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The "Gassed" People of Auschwitz: Pressac's New Revisions
Regarding Le macchine dello sterminio Auschwitz 1941-1945;
the Italian book purporting to be a translation of the original French book
by Jean-Claude Pressac, Les Crematoires d'Auschwitz:
La machinerie du meuertre de masse.
by Carlo Mattogno
(1) The New Thesis of Jean-Claude Pressac:
In the section headed The Extermination of Hungarian Jews in our study,
Auschwitz: The End of a Legend (pp. 31-32), we demonstrated that
the Pressac thesis maintaining mass extermination of Hungarian Jews at Auschwitz
is historically unfounded based upon two arguments:
- The material impossibility of carrying out actual cadaver- cremations
of such alleged masses of homicidally gassed persons.
and:
- The Allied aerial reconnaissance photographs of 31 May 1944 which
do not reveal any extermination activity.
Our reasoning must have impressed Pressac (1)
because now he presents a radical revision of his thesis on pages 169 to
173 of Le macchine dello sterminio,(2) which does not
purport to be a revised edition, but merely that it is supposed to be an
Italian language translation of his original French language book, Les
CrÈmatoires d'Auschwitz: La machinerie du meuertre de masse. But it
IS different. Realizing the material impossibility of an extermination of
292,000 Hungarian Jews, as he had previously maintained, Pressac now has
sought to salvage the extermination principle by reducing the number of
Jews deported to Auschwitz from Hungary. In this regard, he affirms as follows:
The reports of Lieutenant Colonel
Laszlo Ferenczy of the Hungarian Police indicate that from 15 May to
8 July 1944, 148 convoys containing 483,000 (3) Jews were
deported from Hungary with an average of 3,000 persons per convoy. The
scheduled destination: Auschwitz, according to a telegram of 24 April
to German diplomat Edmund Veesenmayer. Routinely mentioned as destinations
of the Hungarian Jews: labor camps situated within the territory of
the Reich and subject to the authority of the Reichsf¸hrer SS (according
to Ritter); Upper Silesia, and the General Gouvernement (according to
Eberhard von Thadden).
We would like to point out that the reports of Lieutenant Colonel Laszlo
Ferenczy refer to deportation of 434,351 Jews in 147 trains, (4)
not of 438,000 in 148 trains.
Then Pressac outlines the following status quaestionis [position]:
In the first Calendar
of Auschwitz which Danuta Czech published in 1964, are recorded 91 convoys
from Hungary which had reached Auschwitz between 2 May and 18 October
1944 (limit dates).
It was estimated then that the 480,000 (5) deportees indicated
by Ferenczy had actually arrived at Auschwitz, but that the number of
convoys was less, and their load greater (4,800 per train). The Auschwitz
Museum prefers not to give an explanation as to the gap between the
two durations of deportations of approximately two months according
to Ferenczy, compared to four months claimed by them [the Auschwitz
Museum]. Since only about 28,000 Jews, both men and women, were registered
at Auschwitz, the other 410,000 were considered homicidally gassed;
signifying that 94% of the deportees were liquidated upon arrival, and
that only 6% were selected as capable for work (percentages offered
by researcher G. Wellers in 1983). For 25 years these figures have been
spread around the world and accepted as certainties.
In the 2nd Kalendarium by Danuta Czech published by Rohwolt in
1989, no longer is there any more mention of 53 Hungarian convoys arriving
at Auschwitz between 2 May and 11 July 1944. About 40 convoys have disappeared.
This "evaporation" explains with a misconception, the so-called "selection"
among the Hungarian Jews at Auschwitz, which is revealed from documents
discovered in the Arolsen Center.
The reception of a convoy at Birkenau proceeded as follows: the unloading
of arrivees at the "ramp"; the separation into two columns, one of women
and children; the other of men. Selection was carried out by one or
two SS medical doctors functioning near the center of the platform after
the two columns were divided into four columns: two of women and children,
and two of men. Those unable to work went ahead in function of availability
toward Crematories II, III, or V, and [were] liquidated. The able men
and women were either immediately registered and interned in Auschwitz
(especially the men); or transferred as soon as possible to other camps
of the Reich without being registered; or finally-for the men and the
women- thrust into the camp sectors of Birkenau, the BIII (Durchgangslager)
and the BIIc (camp of the Hungarian Jews); always without being registered.
Whenever the Auschwitz work office needed manpower, or received a request
from the outside, the select registered workers were directed to the
work Kommandos of the camp or elsewhere, from the Jews of BIII and BIIc.
It is these internal and external transfers that took place after 11
July (the end of deportations of Hungarians to Auschwitz), which caused
the erroneous belief that because of registration, the trains were still
arriving from Hungary. (pp. 170, 171).
(2) The Pressac Basis for his New Thesis:
In the first German edition of the Auschwitz Kalendarium (6)
there are 91 convoys of Jews coming from Hungary between 2 May and 18 October
1944, which resulted in a total registration of 29,159 people. (7)
As far as the destiny of the non-registered people, the Kalendarium
invariably states: "Die <brigen wurden vergast" (the remaining were gassed).
(8)
In his Essai de dÈtermination du nombre de morts au camp
d'Auschwitz, (9) Georges Wellers attempted to present the number
of deaths at Auschwitz based upon the Kalendarium of Auschwitz. Dealing
with the case of Hungary, he stated that at Auschwitz, a total of 437,402
(10) Jews were deported to Auschwitz in 87 trains with an
approximate average of 5,028 persons in each train. Deducting from the total
deportees the number of those registered, which he calculated as 27,758,
Wellers concluded that 409,640 Hungarian Jews were homicidally gassed at
Auschwitz. (11)
In our critique of Wellers' study, we noticed a striking
contradiction in the Auschwitz Kalendarium regarding deportation
of the Hungarian Jews: According to Motion 112 of the Eichmann trial in
Jerusalem, (based upon the report of Lieutenant Colonel Laszlo Ferenczy
dated 9 July 1944), from the middle of May, until 8 July 1944, there were
434,351 Jews deported from Hungary in 147 trains, (12) but
the Kalendarium of Auschwitz records only 91 transports, and among
those were 33 transports after 11 July 1944, which is the specific date
of the arrival of the last train which left Hungary.
The conclusion was clear: only 58 transports recorded in
the Auschwitz Kalendarium arrived up to 11 July 1944, and the other
33 transports were false. (13) Before reaching this conclusion,
we presented this issue to the major world institutes specializing in the
study of the Holocaust. No one could solve this contradiction. On 11 April
1987, when the above-referenced study had already been published, the Auschwitz
Museum answered us as follows:
1) Part of the Hungarian Jews arriving at Auschwitz had
been sent, without registering, to the so-called Depot Lager (deposit
camp) or Durchgangslager (transit camp) from where, later on, some
of them had been registered and admitted to the camp. So the registrations
of the Auschwitz Kalendarium after 11 July 1944 do not report the
convoys from Hungary, but rather only those of the prisoners coming from
the Durchgangslager.
2) Registration of prisoners coming from Hungary were done
cumulatively; that is, a registration can refer to more than one convoy
which arrived on the same day. This explanation, which is acceptable to
us, was adopted two years later by Danuta Czech in the second German language
edition of the Auschwitz Kalendarium (14) which states that
part of the Hungarian Jews deported to Auschwitz were housed in sectors
BIIe, BIIc and BIII in Birkenau, called "Durchgangslager KL Auschwitz II"
in the documents. (15) Registrations regarding the Hungarian
Jews are moreover, often introduced by the formula "Aus den Transporten
des RSHA aus Ungarn..." (from convoys of the RSHA from Hungary), (16)
by which Danuta Czech means that the relative registration of prisoners
is referred to more than one convoy.
It is quite evident that Jean-Claude Pressac has basically
adopted our reasoning of 1987. (17)
(3) The Contradiction of Pressac's New Thesis:
The conclusion that Jean-Claude Pressac draws from the preceding, is
that only 53 convoys of Jews from Hungary arrived at Auschwitz; convoys
that usually consisted of an average of 3,000 people each, which corresponds
to a total of (53 ¥ 3,000 =) 159,000 deportees; rounded off to 160,000 deportees
(p.173).
In open contradiction with this, Pressac writes:
Summing it up, the only reliable
figures available, although lacunose [with gaps], relating to Hungarian
male and female work-capable Jews, are:
- The number of those registered at Auschwitz: 28,000
- The number of those transferred to the Reich camps: approximately
25,000 (incomplete figures).
- The number of female Hungarian Jews transferred to Stutthof:
from 20,000 to 30,000 (as the count of its card-index at Yad Vashem
has not yet been completed)
Therefore a total of approximately 80,000 people (which
corresponds to approximately 240,000 who arrived)" (p.171).
Here Pressac applies the "1/3 to 2/3 rule," (18) considering
these 80,000 detainees able to work as one-third of the total of the deportees,
which is then set at 240,000 people. Consequently, the trains arriving from
Hungary contained an average of (240,000 / 53) = 4,528 people each. But
at the same time, Pressac states in a polemical way disagreeing with F.Piper,
that each convoy had " a maximum capacity of 3,000 " people, (p.172).
Thus Pressac states that the total capacity of the convoys
were at the same time 3,000 and 4,528 people, and that the proportion of
people able to work was at the same time, one-third and one-half, (80,000
able to work, out of 160,000 deportees).
Pressac moreover distorts the data from the Auschwitz
Kalendarium (1989): For the period of 2 May to 11 July, it contains
in fact the indication of 55, (not 53) registrations, not transportations
of Hungarian Jews. And every registration refers explicitly or implicitly
to more than one convoy. So for example, the 2 May registration reports
two convoys; the one dated 16 May reports three convoys. Eight more registrations
have the formula "aus den Trasporten...", so they relate to multiple convoys.
The consequence of this is that the number of the convoys is necessarily
larger than the number of the registrations.
We also note that in Les crÈmatoires d'Auschwitz,
the number of female Hungarian Jews transferred from Auschwitz to Stutthof
is not 20,000 to 30,000, but 40,000 to 50,000 (p.147). What about the remaining/
missing 20,000 female Jews?
The Pressac thesis implies another contradiction; and a
more striking one: If, in fact, all work-disabled Hungarian Jews were homicidally
gassed, and if it is true that work-restricted Hungarian Jews amounted to
two-thirds of the total deportees, then approximately 292,000 were homicidally
gassed. But if they homicidally gassed 80,000 or 160,000 work-disabled at
Auschwitz, then just where were the remaining 212,000 or 132,000 work-impaired
Hungarian Jews, homicidally gassed? Or putting it in another way, if 212,000
or 132,000 work-disabled Hungarian Jews who, according to Pressac, did not
go through Auschwitz and were not homicidally gassed; then why would 80,000
or 160,000 work-disabled people have been deported to Auschwitz, and homicidally
gassed?
(4) Auschwitz: A Transit Camp for the Hungarian Jews
Let's get down to the matter: To where were the Hungarian
Jews deported?
It is undoubtedly true that some German documents show a
destination other than Auschwitz for Hungarian Jews. For example, a 27 October
1944 note by Horst Wagner (Chief of the section " Inland " of the Foreign
Ministry of the Reich) states that out of approximately 900,000 Jews who
were in Hungary, 437,402 had been "taken to the eastern territories to be
used for work." (19) Other documents mention Germany, the
General Gouvernate and Upper Silesia, as the final destination. Nevertheless,
this does not preclude that these deportees had gone first through Auschwitz
as a transit and clearing camp; and more than that, some documents affirm
that quite clearly. The report by Eberhard von Thadden (Chief of the section
"Inland II" of the Foreign Ministry of the Reich), dated 26 May 1946, states
that from the 15th to the 24th of May 1944, they had deported from Hungary
to the General Gouvernate, 116,000 Jews, at a rate of 12,000 to 14,000 per
day, (20) but he adds:
Nach den bisherigen Feststellungen
sind etwa 1/3 der abtransportierten Juden arbeitseinsatzfhig. Sie werden
sofort nach Eintreffen im Sammellager Auschwitz auf die Dieststellen
von Gauleiter Sauckel, die OT usw. verteilt. [According to the verifications
done up to now, approximately one-third of the deported Jews are able
to work. After arriving at the gathering camp in Auschwitz, they are
assigned to the services of Gauleiter Sauckel of the Todt Organization,
etc.] (21)
The report by Lieutenant Colonel Laszlo Ferenczy of 29 May
1944, is still more explicit:
The German Security Police proposes,
and it is their clear intent, that the Jews bring with themselves provisions
for at least five days for the duration of their transport-since upon
their arrival at Auschwitz, after selection has taken place, they are
sent immediately (azonnal) on trains (vonatokkal) to the
various work locations. (22) (azonnal = immediately,
at once)
This report underlines that, from the beginning of these deportations until
midnight of 28 May 1944, there were 184,049 Hungarian Jews deported in 58
trains, and they all went through Auschwitz.
(5) Cremation Capacity at Birkenau
According to Jean-Claude Pressac, at the end of May 1944, the exterminating
capacity of the installations at Birkenau was as follows:
Crematory II : only one
possible gassing cycle per day
1,000 per day
Crematory III:
1,000 per day
Crematory V: two possible gassing cycles per day, as the three
gas chamber block is ventilated, and the incineration takes place in
pits -3- [three pits].
1,000 to 2,000 per day
Bunker 2: no ventilated gas chamber and incineration in a
pit of 30 square meters and in another [pit] of 20 square meters.
300 per day
and so 3,300 per day, with the possibility of an extension to 4,300.
The Kalendarium ... indicates the arrival on 20 May (23)
of one convoy (an average of 3,000 people of whom 1,000 were able, and
2,000 were unable to work) and on 21 May of two convoys (6,000 people,
of whom 2,000 were able to work and 4,000 were unable). The photograph
taken on 21 May around 9 to 10 A.M. does not show more than six or seven
cars on the ramp. This indicates how neither one of the two convoys
had arrived (2 * circa 40 cars). Crematories II and III do not show
any smoke, while an incineration is taking place in one of the three
pits (3.5m * 15m) next to Crematory V, which corresponds to the end
of incineration on the eve [night before] of those who were unable to
work. The Kalendarium ... indicates with sufficient precision
that 2,100 work-capable persons were selected from the two convoys of
21 May. To destroy a maximum of 3,900 people per day was compatible
with the exterminating capacity of Birkenau (p.172).
To Pressac's argumentations, we counter with the following objections:
- The cremation capacity of 1,000 cadavers per day which Pressac attributes
to each one of Crematories II and III, is technically unfounded. The
maximum cremation capacity of these two plants was 360 cadavers per
day, each. (24)
- Pressac's affirmation concerning three "crematory pits" of 3.5 meters
by 15 meters each, in the courtyard of Crematory V (not supported in
any document) is in contrast with the declaration of Filip M¸ller,
(25) the most important witness on these "cremation pits",
who mentions five "cremation pits" measuring 40 or 50 meters by 8 meters.
(26) There are no traces
- Granted, but not accepted, that such pits had really existed; and
granted, but not accepted, that it is possible to accomplish a mass
cremation in "cremation pits", on what basis does Pressac declare that
their maximum cremation capacity was 2,000 cadavers per day? The only
possible basis would be Filip M¸ller's declaration. But in this case,
Pressac's three "cremation pits" would have had a maximum cremation
capacity of 525 cadavers per day. (27)
- The Pressac contention concerning two "cremation pits" measuring
30 and 20 square meters in Bunker 2 ground, not supported by any document,
is in opposition to the declaration of the most important witness on
these "cremation pits", Miklos Nyiszli, who writes of two cremation
pits measuring 50 meters by 6 meters. (28) Even in this
case, Pressac has drastically reduced the area of the "cremation pits"
from 600 square meters to 50 square meters.
Assuming also in this case, a basis for Filip M¸ller's
declaration, these two "cremation pits" would have been able to cremate
a maximum of [(1,200 / 360 ) * 50 =] approximately 170 cadavers per
day.
In conclusion, the systems, or incineration plants stated
by Pressac, if the "cremation pits" had existed, would have had a maximum
cremation capacity of 1,400 cadavers per day, not 4,300.
6) Number of Hungarian Jews who arrived at Auschwitz in May 1944.
The report of Lieutenant Colonel Laszlo Ferenczy dated 29 May 1944 states
that from the beginning of the deportation until midnight on 28 May 1944,
there were 184,049 Jews deported to Auschwitz from Hungary in 58 trains.
(29) As the first convoys had left on 15 May, the deportation
took place within fourteen days. If we apply Pressac's "rule", out of 184,049
deportees, approximately 122,700 persons were unable to work, and as such
were homicidally gassed. Since the first convoys which had left on 15 May
arrived at Auschwitz on 17 May, (30) and if the duration of
the journey was two days, then 184,049 deported Hungarian Jews arrived at
Auschwitz within a period of 14 days, between 17 May and 30 May. The average
number of alleged homicidally gassed people would then be (122,700 / 14
=) 8,764 per day. If, on the contrary, the last deportations arrived at
Auschwitz on 31 May, the average number of presumed homicidally gassed persons,
would be 8,180 per day.
(7) The Aerial Reconnaissance Photographs of 31 May 1944:
Jean-Claude Pressac bases his case on three presuppositions:
- On 30 May, 1944, only one convoy of Hungarian Jews arrived at Birkenau
(1,000 able and 2,000 unable to work). On 31 May, two convoys arrived
(2,000 able and 4,000 unable to work).
- The photographs taken on 31 May show only six or seven cars on the
ramp, so the above-mentioned convoys had not yet arrived.
- Aerial reconnaissance photographs show that a cremation is taking
place in one of the three pits measuring 3.5 by 15 meters in the Crematory
V courtyard.
Let's analyze these presuppositions, one at a time:
a) The existing documents allow us to trace the deportation of
the Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz at the end of May 1944, according to the
following table:
DATE................................... 25 May 1944
Number of Deportees.........................138,870(31)
Total Number of Trains...........................44
Partial Number of Deportees......................./
Average Daily Number of Deportees................./
Partial Number of Trains........................../
DATE................................... 28 May 1944
Number of Deportees.........................184,049(32)
Total Number of Trains...........................58
Partial Number of Deportees..................45,179
Average Daily Number of Deportees............15,060
Partial Number of Trains.........................14
DATE................................... 31 May 1944
Number of Deportees.........................217,236(33)
Total Number of Trains...........................69
Partial Number of Deportees..................33,187
Average Daily Number of Deportees............11,062
Partial Number of Trains.........................11
As for the Hungarian Jews who arrived at Auschwitz on 31 May 1944, there
are two possibilities:
- If the journey lasted from one to three days, on 31 May, three or
four convoys arrived at Auschwitz which had departed on May 28, 29,
or 30; so the number of deportees is 9,051 (34) (three
convoys) or 12,068 (35) (four convoys).
- If the journey lasted from four to six days (less probable hypothesis),
on 31 May, four or five convoys arrived, and they had departed on the
26th, 27th or 28th; so the number of the deportees calculates to 12,908
(36) (four convoys) or 16,135 (37) (five
convoys).
As to the 29th, 30th, and 31st of May, a total of eleven
convoys had left Hungary; three on one day, and four on the other two days.
With the hypothesis that the duration of the journey has been one or three
days, if on 31 May, three convoys arrived (9,051 deportees); on 30 May,
four arrived (12,908 deportees), and vice-versa. In the hypothesis that
the journey lasted more than three days, the number of deportee arrivals
on 30 May and on 31 May would be much bigger.
In conclusion, either on 30 May approximately 12,900 deportees
arrived and on 31 May approximately 9,050 arrived; or on 30 May approximately
9,050 deportees arrived and on 31 May approximately 12,900 arrived.
b) After clearing this point, we go to Pressac's second presupposition.
He states that the two aerial photographs of 31 May 1944 were taken at around
9 to 10 A.M., which is very probable because the shadows of the chimneys
of the crematories face North-West with a 315 degree angle. Also the presence
of seven cars on the Birkenau ramp is an exact observation (but on the old
ramp there are at least eight trains, and nine or ten trains in the Auschwitz
station). But all this does not rule out that the convoys had arrived during
the night or early in the morning, and that they had already left. Let's
remember that according to Lieutenant Colonel Ferenczy, the convoys will
continue their journey just after assignment selection at the Birkenau ramp.
That problem is nevertheless not essential. The really serious
problems are the following:
- How would it have been technically possible to homicidally gas and
cremate 122,700 people in not more than fifteen days in facilities that
could have cremated no more than a maximum of (1,400 * 15 =) 21,000
cadavers?
- How could it have been technically possible to homicidally gas and
cremate no less than (9,050 * 2/3 =) 6,000 people on about the 30th
of May 1944 with facilities which in one day could just cremate a maximum
of 1,400 cadavers?
- Why in the aerial photographs of 31 May 1944, is there no trace
of cremation of the remaining (6,000 - 1,400 =) 4,600 cadavers?
- If the story of extermination were true, the Birkenau facilities
should have had a cremation capacity not less than 10,000 cadavers per
day (two-thirds of the deportees arrived at Auschwitz with convoys which
had left Hungary on 26, 27, and 28 May, 1944). So in the aerial photographs
of 31 May, the alleged "cremation pits" ought to be visible, with an
area of approximately 2,800 square meters (calculated according to the
declaration by Filip M¸ller). But there is no trace of them at all!
The small column of smoke rising from the courtyard near
Crematory V which appears in the aerial photographs of May 31, 1944 is consistent
with outside trash incineration in an open-air container where lower level
combustion air is able to enter; we know of no aerial photographic evidence
of pit incineration, where burning would have been very slow because of
poor air circulation.
c) And this brings us to Jean-Claude Pressac's last presupposition:
the presence, in those photographs, of three "cremation pits" measuring
3.5 ¥ 15 meters, and of one such pit in which a cremation is taking place.
Where did Pressac see these? We wait with confidence that he publish these
two pictures. But why did he not present them in his book Le macchine
dello sterminio? And with the exact indication of:
- three "cremation pits" of 52.5 square meters each;
- approximately 100 cubic meters of soil extracted from pits and piled
up next to each pit on an area at least equal to that of these alleged
pits;
- 250 to 500 tons of wood piled up as cadaver cremation fuel for the
cremation of the cadavers of the alleged homicidally gassed from 31
May; piles equal to approximately 550 to 1,100 cubic meters, and of
an area approximately 220 to 440 square meters (assuming the height
of a pile of 2.5 meters);
- the exact location of a "cremation pit" with smoke;
- the exact location of where there is a "cremation pit" of 30 square
meters, and another one of 20 square meters in the area of Bunker 2.
It is clear that we are challenging Jean-Claude Pressac.
THE STATISTICS BY JEAN-CLAUDE PRESSAC
In Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers, Jean-Claude
Pressac mentions 938,000 victims cremated in the Auschwitz-Birkenau installations,
distributed as we presented on page 28 in our critique, Auschwitz: The
End of a Legend. But in the Preface of Beate and Serge Klarsfeld
to the former work, they summed up the results of the article by Georges
Wellers previously id, Essai de dÈtermination du nombre de morts au camp
d'Auschwitz, which we summarize in the following table:
Total number of deportees 1,613,450 of whom 1,433,405 [were] Jews
Total dead...................1,471,595 of whom 1,352,980 [were]
Jews
Total gassed.................1,334,700 of whom 1,323,000 [were]
Jews. (38)
Pressac proposes the numbers 938,000 or 900,000 (39)
without any explanation. The only sure thing is that while for G. Wellers
the Hungarian Jews who were homicidally gassed numbered approximately 410,000,
for Pressac they are 200,000 to 250,000. (40) As a consequence
of this, the number of Jews who were gassed ought to be lowered to 1,113,000.
So just what is the basis for Pressac's calculations?
In Les crematoires d'Auschwitz (p.148), Pressac proposes
a new statistic on the basis of research by Franciszek Piper, (41)
but with a "correction" relative to the number of Polish Jews deported to
Auschwitz.
F. Piper states that the total of Jews deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau
was 1,095,190, (42) of whom, approximately 205,000 were registered
and the remaining 890,000 were unregistered. (43) The number
of Jews killed was a total of 960,000 of whom 95,000 were registered and
865,000 unregistered. (44)
Pressac starts with the total of deported Jews, who he rounds
off to 1,095,200 and reduces from 300,000 to 150,000 the number of Jews
deported from Poland. Besides that, he assumes that 118,000 Hungarian Jews
were transferred from Auschwitz Birkenau. In such a way, he has 827,200
deportees from whom he subtracts the registered 200,000, (45)
reaching a final count of 630,000 homicidally gassed (p.148).
He sums up the total of the victims in the following table
(p.148):
Non-registered gassed Jews...........................630,000
Registered detainees who died........................130,000
(Jews and non-Jews)
Soviet Prisoners of War...............................15,000
Total................................................775,000
The reason for the reduction of the number of Jews deported out of Poland
from 300,000 to 150,000 presented by Pressac has not any historical foundation,
but a technical one: He states that the number of the gassed indicated in
the Auschwitz Kalendarium in the first six days of August 1943 (convoys
from Bendsburg and Sosnowitz), an average of 4,000 per day, is excessive
because at that time only Crematories III and V were functioning with an
incinerating capacity of 1,500 cadavers per day; so the number of Jews for
each convoy has been " mal estimÈ " (estimated incorrectly) by the witnesses.
But on the contrary, it has been doubled because the percentage of the registered
deportees was 30% to 35% of the approximately 50,000 registered Polish Jews,
corresponding to approximately 150,000 deportees "soit une centaine de convois
de 1.500 personnes" (that is approximately one hundred convoys containing
1,500 people) (p.147).
According to the Auschwitz Kalendarium, during the
first six days of August 1943, from Bendsburg and Sosnowitz, 28,000 Jews
were deported to Auschwitz (approximately 5,800 of whom were registered,
and 22,200 homicidally gassed) in 12 convoys; an approximate average of
2,300 people per convoy. This number represents approximately 9% of the
total number of Polish Jews deported to Auschwitz according to F. Piper
(300,000). So Pressac erroneously attributes to the remaining 91%, the presumed
exaggeration of the number of Jews present in each convoy which would be
valid only for 9%. We also take note that in Pressac's calculation, the
number of alleged homicidally gassed Hungarian Jews, which in Auschwitz:
Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers was 200,000 to 250,000,
now becomes 320,000.
In Le macchine dello sterminio (p.173), Pressac reduces
even more the number of deportees and deceased. He starts out also in this
regard with the number of deportees indicated by F. Piper (1,095,190 or
1,095,200), from which he subtracts incorrectly 150,000 deportees from Poland,
just as in the previous case; but he also reduces from 438,000 to 240,000,
the number of Hungarian Jews deported to Auschwitz; thereby obtaining 667,200
to 747,200 deportees:
1,095,200 - 150,000 - (438,000 - 160,000) = 667,200;
1,095,200 - 150,000 - (438,000 - 240,000) = 747,200.
Jean-Claude Pressac rounds out these figures to 670,000
and 750,000, subtracting the 200,000 registered from them, he obtains 470,000
to 550,000 homicidally gassed Jews. He puts the total death count as follows:
Non-registered Jews who were gassed......470,000 to 550,000 -
Deceased registered Detainees.......................126,000 -
(Jews and non-Jews)
Soviet Prisoners of War..............................15,000 -
Miscellaneous (Gypsies etc.).........................20,000 -
Total....................................631,000 to 711,000
In the calculation of the total death count, Pressac does not take into
consideration Jewish detainees who were transferred to other concentration
camps. The Hungarian Jews transferred from the Durchgangslager must
be included in this category.
As we have seen, Pressac estimates that at least 80,000
Hungarian Jews escaped homicidal gassing; 28,000 of those registered at
Auschwitz, and 52,000 who were not registered and were transferred to other
camps. Those must be subtracted from the 670,000 to 750,000 alleged homicidally
gassed who were unregistered. So the Pressac number of alleged homicidally
gassed Jews would be between 418,000 to 498,000.
We also take note that Pressac has also changed once again
the number of alleged homicidally gassed Hungarian Jews, now putting it
at 80,000 to 160,000.
Before presenting our conclusion, we summarize in a synoptic
table, Jean-Claude Pressac regarding Jews he alleges were homicidally "gassed"
at Auschwitz:
Year 1989: 938,000
-of whom 200,000 to 250,000 were Hungarian Jews.
Year 1993: 630,000
- of whom 320,000 were Hungarian Jews.
Year 1994: 550,000
- of whom 80,000 to 160,000 to 470,000 were Hungarian Jews.
So, from 1989 to 1994, Jean-Claude Pressac has thus reduced
the number of homicidally gassed Jews by 50% from 938,000 to 470,000!
Our study, Auschwitz: The End of a Legend concludes
with the observation that since Jean-Claude Pressac wanted to study the
question of Auschwitz in a technical manner, he
had to accept revisionist methodology,
according to which, where testimony and technology disagree, it is technology
which prevails. Pressac has applied this principle by reducing the number
of alleged victims of alleged homicidal gassing, precisely because of
its incompatibility with the capacity (craftily inflated by him) of
the crematory ovens. In this manner, he has opened an irreparable leak
in traditional historiography, because technology reveals the material
impossibility of mass extermination at Auschwitz-Birkenau. If therefore,
Pressac wants to be coherent in his technical stance, all that remains
for him is to accept this conclusion. If he does not accept it, he can
only go backwards, declaring, in acceptance of that appeal of those
French historians, that one must not inquire as to how such alleged
mass extermination was technically possible (p.90).
In Le macchine dello sterminio, Jean-Claude Pressac has gone one
step further towards this conclusion. Pressac has understood that extermination
of the Hungarian Jews would have also been technically impossible on the
basis of the huge cremation capacity that he attributed to the Birkenau
facilities; but he did not want to draw the extreme consequences from such
an acknowledgment.
To pull himself out of trouble, he had only two ways out:
either increase cremation capacity, or diminish the number of deportees.
Pressac chose the second option.
The drastic reduction of deported Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz
has become such a tactical requirement for Jean-Claude Pressac, which cannot
be set aside; an unrenouncable way out; an illusory game by which he would
make the impossible possible.
Because Pressac's "revision" has no historical foundation,
but is merely tactical, his statistics-the instruments for his illusory
game-are inevitably arbitrary and unfounded.
From a strictly historiographical point of view, Jean-Claude
Pressac seems to be torn between two contradictory necessities: one being
the technical, which rationally pushes him to negation of extermination
of the Jews at Auschwitz, and the other being the dogmatic one about the
holocaustic religion, which fiercely opposes such denial.
It is difficult to predict which one of these two necessities
will prevail in the end, but Pressac's continual "revisions" gives us good
hope.
One thing is certain: If Jean-Claude Pressac wants to go
on - even by small steps - through the technical way in which he started,
we could expect at least more reductions in the numbers of homicidally "gassed"
people at Auschwitz.
NOTES
1. The study Auschwitz: Fine di una leggenda was written in October
of 1993 and Pressac received a copy of the text from the author by the end
of February 1994.
2. J.C. Pressac, Le macchine dello sterminio. Auschwitz 1942-1945.
Feltrinelli, Milano, October 1994.
3. Printing error: read 438,000.
4. Report of 9 July 1944, T-1322.
5. Typographical error [from Pressac]; read 438,000.
6. Kalendarium der Ereignisse im Konzentrationslager Auschwitz-Birkenau,
published in: Hefte von Auschwitz, Wydawnictwo Pa_stwowego Muzeum w O_wi_cimiu,
Hefte 2, 1959; 3, 1960; 4, 1961; 6, 1962; 7 and 8, 1964.
7. See the complete list of the convoys in our study, Wellers e i "gasati"
di Auschwitz, Edizioni La Sfinge, Parma, March, 1987, pp. 51-54.
8. Hefte von Auschwitz, 7, p. 91 ff.
9. Le Monde Juif, October-December 1983, Nr. 112, pp. 127-159.
10. This figure is mentioned in the telegram from E. Veesenmayer dated 11
July 1944, NG-5615.
11. G. Wellers, Essai de dÈtermination..., art. cit., pp. 147, 153.
12. Le procËs de JÈrusalem. Jugement-Documents. Introduction de LÈon Poliakov.
Calman-LÈvy, Paris 1963, p. 199.
13. Wellers e i "gasati" di Auschwitz, op. cit., pp.18-20, 37, 39.
14. Danuta Czech, Kalendarium der Ereignisse im Konzentrationslager Auschwitz-Birkenau
1939-1945. Rowohlt Verlag, Reinbeck bei Hamburg, 1989.
15. Idem., p.699.
16. Idem., pp.777 ff.
17. Wellers e i "gasati" di Auschwitz is one of our five studies
which are id by J.C. Pressac in the bibliography which appears on page 564
of his book, Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers,
published by The Beate Klarsfeld Foundation, New York, 1989.
18. The report by E. von Thadden of 26 May 1944 [NG-2190] states that one-third
of the deported Jews from Hungary were able to work (see below). Pressac
has erected this into a "rule" which he observed in relation to 116,000
deportees.
19. NG-5573.
20. NG-2190, p.2.
21. Idem., pp.4-5.
22. T-1319 (text in Hungarian).
23. Printing mistakes: Read 30 May; also the three citations after 21 May
are wrong: the correct date is 31 May.
24. The question of cremation capacity of the crematory ovens at Auschwitz-Birkenau
is presented in our articleDie Krematoriumsfen von Auschwitz-Birkenau,
in the anthology entitled Grundlagen zur Zeitgeschichte, edited by
Ernst Gaus, and published in 1994 by the Grabert Verlag, Tuebingen, Germany,
1994, pp. 281-320.
25. The absurdities expressed in this regard by this " eye-witness" have
been analyzed and disproved in the id essay Die Krematoriumsfen von Auschwitz-Birkenau,
op. cit., pp. 317-318.
26. Filip M¸ller, Sonderbehandlung. Drei Jahre in den Krematorien und
Gaskammern von Auschwitz. Verlag Steinhausen, M¸nchen, 1979, pp. 207,
211. of these alleged five crematory pits (total approximate area: 1,800
square meters) in the Allied reconnaissance photographs taken on 31 May
1944, as Pressac reduces these alleged pits from five, down to three, and
the area from 1,800 down to 157.5 square meters.
27. Filip M¸ller declares that in a 40 or 50 meter by 8 meter pit, averaging
360 square meters in area, they cremated 1,200 cadavers in three layers
placed one upon another, alternating three layers of wood. [Sonderbehandlung,
op. cit., p.219]. The calculation would therefore be this: [(1,200 360)
¥ 157.5] = 525.
28. Miklos Nyiszli, Auschwitz: A Doctor's Eyewitness Account, Fawcett
Crest, New York, 1961, pp. 70, 71.
29. T-1319.
30. According to the Auschwitz Kalendarium (1989), the first three
convoys would have arrived at Auschwitz on 16 May, and all the deportees
would have been homicidally gassed [op. cit., p.776]. This piece of information,
based exclusively on declarations given after the war, is completely untrustworthy:
the duration of the journeyæonly one dayæis too short, and the complete
lack of anyone at all who could work, is too unlikely among three convoys
sent to Auschwitz in order to be selected for labor.
31. NG-5608
32. T-1319
33. NG-5623
34. 33,187 * 11 = 3,017 persons per each convoy. 3,017 ¥ 3 = 9,051 persons.
35. 3,017 * 4 = 12,068 persons.
36. 45,179 / 14 = 3,227 deportees per each train; 3,227 ¥ 4 = 12,908
37. 3,227 * 5 = 16,135
38. J.C. Pressac, Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers,
op. cit., p. 13.
39. Idem. p.97.
40. Idem. p. 253.
41. Franciszek Piper, Estimating the Number of Deportees to and Victims
of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Camp. Yad Vashem Studies, XXI (Jerusalem 1991,
pp.49-103); Auschwitz, Wie viele Juden, Polen, Zigeuner...wurden umgebracht.
Krakow, Universitas, 1992.
42. Franciszek Piper, Estimating the Number of Deportees to and Victims
of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Camp, art. cit., p.99.
43. Idem., S.97.
44. Idem., S.98.
45. F. Piper puts the count at 200,000 to 205,000
Originally published in 1995 by
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