No, the main issue for YOU is whether those gassings or cremations happened. I've stated from the very beginning, 'what difference does it make?" and you have been unable to answer the question.
to me if 6 million people died at the hands of the Nazis in ways that included gassing, cremation, shooting, starvation, exposure to typhus, ( I do hope you are aware that sending someone to a camp with a typhus epidemic is tantamount to deliberate murder) is just as bad as if
4 million people died at the hnads of the Nazis in ways that included, shooting, starvation, starvation, exposure to typhus etc.
I keep asking you what difference it makes to you and you seem to be suggesting that it's a different thing completely.
Also. You might not be aware of the Halakhah
http://www.jewfaq.org/halakhah.htm
This would also contribute to the importance of researching the people who had survived, the methods of death etc, in ways that were slightly different than other war atrocities. Basically this would have to do with a woman who had been in the camp and thought that her husband had died.
Back then you could sort of make an exception if a man remarried after the Holocaust and later found out that their wife was actually still alive.
However, if a woman remarried and then her husband turned up still alive, then she was considered to have committed adultery. In addition any child she had with the new husband were now considered "bastards' and according to the law a bastard could only marry a bastard. So for this reason it was very important to determine who died in the camp.
It would be very bad to suggest that someone had died and then to have them turn up later.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0870682962/ref=dp_olp_0?ie=UTF8&redirect=true&condition=all
You might want to read up on it. I would wager you have never even heard of this before.