After the war, the fragment of seven seconds in Breslauer's movie was used in many documentaries. The image of the anonymous young girl staring out of the wagon full of fear and about to be transported to Auschwitz became an icon of the
Holocaust. Until 1994, she was only known as "the girl with the headdress". It was assumed she was Jewish, as for many years there was little attention paid to the
genocide of the 500,000 to 1,500,000 Romani that were killed by the Germans in the
Porajmos throughout
Europe. In December 1992, Dutch journalist started to research her identity. By following the number on the outside of the wagon, number 10, 16 or 18, the description of the wagon, and the identity of a single suitcase that appears in the shot, he quickly discovered that the transport took place on 19 May 1944 and that it was a mixed transport of Dutch Romani and Jews. On 7 February 1994 at a trailer camp in
Spijkenisse, Crasa Wagner was able to remember and to reveal the name of Settela Steinbach. The quest for Settela Steinbach's identity was documented in Cherry Duyns' documentary (1994). Wagenaar published his research in the book , ==References==