General Holocaust Denial Discussion Part II

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More lies? You do know that the inmates traversed the camp/camps unescorted by guards.

Is that some times or all of the time or with just some inmates or all inmates? Could you be referring to inmates who worked and were trusted?


Again, how many babies and small children carried out of an alleged gas chamber would push a Sonderkommando over the edge?

One, or hundreds, it depends on the mental state of the SK.

Again, the soccer field was right next to the alleged gas chamber.

Was there a time overlap between the use of the pitches and the gas chambers?

The ritual aspect of the alleged policy of extermination of Jewish people is pure idiocy.

The policy was not pure idiocy. No matter what you claim you are still left with an ethnic cleansing and deaths on a huge scale.

In the alleged death camps there are too many stops and starts and exceptions.

Such are explained, for example by competing demands to have Jews put to work or exterminated. The exceptions are explained by the relations between some Jews and the Nazis. We know some Jews or at least half Jews served in the armed forces. So some will be more privileged or just lucky in other walks of life and even the camps.

Children couldn't work yet many survived the camps. Old people couldn't work but many survived. Women inmates got pregnant by their husbands? They couldn't work yet they and their children survived. Many famous/rich Jewish people didn't work and survived the camps. Ill Jewish people were treated in hospitals. Why weren't they just killed.

Initially because they were going to be ethnically cleansed, then when the death camps started not all went there as different places were more thorough in sending away the Jews (Hungary) than others (Denmark). Then the death camps were stopped as the Nazis realised they were losing and places were the camps existed had to be cleared up.


Bottom line the alleged 5 to 6 million Jewish killed in alleged gas chambers and other methods of alleged extermination never existed.

What do you mean by that? Are you saying that they did not exist in the first place?
 
More lies?[...]
What I posted in that comment were not lies and since I didn't post lies before that comment either your use of the word "more" was inappropriate, even in a question. Let's review what I wrote.

"I don't know what the first part of your reply to me is supposed to mean."
Not a lie.
I didn't understand what you meant at the time and you've made no attempt to clarify.
You wrote "Well I undebunked the

I mean, Jon Harrison dealt with it

explanation."
Please explain what this means. Did it have anything to do with the wedding photo you posted or with the wedding material I linked in reply?

"Christian and Jewish wedding ceremonies took place in Westerbork."
Not a lie.
Max Enker, Srul Tabaksblatt and Bruno Benfey were among the Christian clergy who took care of Christians in the Westerbork camp. There was a barracks for housing baptised people. Church services were held. Wedding ceremonies were also performed. Some Christians, like Ds. Benfey himself, were exempt from wearing the yellow Star of David on their clothes and had other privileges. Some temporarily. For others it saved their lives.
Julius Augapfel was among the Rabbis who married people in Westerbork.

In "Kamp van Hoop en Wanhoop, Getuigen van Westerbork 1939-1945" Willy Lindwer included the experiences of a couple who wanted to get married even though Gemmeker informed them that doing so would cost them their Barneveld-sperre. They decided to get married anyway and recalled that they had to go through a civil procedure first to register their marriage. Mentioned a certain van Donselaar as the "Ambtenaar van de Burgerlijke Stand" who officially registered their marriage. Which takes us to:

"Municipal clerks registered births and deaths as well as weddings and divorces."
Not a lie.
Molhuijsen, Van As and Van Donselaar were among the civil servants who took care of such administrative tasks. The "Hulpsecretarie van de Burgerlijke Stand" was the registry office in the camp itself where they worked. I already linked to the archives and showed an example of a registration card with a registered marriage from Westerbork.

"It is recorded history. Has been for a while."
Not lies.
I referenced the archives where surviving records are kept and posted links to examples. The dates on the files show they were created in the 1940s. Not sure why you would call any of these things lies since neither you nor I dispute that people got married in Westerbork.

"What are you trying to say by posting a photo without explanation?"
This not a lie but an -unanswered- question. A question for you, as it happens. Please answer it.

"Some of the married people survived the final solution, others didn't."
Not a lie.
I posted links to Joods Monument entries where it is shown that some spouses died while others survived the final solution.

"What about the couple in the photo you posted?" Do you know who they are?
Not lies.
Unanswered questions. Please answer them.

"When the Red Cross wrote in 1946 that Sobibor was the extermination camp for Jews deported from Westerbork in 1943 the Red Cross representatives already knew that some of the victims of the mass murder in Sobibor had been married - or had attempted to marry- in Westerbork because such bureaucratic records remained for them to examine."
Not a lie.
The first part of this sentence -although with "The Netherlands" in stead of "Westerbork" - was written in Dutch on page 5 of the Sobibor report, published in July 1946, by "Het Afwikkelingsbureau Concentratiekampen". In December 1945 this bureau had come to reside with the Dutch Red Cross. The writers of the 1947 corrected and expanded Sobibor report repeated that sentence. By the time these post mass murder reports were written "Het Informatiebureau van het Nederlandse Rode Kruis" had access to records from the "Hulpsecretarie van de Burgerlijke Stand in Westerbork".
The Dutch Red Cross was assigned the task of researching the fate of the missing by the Dutch Government. At first coordinating with and later taking over the work from such organisations as "Het Gemeentelijk Informatiebureau voor Joden te Westerbork." In the case of Jews deported from Westerbork to Sobibor the Red Cross representatives concluded that the vast majority had been gassed. It stated this in their reports and in the letters sent to friends and relatives who had inquired about missing people with the Red Cross. An example of such a letter is in my JREF photo album - which I brought to your attention months ago. Such records won't go away simply because you ignore them.

Molhuijsen died in Dachau but Van Donselaar was still around after the defeat of the twelve year reich to explain his activities in Westerbork and the registry he administered there.

Now What?"
Not a lie but a question.

You posted a wedding photo but are strangely reluctant to comment on it. You posted another reply that has nothing whasoever to do with that photo after I listed several links to Holocaust remembrance related websites and provided references for public archives where marriages in Westerbork have been recorded long before you had the idea to post a wedding photo in a JREF thread. Perhaps my own question wasn't clear? Allow me to expand some more. My "Now what?" Was an invitation for you to demonstrate your purpose for posting a wedding photo hosted on the "bible believers" website. A website where that photo floats around -without caption or explanation- on a page with content that has no logical connection whatsoever with that photo either. In fact, that page doesn't have much logical coherence of any kind. My "Now What?" was an invitation for you to explain how we were supposed to deal -differently?- with the recorded reality of weddings in Westerbork. Were we supposed to do something -differently?- after seeing that you had posted a photo? Why?

Loss Leader's reply to my question, and CaptainHowdy's follow up, might have given you some guidance about what not to suggest regarding your purpose for posting that wedding photo - but it appears their comments either escaped your attention or their guidance went unheeded. LSSB gave pointers that there might be some faulty thought processes behind the inability to reconcile one fact with an other. Pointing out that personal incredulity is not a convincing argument. So, one more time, can you, please, state yourself why you posted that wedding photo? Since "Neither performed weddings nor cancelled weddings in a transit camp are mutually exclusive with the attempted extermination of a race." you must have had an other reason. What is it?

Dcdrac asked you for your sources before, btw. You've once again ignored that request. You've also not indicated if Dcdrac's speculation about your reason for posting that image was accurate.
Rather than answer a simple question about a wedding photo you changed the subject. Why? Why bring it up if you don't want to talk about it?

"What about soccer?"
Not a lie.
Another question for you. An invitation to elaborate on the point you were supposedly trying to make.

"Primo Levi wrote about a soccer match involving Sonderkommando of Birkenau Crematoria. The killing and body disposal there continued regardless."
Not a lie.
When Primo Levi wrote about these things in "The Drowned and the saved" (page 54 etc) - one of his later books- he refers to the experiences of Dr. Miklós Nyiszli for that information.

Below is the published translation of the relevant passage from Miklós Nyiszli's account. After examining women with head and neck wounds caused by small caliber guns fired from close range he writes:
"My head spinning struck dumb with horror, I walked along the gravel path which divided the well-kept lawn of the crematorium courtyard. My gaze wandered to the evening muster of the Sonderkommando. This evening there was no change of guard. Number one crematorium was not working today. I glanced in the direction of numbers two, three and four: their chimneys were spewing flame and smoke. Business as usual.
It was too early for dinner. The Sonderkommado brought out a football. The teams lined up on the field. "SS vs SK". On one side of the field the crematorium's SS guards; on the other, the Sonderkommando. They put the ball into play. Sonorous laughter filled the courtyard. The spectators became excited and shouted encouragement at the players, as if this were the playing field of some peaceful town. Stupefied, I made that mental note as well. Without waiting for the end of the match, I returned to my room."

"What do you have to tell me?"
Not a lie but an other invitation for you to elaborate. Hinting that you don't have anything to tell me.

Where does the information regarding the frequency and location of the football matches come from? Can you provide references so we can see the material in context? Is it perhaps from former inmate statements? As a possible source I suggested "If this is a Man" by Primo Levi. First published in Italian in 1947 and translated into various languages prior to 1967. Primo Levi whose survival isn't a convincing argument against genocide either. It would be foolish for any denier to suggest Primo Levi as the source for football because of the rest of his writings, which aren't compatible with the idea that there were no mass murders.

"Football does not expose the Holocaust as a hoax either but rather -like most of "your" examples- exposes the ignorance of Holocaust deniers regarding the complexity of the camps."
Not a lie.

"Are you starting over again? Reset the merry-go-round? What do you think will change this time around?"
Questions.

Your bottom line does not follow from the content of your message(s).
 
I was also hoping that EtienneSC could expand on his point regarding understandings of the perpetration of mass violence, maybe trying to get us back on course. Elsehwere in the thread he stated:


In his most recent post, he brought up Grossman's work On Killing to make the point that proximity to the victims reduces the willingness of perpetrators to commit violence. This is a fairly common point across many investigations (Milgram included). However, Grossman also focuses on the point that he is largely talking of armed soldiers combatting other armed soldiers on a battlefield. He notes that when one side suddenly becomes unarmed (i.e. POWs), violence against them is nearly epidemic from the victors in historical terms.
The treatment of former combatants (POWs) is not that relevant to the Holocaust. Captured partisans would not have the rights of POWs and what is mostly alleged is planned killings of civilians. I don't know Grossman's work in detail and frankly don't want to for personal and moral reasons. The intended relevance of my citing him was that it would provide a comparative basis for holocaust claims.

He also spends a good chunk of the book detailing episodes of face to face massacres and atrocities, analyzing their causes and motivations.

And needless to say, any claims that the events of the Holocaust are historically unique are rather spurious. So, any discussions of the motivations of violence or the perpetration of mass atrocities in other contexts (i.e. Japan, Russia, etc) also help provide an analytical framework from which to understand the Holocaust as well. Indeed, the more "unique" components of the Holocaust (e.g. gas chambers) would ease the ability of the Nazis to perform mass killings on a wide scale.
Interesting that you consider that claims for the uniqueness of the holocaust are "rather spurious", given that so many writers on the subject (e.g. Berel Lang) believe that it is unique. I agree with them rather than you and consider it would be historically unique if it occurred. However, that is precisely a reason for looking more suspiciously at the supposed evidence. You might compare this with "professional scepticism" in other fields where matters are taken at face value in routine situations, but anomalies are investigated thoroughly. Holocaust studies would do well to learn this lesson.
 
You might compare this with "professional scepticism" in other fields where matters are taken at face value in routine situations, but anomalies are investigated thoroughly. Holocaust studies would do well to learn this lesson.


You mean like taking the German explanation that they were deporting Jews to the east at face value? Like the Red Cross taking the scene they found at Theresienstadt at face value? Like taking claims there were pools and soccer fields for Jewish prisoners at face value?

Are those the types of things we should question?
 
The treatment of former combatants (POWs) is not that relevant to the Holocaust.

On the contrary, it is highly relevant for a number of general-comparative as well as historically specific reasons. The general point is that it's relatively easy to kill non-combatants outside of combat situations, including POWs.

There are also historically specific points of comparison, starting with the fact that Soviet POWs were among the few other groups killed in mass executions using gas, and they also formed the second largest group of victims of Nazism, with 2.7 million dead, including hundreds of thousands who were simply executed, the rest starved or allowed to die in appalling conditions due to planned undernourishment.

Captured partisans would not have the rights of POWs and what is mostly alleged is planned killings of civilians.

The Nazis engaged in the planned killing of many kinds of civilians of many nationalities. In the course of antipartisan warfare, they used methods such as reprisal executions of hostages on a ratio basis up to 100:1, which incidentally did for the entire Serbian male Jewish population in a matter of months, but also systematically emptied guerrilla controlled territories using a mixture of evacuations, deportations and mass executions of non-combatants, in some cases actually carrying out selections in villages so that able-bodied men and women were deported for forced labour while 'useless' children and old people were simply murdered.

We also find the Nazis resorting to prophylactic or 'preventative' executions of targeted groups of undesirables, intelligentsia and potential resistance leadership, especially in Eastern Europe. And we find them using Sippenhaft, targeting relatives, thus including women and children, extending the groups of targeted individuals to whole families. In Poland this practice was not infrequently used to kill entire families who had been hiding Jews that had escaped deportation. Among the groups targeted for planned killing were of course Sinti and Roma, again especially in Eastern Europe (most gypsies in Poland and the occupied Soviet Union were simply shot), as well as psychiatric patients (again, in Eastern Europe many were simply shot).

So there were an awful lot of killing programs enacted by the Nazis across Europe during WWII, extending well beyond the execution of captured partisans.

I don't know Grossman's work in detail and frankly don't want to for personal and moral reasons. The intended relevance of my citing him was that it would provide a comparative basis for holocaust claims.

You seem to be under the delusion that historians and social scientists haven't compared the genocide of European Jews with other killing actions carried out by the Nazis, or with other genocides, or with other examples of mass violence.

This is clearly nonsense; a vast amount of literature exists doing exactly that - countless studies of a single region or nation-state under the Third Reich do this routinely. For example, Christian Gerlach compared mass violence against Jews, POWs the rural population and other target groups in Nazi-occupied Belorussia; Robert Seidel did the same for Poles and Jews in the Radom district quite recently, and virtually all Polish historians have done the same for their regional or local studies.

There are also many studies which compare Nazi and Soviet rule in the same region before/during/after WWII. For example, Marek Chodakiewicz looked at a single county of the Lublin region from 1939 through to 1947; Chad Bryant looked at the Czech lands under the Nazi 'Protectorate' and continued his study through to 1948 and full Sovietisation; One does not need to go back to the 1950s wave of totalitarianism studies to find explicit mash-ups, e.g. Christian Gerlach and Nicolas Werth comparing Nazi and Soviet forms of violence in a jointly written comparative essay.

Both Christopher Browning as well as Harald Welzer have written on Nazi killing actions and made deliberate comparisons with My Lai; Browning also looked at the conduct of the US Army towards the Japanese in the Pacific theatre, drawing on John Dower's work.

In the social science literature on violence, there are countless comparisons between the Holocaust and other instances of mass violence. Genocide studies abound, including studies like Benjamin Valentino's Final Solutions: Mass Killings and Genocides in the Twentieth Century, that examine instances of mass violence such as Stalinist terror alongside Allied strategic bombing as well as explicit cases of genocide.

Grossman's On Killing deals explicitly with atrocities (i.e. the killing of noncombatants) on pp.197-223, and he discusses the Holocaust in that context alongside other atrocities.

Interesting that you consider that claims for the uniqueness of the holocaust are "rather spurious", given that so many writers on the subject (e.g. Berel Lang) believe that it is unique. I agree with them rather than you and consider it would be historically unique if it occurred.

I've just come back from a conference where two papers by Israeli historians explicitly addressed "uniqueness", and both rejected the interpretation. Why? Because uniqueness implies narrating the Holocaust separately to the rest of 20th Century history. Thousands of historians don't do that because they are writing about x country or x region in the 1940s and the Holocaust is an indelible part of that history, no matter whether one is writing about France, Paris, Germany, Stuttgart, Romania, Transylvania, Poland, Janow Lubelski, Galicia, Lwow, Volhynia, Russia or Smolensk.

The uniqueness thesis was articulated over a relatively historically specific time-frame, from the 1970s to 1990s, overwhelmingly by a fairly small number of Israeli and diaspora Jewish historians. It has never been generally accepted, otherwise the entire field of comparative genocide studies simply wouldn't exist. Since Rwanda, the claim of uniqueness based on a supposedly unique genocidal intent hasn't even vaguely stood up to scrutiny.

It might be thought that exponents of uniqueness emphasised the technological distinctiveness of gas chambers, but this is not actually the case. Yehuda Bauer, Steven Katz and others who have been at the forefront of trying to argue for uniqueness have not generally emphasised the methods; they have emphasised the distinctiveness of Nazi genocidal intent towards all Jews, claiming this sets the Holocaust apart from other forms of Nazi violence and other outbreaks of mass violence.

However, that is precisely a reason for looking more suspiciously at the supposed evidence. You might compare this with "professional scepticism" in other fields where matters are taken at face value in routine situations, but anomalies are investigated thoroughly. Holocaust studies would do well to learn this lesson.

I'm sorry, but you have no idea what you are talking about.
 
German war graves

Here is an interesting article from Der Spiegel on German graves in Eastern Europe since 1992:
"By the end of this year [2013], the German war graves commission will have found and reburied a total of 800,000 soldiers in Eastern Europe and Russia since 1992, when the former Eastern bloc countries began helping Germany retrieve the remains of missing soldiers following the end of the Cold War... But the work is far from over. The Volksbund says it expects to recover a further 150,000 war dead in the east and southeast of Europe by 2017. and that it will be building and refurbishing more cemeteries in places including the Balkans. And it knows the approximate locations of a further 250,000 dead, most of them in hard-to-access areas like swamps, or small burial sites with just a handful of graves."

A telling contrast with the graves of Holocaust victims, Père Desbois, etc. Have Yad Vashem or USHMM done anything similar? But then, the bodies were already all discovered by the German and burned with petrol, so there would be nothing to find and no point looking, as shown in this video.

Plausible stuff, guys...
 
You seem to be under the delusion that historians and social scientists haven't compared the genocide of European Jews with other killing actions carried out by the Nazis, or with other genocides, or with other examples of mass violence.

This is clearly nonsense;
Yes, the books by Christian Gerlach and Benjamin Valentino certainly look highly relevant to my line of argument. Valentino seems to take a fairly idealist line in blaming the ideology of leaders.


The uniqueness thesis was articulated over a relatively historically specific time-frame, from the 1970s to 1990s, overwhelmingly by a fairly small number of Israeli and diaspora Jewish historians. It has never been generally accepted, otherwise the entire field of comparative genocide studies simply wouldn't exist. Since Rwanda, the claim of uniqueness based on a supposedly unique genocidal intent hasn't even vaguely stood up to scrutiny.
There are still differences between Rwanda and Germany - the difference in economic and educational level and the relatively "heat of the moment" development of events in Rwanda for example.
 
video.
Plausible stuff, guys...
I believe you are using the above video, by holocaust deniers, to state that burning bodies at Treblinka was impossible. Is that correct? How do you account for the successful cremation of cows using that method.
 

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Here is an interesting article from Der Spiegel on German graves in Eastern Europe since 1992:
"By the end of this year [2013], the German war graves commission will have found and reburied a total of 800,000 soldiers in Eastern Europe and Russia since 1992, when the former Eastern bloc countries began helping Germany retrieve the remains of missing soldiers following the end of the Cold War... But the work is far from over. The Volksbund says it expects to recover a further 150,000 war dead in the east and southeast of Europe by 2017. and that it will be building and refurbishing more cemeteries in places including the Balkans. And it knows the approximate locations of a further 250,000 dead, most of them in hard-to-access areas like swamps, or small burial sites with just a handful of graves."

A telling contrast with the graves of Holocaust victims, Père Desbois, etc. Have Yad Vashem or USHMM done anything similar? But then, the bodies were already all discovered by the German and burned with petrol, so there would be nothing to find and no point looking, as shown in this video.

Plausible stuff, guys...

So, you fell for the denier meme that nobody ever investigated or recovered remains or even built memorials to the mass grave sites from WWII. More fool you.

Anyone who has read the recent literature on the Holocaust in the Soviet Union can quickly work out that the Nazis certainly didn't burn all the bodies, especially not in the smaller towns; that the Soviets carried out at least some kind of investigation; that where there were survivors in smaller towns there were often reburials; and that a great many of the sites were commemorated already during the Soviet era, just as the mass graves of peasant villagers murdered in German antipartisan operations were also commemorated with markers.

The same pattern also holds true for western Poland where mass graves holding several hundred thousand murdered Jews outside countless cities and towns were investigated, and then inconsistently marked depending on the number of survivors postwar and how long they stuck around.

There were already survey projects designed to register Jewish cemeteries as well as Holocaust mass grave sites before Yahad In Unum came along. There are reference works to the memorialisation of the Holocaust in Belarus which identify which mass graves have what kind of markers.

Yahad in Unum use the 1940s exhumation and investigation reports to relocate and mark mass graves which were not commemorated because there were essentially no Jews remaining after the war - survivors tended to move to larger cities and/or emigrate.

Comparing this situation with German efforts to locate war graves is comparing apples and oranges. For starters, the graves were already located in the 1940s. The Soviet Extraordinary Commission produced 55,000 reports on war crimes, and whatever is said about the Katyn case there was no disagreement over the issue of where the mass graves were.

Secondly, the major sites were already commemorated even under communism - and this applies to Drobitskii Yar where there were bodies as much as Babi Yar where the bodies had been cremated. This also applies to Rumbula, where there was a memorial already in 1964 and a new one in 2002, Ponary, Fort IX outside Kaunas, and numerous other sites.

In the 1960s, local Russian intelligentsia managed to get a memorial erected in Roslavl, where a smallish massacre had taken place without subsequent cremation.

Once a site becomes a matter of commemoration, then the process of recovering the dead or their remains is essentially complete. The investigation phase - identifying where the mass grave is - was long over, the only question was whether to move bodies or erect a common gravestone over the site. In smaller towns, bodies could be exhumed and moved, as happened in for example Bryansk (again no cremation there). The mass graves of many thousands of victims could not be reburied in proper cemeteries, so the gravestones (as it were) tended to be located on the spot.

The same issues, of course, apply to the millions of Polish and Soviet non-Jewish victims of the Nazis, including circa 2 million Soviet POWs.

Thirdly, the proper comparison is between the war graves commissions of Germany and the successor states of the former Soviet Union. Germany is twice as rich as Russia despite having just over half the population. Ukraine has less than 5% of Germany's GDP. The Soviet successor states are not doing nearly as much as the Germans, (a) because they are not as rich and (b) because more of the work was already done in the 1940s, whereas the Wehrmacht lost a million missing on the Eastern Front, nearly all of whom were killed on the battlefield, rather than dying (as was believed in West Germany for decades) in Soviet POW camps.

Despite a fair degree of effort already in the 1940s, the Soviet Union could not identify all the military casualties of the Great Patriotic War, and there are undoubtedly just as many missing as there were missing from the Wehrmacht.
From what I have seen, the majority of effort to locate or identify further Red Army dead is conducted without a massive amount of assistance from the state level.

So all in all, you're comparing apples and oranges, and also arguing from utter ignorance.
 
Yes, the books by Christian Gerlach and Benjamin Valentino certainly look highly relevant to my line of argument. Valentino seems to take a fairly idealist line in blaming the ideology of leaders.

I'm honestly no longer sure what your line of argument actually is. For a while, You seemed to be arguing as if the Holocaust hasn't been compared properly with other outbreaks of mass violence, but clearly it has. Originally you wondered what social science might be used to analyse the Holocaust, and that was answered. Much more could be said on this.

It would be a bit unrealistic to expect that an outbreak of mass violence in human history is only analysed or understood in one way or through only one lens; even just a cursory glance at the historiographies of Stalinist terror and Nazi Germany, to take the two most obviously well developed examples, finds that scholars have used a variety of methods, or no discernible method at all, and that previous historical research into these regimes has had an influence on subsequent social science research, as well as on historical research into other periods.

That is why Christopher Browning, Ordinary Men, is cited in studies of the French wars of religion as well as of revolutionary and Soviet Ukraine between 1905-1932.

The notion that the Holocaust is somehow lagging behind other fields or is somehow unscholarly in how it has approached things is also untenable. That goes for whether one is speaking about the use of social science methods and theories or whether one is speaking about the types of evidence used to write the histories.

There are still differences between Rwanda and Germany - the difference in economic and educational level and the relatively "heat of the moment" development of events in Rwanda for example.

I hope you realise that you've now caused anyone with a proper education in history at university level to bang their heads on the table in frustration at your evident incomprehension of the term 'comparison'. Comparison is the very bread and butter of the historian - it is how we teach the subject and how it is commonly written.

Comparison does not mean seeking out an exact match between two historical events, as if the French Revolution of 1789 was replayed like a cassette tape in the Russian Revolutions of 1917. It means taking two phenomena of a similar type, and exploring the differences. Both the French Revolution and Russian Revolutions are commonly understood as 'revolutions', and a lot of ink has been spilled over the past 200+ years to understand the phenomenon of revolution, since there have been many examples of these political upheavals. There is no one type of revolution and no one would now say otherwise. Revolutions have some features in common, which allows typologies to be created, and comparisons to be drawn.

The same applies to genocides. There have been quite a few genocides in human history, even just focusing on the cases which are essentially universally accepted as genocides and leaving aside the contentious ones. The Holocaust and Rwanda are probably considered the two most clear-cut examples of genocides. One reason is the articulation of genocidal intent in both cases, which is important since the legal definition of what a genocide is places a lot of emphasis on this.

Perpetrating a genocide is not dependent on economic development or levels of education. That the Holocaust happened in unevenly developed 1940s Europe - actually a lot of it happened in essentially rural-provincial environments in Eastern Europe - and the Rwandan genocide happened in underdeveloped 1990s Africa doesn't mean they are entirely incomparable or that one is somehow more unique than the other. All historical events are unique products of specific historical circumstances, yet we find wars, revolutions, genocides, dictatorships and democracies all over.

Nor is speed of the event/heat of the moment necessarily as different as might be thought. The Holocaust escalated in the space of six months in 1941 during which time more than a million Jews were killed in mobile waves by a coalition of German, Romanian, Lithuanian, Ukrainian, Polish and other forces who were a mixture of idealistic secret policemen, beat bobbies who had been paramilitarised, actual regular armed forces whether they were Wehrmacht, Waffen-SS or Romanian Army, as well as local auxiliary policemen and finally, ordinary civilians who joined in at various moments. There are obvious differences in the social composition of the genocidaires who wreaked havoc in Rwanda, and the genocidaires who carried out the Holocaust in 1941. There are obvious differences in what had come before June 1941 compared to the "seeming" sudden explosion of 1994 in Rwanda.

But in the Rwandan case there were earlier waves of massacres on a smaller scale, just as the Nazis had murdered thousands of Jews in Poland in 1939. The cycle of escalation is even more clearly seen with the Armenian genocide: the Hamidian massacres of 1894-1896 were a clear precursor to the explosion of 1915.

One can compare 1915, 1941 and 1994, along with 1937 - Stalin's Great Terror began very precisely on 31 July 1937 with the dispatch of Order 000447 and subsequent orders to the NKVD for 'mass operations', which in the space of 18 months until the start of 1939 resulted in just under 700,000 executions and several million sentenced to the GULag. Unlike 1941, this was almost entirely the work of a secret police force, with assistance coming from other parts of the Soviet state and from Soviet society, but the killing was done exclusively by the NKVD.

I have here shifted from 'genocide' to 'mass violence' because the two phenomena are perfectly comparable in many cases. Stalinist collectivisation, dekulakisation and the ensuing famine is obviously comparable to the Great Leap Forward, but can also be compared to the Nazi Hunger Plan and occupation policies in the Soviet Union regarding its extent - the Great Leap Forward beats the European examples hands-down, of course. Pol Pot's Cambodia carried out collectivisation, "dekulakisation" and political terror simultaneously over 1975-1978.

Pointing to these other examples indicates cases of mass violence which went on for longer than Rwanda in 1994 or the main part of the Armenian genocide in 1915, just as the Holocaust did not stop in 1941 but was extended westwards into Poland and the rest of Europe over the course of 1942-44. Nonetheless, the moment of escalation and explosion is usually regarded as crucial in any attempt to understand such events, which is why scholars have spent considerably more time by now studying 1941 than they have studying Auschwitz. That is not to say that they haven't studied Auschwitz, or for example the Holocaust in Hungary, the very last frenzied major action in 1944, but simply observes that far more ink has been spilled over Barbarossa, because that was when the Nazis escalated to six and seven figure killings.

All these outbreaks of mass violence and political violence underline why the Holocaust is frequently compared: because it took place in an extremely violent 20th Century. There are many reasons why the Holocaust stands out in all of this slaughter, and many reasons why it commands greater attention from western society than the Russian or Asian examples. It is of course a unique event in its own terms, but it cannot be said that it is beyond history, or entirely incomparable to other outbreaks of mass violence or other genocides.

The "uniqueness" of the Holocaust has been argued for on many grounds, but the political assertion of uniqueness is a product of the 80s and early 90s. It harks back to the days of the Historikerstreit in 1986, or to complaints about comparisons with other genocides in 1992 or 1993, just before Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur made it quite clear that mass violence was not a thing of the past, and that genocides and ethnic cleansing were recurring.

Unsurprisingly, since Rwanda and Bosnia, genocide studies received a huge boost, and explicit advocates of the uniqueness of the Holocaust went rather quiet.

Today, there are no de facto bans on comparing Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union as there were during the Historikerstreit; there is of course a world of difference between 1950s totalitarianism and Timothy Snyder's book Bloodlands, but the fact remains that the end of the Cold War meant that it was now possible to discuss a wide variety of cases of mass violence perpetrated by the two major totalitarian dictatorships, and to discuss their 'entangled histories'. It's also now possible as a further result of the end of the Cold War to look in far greater detail at the programs of ethnic cleansing carried out by Axis allies like Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Croatia. A lot of this debate is now held under the banner of 'transnationalism' or 'transnational history'. Which is again explicitly and fruitfully comparative.

That is where the intellectual debate is now at. And it's one of many reasons why post-Faurissonian revisionism looks completely out-dated and hopelessly barking up the wrong tree.
 
I believe you are using the above video, by holocaust deniers, to state that burning bodies at Treblinka was impossible. Is that correct? How do you account for the successful cremation of cows using that method.

What part of a successful cremation does that picture show?
 
I believe you are using the above video, by holocaust deniers, to state that burning bodies at Treblinka was impossible. Is that correct? How do you account for the successful cremation of cows using that method.
Not exactly. The argument is that the burning methods described by two principal eye witnesses (Chil Raijman and Jacob Wiernik, variously spelled) at the Aktion Reinhardt camps do not work; therefore the witnesses are not reliable. The video is the work of a single "denier", though it uses footage from One Third of the Holocaust, which addresses the question in much more detail. The cremation of dairy herds following the BSE outbreak in Britain used a variety of solid and liquid fuels in addition to wood. You can see coal at the feet of the man in white in the photo you have uploaded, for example.
 
I'm honestly no longer sure what your line of argument actually is. For a while, You seemed to be arguing as if the Holocaust hasn't been compared properly with other outbreaks of mass violence, but clearly it has. [.....]
It has been compared, but without taking revisionist arguments seriously. My basic and tentative thought was that if there were a common theory of human nature, which "genocide studies" or other inquiries might establish, this could be used to evaluate narratives to distinguish atrocity propaganda from factual description. If the theory takes the holocaust narrative as foundational, this process is necessarily vitiated (from a revisionist standpoint) as the dataset has been corrupted.

I hope you realise that you've now caused anyone with a proper education in history at university level to bang their heads on the table in frustration at your evident incomprehension of the term 'comparison'. Comparison is the very bread and butter of the historian - it is how we teach the subject and how it is commonly written.
More fool history students then, surely. History's first aim should be to establish and narrate individual facts. Facts about individual intentions are most easily accessible. Generalisation and comparison and inferences as to the large-scale effects come afterwards and involve other social science disciplines and statistical or other extra-historical methods. This became popular in the 20th century once a basically biographical approach was supplemented by the history of nations and other groups and thereafter the stories of "ordinary people" were valorised as part of a process of democratisation and "identity politics". Tracing texts back to the individuals who created or published them is Faurisson's speciality and strength.
I take the point that comparison and analogy establish both similarities and differences, but they do this with the purpose of discerning general patterns.

Unsurprisingly, since Rwanda and Bosnia, genocide studies received a huge boost, and explicit advocates of the uniqueness of the Holocaust went rather quiet.
I've been around long enough to realise that revisionism is being thrown a bone here. The uniqueness thesis is to be discarded, but the factual narrative is to remain the same. The uniqueness argument is important for both German and Jewish studies and in my view would cast doubt on some of the holocaust narrative if it were accepted, but it is secondary to the purpose of this thread which is to discuss the arguments of revisionists/deniers.
 
Facts about individual intentions are most easily accessible. Generalisation and comparison and inferences as to the large-scale effects come afterwards and involve other social science disciplines and statistical or other extra-historical methods.


I don't think any of this is right.
 
It has been compared, but without taking revisionist arguments seriously.

Revisionism has only one subject, the Holocaust; by definition it cannot prove any of its theories unless it engages in some form of systematic comparison.

That is why revisionists are the greatest proponents of the Holocaust uniqueness thesis: because it suits them as a strawman.

My basic and tentative thought was that if there were a common theory of human nature, which "genocide studies" or other inquiries might establish, this could be used to evaluate narratives to distinguish atrocity propaganda from factual description. If the theory takes the holocaust narrative as foundational, this process is necessarily vitiated (from a revisionist standpoint) as the dataset has been corrupted.

Well, sorry, but revisionists aren't in a position to demand squat on this one. There is a massive data-set regarding the evidence for atrocities in the 20th Century alone: this shows that many factors which deniers frequently claim prove the 'corruption' of the Holocaust are in fact quite normal, and can be compensated for without throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

Your sneer quotes around genocide studies ignore the fact that I've been discussing other forms of mass violence as well. We got onto this line of argument because you handwaved away the relevance of violence against POWs to the Holocaust.

Invoking 'atrocity propaganda' simply backfires on you, because revisionism has never studied other atrocities to be able to offer a coherent method of distinguishing false from real atrocities. The 'method' is entirely hypocritical and displays blatant double standards, since it is quite standard within revisionism to express total credulity towards Soviet or Allied atrocities, and to repeat proven past atrocity propaganda such as exaggerated Dresden death tolls, while simultaneously casting hyper-sceptical doubt on atrocities against Jews, and Jews alone. Meanwhile all other atrocities are simply ignored, even if they're Nazi atrocities.

As a historical method, revisionism is accordingly completely useless.

More fool history students then, surely. History's first aim should be to establish and narrate individual facts.

Most historians would actually laugh at this hopelessly naive throwback to the era of positivism. Historians seek to establish particular narratives and explanations out of large numbers of individual facts, always aware that 'establishing facts' is entirely contingent on the quality of the evidence, and thus subject to change as more research is done.

Scholars who specialise in the ancient world or middle ages call themselves historians, yet they are confronted with colossal evidentiary problems even trying to find out the most basic pieces of data; the problems do not go away in early modern or even modern history.

Facts about individual intentions are most easily accessible.

Really? In fact it's quite the opposite. Historical actors tend to be social groups. Discerning individual intentions may well be impossible, depending on available source evidence.

Generalisation and comparison and inferences as to the large-scale effects come afterwards and involve other social science disciplines and statistical or other extra-historical methods.

LOL you clearly have no idea of 20th century social science much less modern historiography.

This became popular in the 20th century once a basically biographical approach was supplemented by the history of nations and other groups and thereafter the stories of "ordinary people" were valorised as part of a process of democratisation and "identity politics".

Whoa there, why are you ignoring everything in between the nation and the ordinary individual?

Both history and social science have spent a quite unbelievable amount of time in the past 100-150 years examining the nature of social groups and institutions, starting of course with the history of socioeconomic classes for Marxists, but also examining the role of political parties, churches, bureaucracies, militaries, paramilitaries, police forces, and legal systems on the one hand, and social cohorts like gendered milieux, religious communities, social movements, workplaces, business communities, intelligentsias and subcultures on the other.

Those subjects are seen as historical, social, economic and political actors in their own right as well as in relation to other such actors. Many of these actors behave in a corporate fashion, so that an immense amount of time is spent examining deviations from a supposed norm: the politician who breaks with their party, the general who disobeys orders, or the ordinary soldier who deserts.

Tracing texts back to the individuals who created or published them is Faurisson's speciality and strength.

I'm sorry, but Faurisson doesn't have any strengths. His 'method' is entirely useless from the perspective of a historian or social scientist, and is simply not practiced even by people in his own ostensible discipline of literary criticism.

Methods of historical source criticism have been developed over the past 150 years which actually work because they can reconstruct past historical reality, and have been proven to do so even under extremely adverse evidentiary conditions. Faurisson has never reconstructed anything to do with the past, since all he's interested in as a professional antisemite is erasing the past as it concerns Jews.

I take the point that comparison and analogy establish both similarities and differences, but they do this with the purpose of discerning general patterns.

Not in history they don't. Creating typologies of revolutions is fine in political science, but historians love to find the exception to the rule; there are also serious arguments over how one contextualises specific historical events. That was your hamfisted point about Rwanda: the specific contexts for Rwanda differed considerably from the Holocaust. Yet the events in Rwanda in 1994 and the events of the Holocaust are both considered to belong to the descriptive class of events known as 'genocides'.

Historical comparison is about applying usually several comparisons to home in on what made a specific event or institution distinctive.Those comparisons rest on fairly loose typologies and on comparing data from similar eras and regions. One can apply social science models from psychology and sociology, but always keeping an eye out for the exceptions.

For example, the Holocaust belongs to other classes of events than just 'genocide', such as 'Nazi crimes against humanity' or 'mass violence in the era of high modernity'. The T4 euthanasia program was not a 'genocide', but it clearly belongs together with the Nazi genocide of European Jews as another example of Nazi criminality. An obvious point of similarity is both used gas as one of several killing methods. Every single major account of the Holocaust from Poliakov onwards has noted the fact that personnel from the T4 program were transferred to participate in the genocide of European Jews by serving in the Aktion Reinhard camps.

Another example of historical comparison is to note that the NKVD under Yezhov was fairly small, about 35,000 strong (it later grew), and was of a similar size to the various branches of the RSHA during WWII, which reached a strength of 50,000 by 1944. Both the NKVD and RSHA were secret police forces or state security forces, which makes them institutionally comparable. There are of course countless nationally specific differences, but the informed historian finds that both the NKVD and RSHA compiled mood reports on public opinion, tracked down political opposition to the respective one party states, and were also tasked with mass murder on a historically unprecedented scale. By the time the RSHA was given mass murder tasks, of course, the NKVD had already killed more than 700,000 people, and organised the deportation of millions.

There were so many points of comparison between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union under Stalin that contemporaries were already using the term 'totalitarianism' before the outbreak of WWII. In the 1950s, political scientists as well as many historians developed the comparison into a full-scale typology. Then from the 1960s historians of both regimes challenged the premises of the totalitarianism model - but by the 1990s it was clear that they were challenging the premises in similar ways. By the 2000s, there was a new consensus that both regimes benefited from considerably more popular support than had been believed and that the ordinary citizens of both regimes did not live in quite as much fear of the Gestapo or NKVD as had been believed. This led to a series of comparative projects, conferences, special editions of journals (eg Accusatory Practices, a volume on denunciation in modern European history) and to parallel narrations, for example Richard Overy's The Dictators.

By now, it's also obvious, as I have mentioned, already that the two regimes ran amok over the same territories, which is why histories of modern Poland, Lithuania, Latvia etc will examine and compare what the Nazis did with what the Soviets did after 1944. Continuities and discontinuities are noted as relevant. That, too, is comparison. The aim is to increase the explanatory power of a particular narrative by introducing greater complexity.

To take an example from my own work, in studying Wehrmacht policies towards the Soviet civilian population in the combat zone, two things became clear to me, firstly the Wehrmacht resorted to techniques of occupation and population control that had already been practiced on the western front of WWI in Belgium and France, secondly that the reactions of Soviet civilians were conditioned by their prewar experiences under Soviet rule. Both these observations, which are empirically confirmed by the source evidence, are necessarily comparative.

This can be extended in many ways, eg comparing arrest rates during the Great Terror province by province with the depredations of Wehrmacht security forces and the extent to which Soviet civilians were deported or killed by the Nazis. The prior experience of Stalinist terror was not only a major factor in causing some Soviet civilians to collaborate with the Nazis, but it also conditioned their social behaviour, so that practices of denunciation displayed a remarkable continuity between the prewar years and the experience under occupation.

I've been around long enough to realise that revisionism is being thrown a bone here. The uniqueness thesis is to be discarded, but the factual narrative is to remain the same. The uniqueness argument is important for both German and Jewish studies and in my view would cast doubt on some of the holocaust narrative if it were accepted, but it is secondary to the purpose of this thread which is to discuss the arguments of revisionists/deniers.

No, sorry, revisionism wasn't being thrown a bone at all, it was being criticised as backward.

Uniqueness is like denial virtually an 80s retro thang. But even in the 1980s, as the Holocaust was moving into a more central position in western cultural and intellectual life, there was always a comparative dimension, which is why the journal of what became USHMM was entitled Holocaust and Genocide Studies. The 80s were not that long after Cambodia had caused another round of Holocaust comparisons, and it was also around then that the Armenian genocide became more widely known as an earlier example of genocide before the Holocaust.

Nor is it true to say that the narrative remains the same except on a trivial level of historical chronology. Operation Barbarossa will forever be known as starting on June 22 1941 but the significance of Operation Barbarossa can be narrated and explained in vastly different ways. Perspective and hindsight matters enormously.

Helmut Walser Smith wrote about this extremely eloquently in his essay/book The Continuities of German History, observing that for the 1960s generation of West German historians, the 'vanishing point' of modern German history was 1933. By the 1990s, the 'vanishing point' had shifted to 1941 - the start of the epochal clash between rival dictatorships which not only led to unprecedented slaughter but also eventually led to the division of Europe between two power blocs during the Cold War.

Richard Evans likewise observed that the historiography of the Third Reich initially focused on the origins of the Nazi seizure of power, then on the 1933-39 period, then moved finally to looking at the war years in greater detail. Now there are many who think we should look much earlier to the 19th Century for the explanatory roots and causes of the Third Reich, yet they are not reviving the old Sonderweg argument in a literal sense. Many are after all emphasising the impact of imperialism and exercise of colonial violence not just by Wilhelmine Germany but other imperial powers, while others consider that the upheavals of 1914-1921 are more significant, since there are many more precedents to consider and many more 'breaks' which have come to light as that era has been researched in more detail.

Even on a middle range level, the narrative of the Holocaust has changed considerably over the decades, which is to be expected because no narrative ever stays exactly the same if research is being done and the subject is debated by academics.

The factual narrative may well remain broadly similar for most historical events, but it's remarkable how easy 'facts' are to revision of a proper kind. For decades it was believed and widely repeated that Prokrovorkha was a major tank battle during the larger battle of Kursk which saw hundreds of German tanks destroyed. Then someone actually looked at the archival evidence and found that the SS-Panzerkorps had in fact suffered relatively light losses in AFVs, while Rotmistrov's tank army was effectively gutted. "Kursk" remained a turning-point in the operational military history of the Eastern Front, but not for quite the same reasons as before. Tanks were still destroyed, the Nazi offensive was still blunted, in the end the Nazis still lost the war. But the 'facts' changed. Prokrovorkha still took place on the same days and the same forces were still involved, but the 'facts' changed.

I hate to break it to you, but the facts of the Holocaust are not going to change in any dramatic way - Auschwitz will forever more still be considered to have acquired new crematoria and gas chambers times four starting in March 1943, for example. The significance of that fact will change, and has already changed, since historians of the Holocaust in Eastern Europe are now well aware that at the same time as Kremas II-V were being constructed, over 100,000 Galician Jews were being mown down in mass shootings without the benefit of gas chambers.

The significance of Kremas II-V, which for decades were held up as the apotheosis of the Holocaust, has considerably receded when it is fairly obvious that they claimed less than 10% of the victims of the Holocaust. Accordingly, historians such as Tim Snyder and Wendy Lower complain of an "Auschwitz syndrome" which has to be overcome by highlighting the Shoah par balles. Neither Snyder, nor Lower, nor myself, nor any other historian of the Holocaust is going to disregard the fact of mass gassing at Auschwitz, but it simply doesn't seem to be quite the same big deal as was believed in the 1980s, when western European countries like France had debates which generalised the French Jewish experience onto the whole of the Holocaust.

That change of emphasis had next to nothing to do with negationism, and everything to do with the end of the Cold War and new research which put existing knowledge into better perspective. Reitlinger and Hilberg both mentioned eastern Galicia in 1943 cursorily in their accounts; once we had more detail and more knowledge, then it seems much more significant.

In the 1980s, a quite popular meta-interpretation saw the Holocaust as the product of modernity, and therefore emphasised bureaucracy as well as industrial killing. Today, there is much more emphasis on popular social participation in genocide, because Jedwabne looks more like Rwanda, and historians unsurprisingly write history influenced consciously or unconsciously by the events of their era. Historians of the Armenian genocide went back and found the same phenomenon of popular participation.

On similar lines, the autonomous agendas of the Hungarian state and society are much more emphasised in recent historiography, compared to older interpretations that revolved largely around Eichmann's organisational achievement in deporting 437,000 Hungarian Jews in a few months. There was popular participation in Hungarian society over the concentration, expropriation and deportation of Jews, as well as the extensive involvement of local governors, gendarmerie and other actors within the Hungarian state. The deportees were sent to Auschwitz, where 25% were selected for work - Wisliceny said as much in 1945 to the Nuremberg interrogators.

Documenting what happened to the 25% selected for work has absorbed the attentions of hundreds of historians in Germany examining every single sub-camp in the KZ system. This experience involved large numbers of ordinary Germans who were called in as camp guards, and then in the final phase of the war brought in other parts of German society as they reacted to the camp evacuations and death marches. The odyssey through the camp system also created numerous battered mini-communities of Hungarian Jewish men and women each with their own experiences.

Both sets of research have considerably transformed our understanding of the last year of the Holocaust; and they have also refined our understanding of the serial massacre of Hungarian Jews in Auschwitz during the early summer of 1944. Indeed, the Auschwitz death toll has to be marginally revised because it's clear and confirmed that slightly more prisoners were shipped out without being tattooed and registered than was thought by historians in the 1980s.

What won't change is the consensus that the majority of the Hungarian Jews deported by the Hungarians + Eichmann were exterminated in Auschwitz between May and July 1944. But the significance of that extermination action has changed considerably.
 
What part of a successful cremation does that picture show?
The height of the cows off the ground prior to cremation. If you watched the holocaust denier's video they said that this was an impossibility, which is not true.
 

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Not exactly. The argument is that the burning methods described by two principal eye witnesses (Chil Raijman and Jacob Wiernik, variously spelled) at the Aktion Reinhardt camps do not work; ........The cremation of dairy herds following the BSE outbreak in Britain used a variety of solid and liquid fuels in addition to wood.
The Germans also had petrol. Next question.

http://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot.com.au/2011/12/belzec-sobibor-treblinka-holocaust_8385.html
 
Not exactly. The argument is that the burning methods described by two principal eye witnesses (Chil Raijman and Jacob Wiernik, variously spelled) at the Aktion Reinhardt camps do not work; therefore the witnesses are not reliable. The video is the work of a single "denier", though it uses footage from One Third of the Holocaust, which addresses the question in much more detail. The cremation of dairy herds following the BSE outbreak in Britain used a variety of solid and liquid fuels in addition to wood. You can see coal at the feet of the man in white in the photo you have uploaded, for example.

Have you had the opportunity to read through the relevant sections of Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: Holocaust Denial and Operation Reinhard? Nick links to it in his forum signature, and while I have seen you reference it in the past I have yet to see you deal with any part of it or show any signs of having read it. If you have responded to it, please direct me to the relevant post. If the pdf format is not conducive to your reading habits, there are html pages by section of the relevant chapter (Chapter 8). See here.

Anyway, I mention this because Roberto Muehlenkamp rather strongly rebuts the open-air cremation arguments of Carlo Mattogno. As Mattogno is the basis upon which your video link as well as the One Third of the Holocaust series stand, they simply become falling dominoes in this regard.

BTW, more fuel types than wood were employed in the AR cremations as well.
 
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