home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky alt.revisionism:871 soc.history:10548
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!emory!gatech!destroyer!cs.ubc.ca!mala.bc.ca!oneb!kmcvay
- Newsgroups: alt.revisionism,soc.history
- Subject: LEST WE FORGET: Filip Muller's Testimony (Auschwitz)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan05.130104.24526@oneb.almanac.bc.ca>
- From: kmcvay@oneb.almanac.bc.ca (Ken Mcvay)
- Date: Tue, 05 Jan 93 13:01:04 GMT
- Reply-To: kmcvay@oneb.almanac.bc.ca
- Followup-To: alt.revisionism
- Organization: The Old Frog's Almanac, Vancouver Island, CANADA
- Keywords: Blobel,Muller,Auschwitz
- File: /u/pd0/text.holocaust/deathcamp.03
- Lines: 103
-
- From the testimony of Filip Muller, an Auschwitz survivor, Konnilyn Feig
- reports the following account in "Hitler's Death Camps":
-
- Filip Muller, a young Slovakian, arrived early in Auschwitz -- April
- 1942 -- and survived! He did so, however, because of his forced work
- assignment as a stoker in the Auschwitz crematorium and then as a jack-of-
- all-trades in the Birkenau extermination plant squad, the Sonderkommando.
- His descriptions of the facilities and of the process are the most precise
- and chilling accounts we have. In the antiquated Auschwitz crematorium
- the procedure was remindful of the Stone Age. The stokers dragged the
- bodies across the floor to the ovens. A main rail track ran across the
- room, with six branch tracks leading to the six ovens:
-
- On the main track was a turn-table which enabled a truck to be
- moved onto the branch tracks. The cast-iron truck had a box-
- shaped superstructure made of sheet metal, with an overall
- height and width of just under 1 metre. It was about 80
- centimetres long. An iron hand-rail went right across it's
- entire width at the back. A loading platform made of strong
- sheet metal and not quite 2 metres long jutted out in the front;
- its side walls were 12 to 15 centimetres high. Open at the
- front, the platform was not quite as wide as the mouth of the
- oven so that it fitted easily into the muffle. On the platform
- there was also a box-shaped pusher made of sheet metal, higher
- than the side walls of the platform and rounded off at the top.
-
- The stokers brought a truck to the branch rail, poured water on the
- truck to keep it cool, and loaded three corpses on it.
-
- Now the time had come to open the oven door. Immediately one
- was overcome by the fierce heat wich rushed out. When the
- wooden prop had been removed, two men took hold of the front end
- of the platform on either side pulling it right up to the oven.
- Simultaneously two men pushed the truck from behind, thus
- forcing the platform into the oven. The two who had been doing
- the carrying in front, having menwhile stepped back a few steps,
- now braced themselves against the hand-rail while giving the
- pusher a vigorous shove with one leg. In this way they helped
- complete the job of getting the corpses inside the oven.
-
- While the corpses burned, the stokers stripped the waiting bodies. At
- the most fifty-four bodies could be cremated in one hour. The continuous
- overloading and operation of the ovens caused the inner fire bricks to
- crumble. The staff built a new modern chimney in the summer of 1942. But
- it soon evidenced crumbling; and the extermination process, never very
- effective, began to disintegrate. Himmler soon became dissatisfied. The
- process moved too slowly; the stench contaminated the surrounding
- countyside at night; and the red sky over Auschwitz could be seen for
- miles.[11]
-
- The gassing process generated enormous piles of corpses, and the number
- grew daily. The small crematorium could not cope, so the squads buried
- the corpses in mass graves at Birkenau woods. Although the corpses were
- covered with chlorine, lime, and earth, after a few months the inevitable
- decomposition began to poison the air, causing an intolerable stench
- throughout the entire neighborhood. Doctors found deadly bacteria in
- springs and wells, and predicted serious epidemics. Experts at the
- fisheries began to complain that the fish in the ponds in the vicinity
- were dying, which they attributed to the pollution of the ground water
- through cadaveric poison. The bodies, rotting under the summer sun,
- swelled up and a brownish red mass began to seep through the cracksto the
- surface. Quick action had to be taken.
-
- Colonel Blobel arrived from Eichmann's office with Himmler's orders that
- all bodies be exhumed and burned and the ashes removed. Working in two
- shifts, the prisoners dug up the 50,000 decaying corpses, took them away
- on trucks, and burned them -- first on wooden pyres, 2,000 at a time, and
- later in pits. The fires raged day and night until December 1942 when the
- anti-aircraft defence service protested because the fires could be seen
- for great distances. Himmler also found fault with the process because
- open-pyre burning could hardly be kept a secret. therefore the top SS
- bureaucracy became awary of the vital need in the future for an efficient
- process of final body disposal.
-
- [11]Filip Muller, Eyewitness Auschwitz, New York: Stein and Day, 1979, 14-15
-
- Extracted From---------------------------------------------------
- "Hitler's Death Camps" by Konnilyn G. Feig LOC D810.J4 F36 1981
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- A recent copy of our Almanac Holocaust files may be obtained via anonymous
- ftp from menora.weizmann.ac.il, as /pub/texts/lest.we.forget/oneb-txt.tar.Z
- - If you do not have ftp access, I'd be happy to send the collection to you
- as uuencoded email. Please specify *.ZIP or compressed tar format.
-
- Individual files are now available via listserv. Send your request to:
- listserv@oneb.almanac.bc.ca, and include the single word 'index' for a list
- of available articles.
-
- For individual files, use the 'get' command, and the archive flag
- 'holocaust' to have them mailed to you..
-
- Example: get holocaust <filename>
- get holocaust b-cpu.faq
- get holocaust irving.canada
-
- For a file list, try "index holocaust"
-
- --
- The Old Frog's Almanac - Public Access UseNet for Central Vancouver Island
- (604) 245-3205 (v32) (604) 245-4366 (2400x4) SCO XENIX 2.3.2 GT
- Ladysmith, British Columbia, CANADA. Just south of Tupperware Central...
- Information is power - get connected
-