID-19 this week, said he was disgusted by the sign.

"How dare you compare the Holocaust to a stay-at-home order?" he said.

Kosuth shared the image on Twitter on Thursday where it was shared more than 14,000 times.

This was one of the signs at the “Re-open Illinois” event today. She assured those that she was not a Nazi, and stated, “I have Jewish friends.” Thank you for representing yourself and your “movement” for what it is.

Among those who shared it were staff at the Auschwitz Memorial in Poland, who said it "painful to see this symbol instrumentalized and used again to spread hate."

According to the museum, the sign was placed at five concentration camps — Auschwitz, Dachau, Flossenbürg, Gross-Rosen, and Sachsenhausen — as well as in the Theresienstadt Ghetto.

"Arbeit macht frei" was a false, cynical illusion the SS gave to prisoners of #Auschwitz. Those words became one of the icons of human hatred. It's painful to see this symbol instrumentalized & used again to spread hate. It's a symptom of moral & intellectual degeneration. https://t.co/ZRxja8x6eS

Kosuth was unaware of the memorial's response until his interview with BuzzFeed News, but he said he agreed "100% with that statement."

"I'm glad in that sense that this picture has gotten out here because it shows the dark side of history," he said.

There appeared to be some confusion on social media as to whether the sign was real.

In a post Friday, the Associated Press said that a viral photo of a sign citing the "Nazi slogan that translates to 'Work Sets You Free'" was altered and originally read "Free Small Business!"

But an AP spokesperson made clear to BuzzFeed News that its fact-check was in reference to a sign from a Pittsburgh protest on April 20, not Kosuth's from Chicago.

Kosuth denied that his image was altered and said he took it with his own phone.

@nico1e_snow I took it with my own phone, I can’t make this up, this is actually the sad state some people exist in

He provided BuzzFeed News with the live photo which showed the woman moving while holding the sign as another woman shouted "the gates of Auschwitz."

video-player.buzzfeed.com

Signs bearing Nazi imagery and phrases have appeared at other anti-lockdown protests, including one in Springfield, Illinois, on Friday, and in Michigan last month.

Illinois Gov @JBPritzker's family is 1) Jewish & 2) arrived in Chicago after fleeing pogroms in Kyiv. But don't tell that to this protester at the Reopen Illinois rally in Springfield today. 📷: @MikeMiletichTV

Asked why he thought his photo had gone viral, Kosuth responded, "I think a lot of people don't like Nazis — and that gives me hope."

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