Some of you may remember that I am doing a study of how the two Germanies (East and West) reflected on the Holocaust through their nation's postage stamps. The matter is far more complicated than I expected, so I have been proceeding rather slowly. On top of this, I have expanded my interest to the neighboring state of Austria.
I am trying to be fair and accurate in my work and am asking for help specifically regarding Austrian stamps. As far as I can tell, Austria has never released a stamp that directly addresses the violence committed against Jews. My hope is that someone more familiar with Austria will correct me if I am wrong.
The most relevant of the stamps I have found that refer to Nazi crimes is one of the early issues released after the war. It is a semi-postal that depicts a tortured hand behind barbed wire. Behind it is the acronym/abbreviation 'KZ.'

Jews alone were not sent to the concentration camps, so I'm unable to claim this specifically as a stamp recognizing the Shoah.
There is this stamp, also, issued in 1995, where a woman is depicted wearing a striped uniform...

but this uniform was not used specifically for Jews.
Perhaps these finer points seem unimportant, but one of the arguments about which I am reading is that Austria--in general terms, of course--focused on its citizens as a whole being victims of the Nazis. Some scholars or commentators see this as a convenient means of ignoring or even attempting to erase any anti-Semitism displayed by Austrians.
Again, help with this survey will be greatly appreciated.