LemmyCaution
Master Poster
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2011
- Messages
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Just noticed that I (spellcheck?) got Belize messed up in this! Belzec!!!. . . three Einsatz Reinhard camps (Treblinka, Sobibor, Belize) . . .
Just noticed that I (spellcheck?) got Belize messed up in this! Belzec!!!. . . three Einsatz Reinhard camps (Treblinka, Sobibor, Belize) . . .
5) Why were all these people evacuated anyway? (Same goes for Anne Frank) I was under the impression that the Nazis somehow wanted to exterminate the Jews. Why did they, in times of war, being overran by the Soviets lead so many prisoners westward? Why didn't they let them starve, freeze to death, why didn't they shoot them?
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I was thinking about guys like Germar Rudolf who spent over 25 years trying to disprove the Holocaust. And I was wondering if he really believes that gas chambers in Auschwitz are a lie. If he is a normal human, he must have doubts about his truth too, right? But then, 25 years of writing, reading, researching, sitting in jail would be for nothing.
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As above, I agree, I think it is rather a matter of recorded deaths of registered prisoners vs deaths of unregistered prisoners, not a case of the Auschwitz Stammlager vs Birkenau.Regarding the 300,000 figure, I still don't get it and the explanation that it was referring to Auschwitz I and not Birkenau is incorrect, imho.
As it took place in Poland in '47, I doubt that transcripts are readily available if they exist at all.I can't find any transcripts for this trial and apparently there are none in english. (there seem to be very little info on that particular trial overall)
You remember correctly. In December 1944 prisoners from the camp were brought to the Krema areas to assist in dismantling the Kremas, beginning with Krema III. On 15 January 70 prisoners who had been in the Sonderkommando, now making up Detail 104 B (Krema demolition detail), continued working at dismantling the Kremas, taking salvaged equipment to the railway siding from where it was shipped out to Gross Rosen. Demolition work included dynamiting the Krema and gas chamber buildings. A squad of Sonderkommando members, about 30 in number, was also assigned burning corpses in Krema V. On 18 January prisoners were marched out of Auschwitz, the demolition work not completed as the Red Army approached the camp. On 20 January the SS had a group of inmates bring dynamite to Kremas II and III; an SS unit under SS-Unterscharführer Herschel dynamited the structures. Another SS unit blew up Krema V on 26 January. The final evacuation transport left Auschwitz on 27 January 1945.N. . . Another question I would love to ask a denier is, why does he think the Nazis dismantled the crematoria in late 44. (I'm remembering this correctly, right?)
Like, why would they do this if they had nothing to hide? Makes absolutely no sense to me.
Hans, I don't mind you thinking whatever you want about me. I can't find any explanations for this specific question (regarding the cremation), maybe it comes off as insincere but I'm really wondering about details like that.
More from Gideon Greif, based on his interviews of Sonderkommando members: there were "six stations" in the Kremas with Sonderkommado crews at each: undressing room, gas chamber, "dentists" (those searching the corpses for valuables), cremation ovens, bone crushers, team hauling ashes to Vistula and Sola rivers; Greif said that although SK members worked in teams, basically all SKs ended up working on all teams and doing all parts of the work at some point.. . . Regarding the crematoria. . . And why would they not have been interested to burn the bodies to complete ash? Did they have a bone mill in Auschwitz?
Regarding the crematoria, I was not suggesting that it would take twice the time for two bodies, Pacal. All I was saying is that I find it weird that Topf&Soehne was capable of building ovens that could burn a body within 30 minutes while present time crematoria apparently take 70-90 minutes.
And why would they not have been interested to burn the bodies to complete ash? Did they have a bone mill in Auschwitz?
Secondly since modern day Crematoria are only interested in burning one body at a time I doubt that a facility that was burning people en-mass would have much to teach them.
.....Another question I would love to ask a denier is, why does he think the Nazis dismantled the crematoria in late 44. (I'm remembering this correctly, right?)
Like, why would they do this if they had nothing to hide? Makes absolutely no sense to me.
Nessie, good point regarding the disappearing of the hungarian Jews. A good question to ask someone like Rudolf.
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Except that you've already received detailed answers. There should be no reason for you to wonder.
More from Gideon Greif....
Fourthly the temperatures in the Auschwitz crematoria were higher than the usual c. 569 Celsius used in modern day crematoria.
A prisoner at TII, Yankel Wiernik reported in his memoires published in 1945...
Donat, The Death Camp Treblinka, p 232 - Why should one disbelieve Wiernik on this corroborated point because some details aren't expressed as you might express them?As soon as we came to Treblinka, we could smell the stench of tens of thousands of corpses. When I arrived, the Germans weren’t cremating the corpses; they were burying them, tens of thousands of people in ditches. They later figured that burying the victims was not such a good idea, because someday those ditches would be dug up and what had gone on there would become known. So they made these fires with grates and they brought steam shovels. They dug the dead out of the ditches and loaded them on the fire, where they burned 24 hours a day. The Germans poured oil on the corpses and oil underneath, and the fire burned continuously.
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Nessie, thanks for your contribution. I agree with a lot of what you said, especially concerning all the missing Jews from Hungary that disappeared in Auschwitz.
I don't want to get into Treblinka here, but in my opinion Yankel Wiernik is full of it. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying Treblinka didn't exist or no one was murdered there. But "A Year in Treblinka" is full of exxagerations if not flat out lies.
Quoting from chapter 7:
"One of the Germans, a man named Sepp, was a vile and savage beast, who took special delight in torturing children. When he pushed women around and they begged him to stop because they had children with them, he would frequently snatch a child from the woman's arms and either tear the child in half or grab it by the legs, smash its head against a wall and throw the body away. Such incidents were by no means isolated. Tragic scenes of this kind occurred all the time."
Tearing children in half, yeah right.
"The number of transports grew daily, and there were periods when as many as 30,000 people were gassed in one day..."
Ok, but considering all his exaggerations, I don't buy it.
Chapter 9:
"The gangsters are standing near the ashes, shaking with satanic laughter. Their faces radiate a truly satanic satisfaction. They toasted the scene with brandy and with the choicest liqueurs, ate, caroused and had a great time warming themselves by the fire."
"The hangmen stood warming themselves by the fire, drinking, eating and singing."
Really?
"Gradually, the fire began to die down, leaving only ashes which went to fertilize the silent soil."
Weird, I wasn't under the impression that an open air cremation of 3,000 bodies would leave only ashes.
Again, I'm not saying Treblinka or every word in Wierniks book is a lie. I just don't trust people who are full of it. And Wiernik clearly was.
Anyway, thanks a lot for all the detailed answers and contributions. Most questions were sorted out, which is great.
Arad, p 175Yechiel Reichman, a member of the “burning group,” writes:The SS “expert” on body burning ordered us to put women, particularly fat women, on the first layer on the grill, face down. The second layer could consist of whatever was brought—men, women, or children—and so on, layer on top of layer.... Then the “expert” ordered us to lay dry branches under the grill and to light them. Within a few minutes the fire would take so it was difficult to approach the crematorium from as far as 50 meters away.... The work was extremely difficult. The stench was awful. Liquid excretions from the corpses squirted all over the prisoner-workers. The SS man operating the excavator often dumped the corpses directly onto the prisoners working nearby, wounding them seriously. . . .
Arad, p 177A prisoner at “Treblinka I” described what he saw:The spring winds brought with them the smell of burning bodies from the nearby extermination camp. We breathed in the stench of smoldering corpses We heard the clatter of the excavators for days and nights on end…. At night we gazed at skies red from the flames. Sometimes you could also see tongues of flame rising into the night…
Arad, p 174SS Oberscharführer Heinrich Matthes, the commander of the “extermination area” in Treblinka, testified:At that time SS Oberscharführer or Hauptscharführer [Herbert] Floss, who, as I assume, was previously in another extermination camp, arrived. He was in charge of the arrangements for cremating the corpses. The cremation took place in such a way that railway lines and concrete blocks were placed together. The corpses were piled on these rails. Brushwood was put under the rails. The wood was doused with petrol. In that way not only the newly accumulated corpses were cremated, but also those taken out from the graves.