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- Newsgroups: alt.revisionism,soc.history
- Subject: Holocaust Almanac: Auschwitz - The Death Factory
- Message-ID: <1993Jan07.130105.22036@oneb.almanac.bc.ca>
- From: kmcvay@oneb.almanac.bc.ca (Ken Mcvay)
- Date: Thu, 07 Jan 93 13:01:05 GMT
- Followup-To: alt.revisionism
- Organization: The Old Frog's Almanac, Vancouver Island, CANADA
- Keywords: Auschwitz,Zyclon
- File: /u/pd0/text.holocaust/auschwitz.01
- Lines: 235
-
- THE EXTERMINATION FACTORY - AUSCHWITZ
-
- The extermination plant with the most advanced design anywhere in the
- world consisted of two large crematoria/gas chambers and two smaller ones.
- Crematoria Four and Five were built on the surface of the ground.
- Crematoria Two and Three had subteranian gas chambers and reception areas.
- They were about 102 meters long by 51 meters across. The basement
- consisted of two main rooms -- the undressing area, which also served as a
- mortuary, and a gas chamber. Victims climbed down the steps into the
- basement. Those who could not walk were pushed down a concrete slide.
- The gas chamber, about 225 square meters, looked like a large communal
- bathroom with shower heads:
-
- The Zyclon B gas crystals were inserted through openings into
- the hollow pillars made of sheet metal. They were perforated at
- regualr intervals and inside them a spiral ran from top to
- bottom in order to ensure as even a distribution of the granular
- crystals as possible. Mounted on the ceiling was a large number
- of dummy showers made of metal.
-
- The largest room in the factory, the changing chambers, accommodated 1,000
- people. Notices throughout the room contributed to a "cunning . . . and
- clumsy deception" -- telling victims they were in disinfection rooms,
- urging clenliness, reminding them to remember their clothing hook
- number.[39]
- The extermination plant contained a hair-drying loft run by fifteen
- Orthodox Jews. Spread over the floor, noticed Muller from the
- extermination staff, was women's hair of every color:
-
- Washing lines were strung across the room. Pegged on these
- lines like wet washing were further batches of hair which had
- first been washed in a solution of ammonium chloride. When the
- hair was nearly dry, it was spread on the warm floor to finish
- off. Finally it was combed out by prisoners and put into paper
- bags.[40]
-
- The SS set up a gold-melting room in the plant. There two dental
- technicians soaked the teeth for hours in acid to remove bone and flesh,
- and used a blowtorch to melt the gold into molds. They produced as much
- as 5 to 10 kilos a day.
- As in Treblinka, the stoking gangs sorted out the bodies into
- combustability catagories: strong men, women, children, and Mussulmans.
- The SS staff had performed earlier experiments to find ways to economize
- on fuel -- with the help of Topf and Sons, civilian experts:
-
- In the course of these experiments corpses were selected
- according to different criteria and the cremated. Thus the
- corpses of two Mussulmans were cremated together with those of
- two children or the bodies of two well-nourished men together
- with that of an emaciated woman, each load consisting of three,
- or sometimes, four bodies. Members of these groups were
- especially interested in the amount of coke required to burn
- corpses of any particular catagory, and in the time it took to
- cremate them. During these macabre experiments different kinds
- of coke were used and the results carefully recorded.
- Afterwards, all corpses were divided into the above-mentioned
- catagories, the criterion being the amount of coke required to
- reduce them to ashes. Thus it was decreed that the most
- economical and fuel-saving procedure would be to burn the bodies
- of a well-nourished man and an emaciated woman, or vice versa,
- together with that of a child, because, as the experiments had
- established, in this combination, once they had caught fire, the
- dead would continue to burn without any further coke being
- required.[41]
-
-
- As early as June 13, 1943, all was not well with the new installation.
- The Central SS Construction Management of Auschwitz sent a letter to a
- German equipment firm urging the completion of carpentry work in the new
- crematoria. The chief requested the delivery without delay of the doors
- for the crematoria, "which [are] urgently needed for the execution of the
- special measures; otherwise, the progress of the construction will be
- jeopardized." In addition, he demanded the completion of the windows for
- the reception building. If the carpentry work could not be done, building
- operations would have to be suspended for the winter. Eventually the
- ovens seemed to fall apart. Crematorium Four failed completely after a
- short time and Crematoria Five had to be shut down repeatedly.[42]
- The plans for the crematoria have been preserved by an architect who
- stole them from the Birkenau plant. The one-story buildings looked like
- large bakeries with steep roofs and dormer windows. The underground gas
- chambers rose 51 centimeters above the ground to form a grassy terrace.
- No one would know at first glance what they were. Crematoria Two and
- Three were close to the camp and visible. Pine trees and birches hid
- crematoria Four and Five. Around the crematoria lay large piles of wood
- for burning the corpses in the nearby pits. All chambers had doors with
- thick observation windows. In 1942 and 1943 alone those chambers used 27
- tons of Cyclone B. The gas chambers and the crematoria of Auschwitz were
- called "special installations," "bath houses," and "corpse cellars."[43]
- Each day the trains rolled into the camp through the passageway
- constructed in the far gate, down one of three tracks to the selection
- platform. As they fell out of the trains, the victims were sent one way
- or another, with tearful prting scenes. The procession moved to the
- crematoria yard where the SS told the Jews they were going to take
- disinfection baths. An orchestra of attractive women played gay tunes
- from operas and light marches. Then to the dressing room or reception
- center with numbered clothing pegs drivin into the walls. The SS ordered
- the victims to undress and to remember their numbers. Sometimes they gave
- them towels. Then the SS drove the victims through the corridor to the
- heated gas chamber. The heating was provided not for the comfort of the
- prisoners but to create a better setting for the evaporation of gas. The
- gas squads packed the 2,000 victims into the room. From the ceiling hung
- imitation shower heads. The doors were closed, the air was pumped out,
- and the gas poured in. Cyclone B, or hydrogen cyanide, is a very
- poisonous gas that causes death by internal suffocation. In sufficient
- concentrations, it causes death almost immediately. But the SS did not
- bother to calculate the proper quantities, so death took anywhere from
- three to twenty minutes. While the victims were dying, the SS witched
- through the peepholes.
- When they opened the doors, they found the victims in half-sitiing
- positions in a towerlike pile. Most were pink, others were covered with
- green spots. Some had foam on their lips, while others bleeding from the
- nose. Many had their eyes open. The majority were packed near the doors.
- The squads in special clothing moved in with hooks to pull the bodies off
- of each other.
- The SS physicians and scientists monitored the selection and the
- gassing, watching the procedure through the special airtight door. The
- doors could not be opened until the doctor gave the sign that all victims
- were dead. The doctors assumed their monitoring of the killings on a
- rotating basis.[44]
- Two German firms, Tesch/Stabenow and Degesch, produced Cyclone B gas
- after they acquired the patent from Farben. Tesch supplied two tons a
- month, and Degesch three quarters of a ton. The firms that produced the
- gas already had extensive experience in fumigation. "In short, this
- industry used very powerful gases to exterminate rodents and insects in
- enclosed spaces; that it should now have become involved in an operation
- to kill off Jews by the hundreds of thousands is not mere accident."[45]
- Afetr the war the directors of the firms insisted that they had sold their
- products for fumigation purposes and did not know they were being used on
- humans. But the prosecutors found letters from Tesch not only offering to
- supply the gas crystals but also advising how to use the ventilating and
- heating equipment. Hoss testified that the Tesch directors could not help
- but know of the use for their product because they sold him enough to
- annihilate two million people. Two Tesch partners were sentanced to death
- in 1946 and hanged. The director of Degesch recieved five years in
- prison.
- The scientifically planned crematoria should have been able to handle
- the total project, but they could not. The whole complex had forty-six
- retorts, each with the capacity for three to five persons. The burning in
- a retort lasted about half an hour. It took an hour a day to clean them
- out. Thus it was theoretically possible to cremate about 12,000 corpses
- in twenty four hours or 4,380,000 a year. But the well-constructed
- crematoria fell far behind at a number of camps, and especially at
- Aschwitz in 1944. In August the total cremation reached a peak one day of
- 24,000, but still a bottleneck occurred. Camp authorities needed an
- economic and fast method of corpse disposal, so they again dug six huge
- pits beside Crematorium Five and reopened old pits in the wood.
- Thus, late in 1944, pit burning became the cheif method of corpse
- disposal. The pits had indentations at one end from which human fat
- drained off. To keep the pits burning, the stokers poured oil, alcohol,
- and large quantities of boiling human fat over the bodies:
-
- The sizzling fat was scooped out with buckets on a long curved
- rod and poured all over the pit causing flames to leap up amid
- much crackling and hissing. . . . The air reeked of oil, fat,
- benzole and burnt flesh.
-
- Muller described the ghastly scene:
-
- The corpses in the pit looked as if they had been chained
- together. Tounges of a thousand tiny blue-red flames were
- licking at them. The fire grew fiercer and flames leapt higher
- and heigher. Under the ever-increasing heat a few of the dead
- began to stir, writhing as though with some unbearable pain,
- arms and legs straining in slow motion, and even their bodies
- streightening up a little, hesitant and with difficulty, almost
- as if with their last strength they were trying to rebel against
- their doom. Eventually the fire became so fierce that the
- corpses were enveloped by flames. Blisters which had formed on
- their skin burst one by one. Almost every corpse was covered
- with black scorch marks and glistening as if it had been
- greased. The searing heat had burst open their bellies: there
- was the violent hissing and sputtering of frying in great heat.
- Boiling fat flowed into the pans on either side of the pit.
- Fanned by the wind, the flames, dark-red before, now took on a
- fiery white hue: the corpses were burning so fiercely that they
- were consumed by their own heat. The process of incineraton
- took five to six hours. What was left barely filled a third of
- the pit. The shiny whitish-grey surface was strewn with
- countless skulls.[46]
-
- At intervals, flamethrowers were brought in to destroy the rotten
- remains. In the center of Nazi industrial might it was the open pits that
- finally broke the bottleneck of bodies: a technique from ancient times.
- Burning that many bodies produced an enormous quantity of ashes. To
- finish the task, the labor squad cooled the ashes with water, shoveled out
- the ashes, piled them in heaps, removed remaining bones and limbs with
- special tools, reburnt the limbs, pulverized the ashes, and buried them in
- pits or threw them into the marshes. Later they threw the ashes into the
- Vistula and Solo rivers. A small, carefully siften quatity was kept in a
- shed. Sometimes families were notified of the death of their loved ones
- and in return for money they would recieve urns filled with the ashes.[47]
-
- [39] Muller, Eyewitness Auschwitz, 60-61; Serge Klarsfield, The Holocaust
- and Neo-Nazi Mythomania, 109-119
- [40] Muller, Eyewitness Auschwitz, 65
- [41] Ibid, 99-100
- [42] TWC V:624
- [43] Between 1945 and 1962 Polish officials found five manuscripts written
- by Sonderkommando members befor etheir deaths. The published
- manuscripts and documents relate to the specific process of
- extermination at Birkenau, and provide detailed descriptions of the
- crematoria and gas chambers.
- [44] Auschwitz, Vol I, Pt. I, 61.
- [45] Hilberg, 567. Commandant of Auschwitz (London: Weidenfeld and
- Nicholson, 1959)
- [46] Naumann, Auschwitz, 267; and Muller, Eyewitness Auschwitz, 136-137
- [47] Muller, Eyewitness Auschwitz, 138-139.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- "Hitler's Death Camps" by Konnilyn G. Feig LOC D810.J4 F36 1981
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
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-
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-
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