Message-Id: <199602220651.WAA19603@rbi.rbi.com> Date: Wed, 21 Feb 1996 22:55:05 -0700 From: mvanalst@rbi.com (Mark Van Alstine) Subject: Höss's enterprising subordinate Hauptsturmführer Fritsch Newsgroups: alt.revisionism (A copy of this message has also been posted to the following newsgroups: alt.revisionism) Source: "Auschwitz Chronicle, 1939-1945 / Danuta Czech. - 1st American ed. (ISBN 0-8050-0938-8); pp. 84-87. Reference to August: Ibid. Reference to September 3: APMO, Hoss Trial, vol. 2, p.97; vol. 4, pp.21, 34, 99, 128; vol. 54, p.207; Vol. 78, p. 1, Statements of Former Prisoners. Reference to September 4: APMO, Hoss Trial, vol. 2, pp.21, 97; vol. 4, p.21; vol. 54, pp.208ff; vol 55, pp.101ff; Statements of Former Prisoners; Statements of Former Prisoners Jan Krokowski and Michal Kula; Kieler, _Anus Mundi_, pp.92-94 Reference to September 5: Kieler, _Anus Mundi_, pp.95-98. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- August * [1941] In Ho"ss's absence, Camp Commander SS Captain Karl Fritzsch uses the gas Zyklon B to Kill Russian POW's.** * This most likely happens at the end of August because Ho"ss is present at the next killing of Russian POW's and the Polish prisoners in the cellar of Block 11. ** Following Hitler's order of March 30, 1941 and the guidlines worked out by High Command of the Aemed Forces for the treatment of political commissars of June 6, 1941 (NO-1076), and on the basis of the operational order No. 8 issued by the Head of the RSHA Heydrich on July 17, 1941, small groups of political functionaries are sent to Auschwitz by th Gestapo in August. They are selected in the POW camp to be liquidated. The time of the admission and the size of this group cannot be ascertained because of the lack of documents. In his autobiography, Rudolf Ho"ss writes: "In accordance with a secret order issued by Hitler, these Russian _politruks_ and political commissars were searched out in all the prisoner-of-war camps by special Gestapo commandos. When identified, they were transferred to the nearest concentration camp for liquidation... The political officials of the Red Army thus identified were brought to Auschwitz for liquidation. The first, smaller trnasports were shot by execution commandos. While I was away on duty, my deputy, Fritzsch, the Protective Custody Commander, first tried gas for these killings. It was a preparation of prussic acid, called Zyclon B, which was used in the camp as an insecticide and of which there was a stock on hand. On my return, Fritzsch reported this to me, and the gas was used again for the next transport." In the notes titled by Ho"ss "The Solution to the Jewish Question in Auschwitz Concentration Camp," he writes the following: "In the autimn of 1941 a secret order was issued insrtructing the Gestapo to weed out the Russian _politruks_, commissars, and certain political officals from the prisoner-of-war camps, and to transfer them to th nearest concentration camps for liquidation. Small transports of these prisoners were continually arriving in Auschwitz and they were shot in the gravel pit near the Tobacco Monopoly buildings or in the courtyard of Block 11. When I was absent on duty, ny deputy, Captian Fritzsch, on his own initiative used gas for killing those Russian prisoners of war. He crammed the underground detention cells with Russians and, protected by a gas mask, discharged Zyklon B gas into the cells, killing the victims instantly" (Ho"ss, _Commandant in Auschwitz_, pp. 125ff.,159). Ho"ss mentions neither the number of the murdered Russian prisoners of war nor the place were Zyclon B is used. September 3 * [1941] After the success of the experiment of killing the small group of Russian prisoners of war with gas, ordered by Karl Fritzsch a few days earlier, the camp administration decides to repeat the experiment in the cellar of Block 11. This no doubt has to do with the news that the Gestapo is planning to send a large transport of officers, People's Commissars, and Russian prisoners of war for liquidation. In this connection, Camp Doctor SS Captian Dr. Seigfreid Schwela orders a selection in the prisoners' infirmary, in which about 250 inmates are selected. The attendants are instructed to take the selected prisoners to the bunker of Block 11 and to bring a few of the there on stretchers. In the bunker they are crammed together in a few cells. The cellar windows are blocked up with earth. Then about 600 Russian POW¹s, officers, and people¹s commissars are driven into the cellar. They have been chosen in the camp¹s prisoner-of-war section by special Gestapo commandos. As soon as they are pushed into the cellar and the SS men have thrown in the Zyklon B gas, the doors are locked and sealed.** This operation takes place after evening roll call, after the announcement of a so-called camp curfew, during which prisoners are forbidden to leave the blocks and move around in the camps. * The date comes from the analysis of the statements of former prisoners and of the Bunker Register, in which between August 31 and September 5 no entries occur regarding admission of prisoners onto the bunker. ** In his autobiography Rudolph Hoss writes: ³the gassing was carried out in the detention cells of Block 11. Protected by a gas mask, I watched the killing myself. In the crowded cells death came instantaneously the moment the Zyklon B was thrown in . A short, almost smothered cry, and it was all over² (Hoss, _Commandant in Auschwitz_, p. 126). September 4 [1941] In the morning Roll Call Leader Gerhard Palitzsch, protected by a gas mask, opens the doors and discovers that one of the POW¹s is still alive. More Zyklon B is poured and the doors are closed once more.... In the afternoon all the doors of the bunker in Block 11 are opened and unsealed after it is ascertained that the second dose of Zyklon B has killed the Russian POW¹s. ...In the afternoon all the doors of the bunker in Block 11 are opened and unsealed after it is ascertained that the second dose of Zyklon B has killed the Russian POW's and the Polish prisoners. There is a wait until the gas has evaporated. After the evening roll call, another camp curfew is ordered. In the evening Roll Call Leader Palitzsch summons 20 prisoners from the Penal Company in Block 5a as well as all the hospital orderlies and two prisoners, Eugeniusz Obojski and Teofil Bansiuk, who are put to work as corpse bearers. They are given two carts to transport the bodies to the morgue and the crematorium. All are taken to the courtyard of Block 11. They are told in advance that they have been put on a special work dtail and are not to tell anyone what they see, under the penalty of death. At the same time they are promised that after performing this work they will recieve larger portions of food. In the courtyard of Block 11, SS officers Fritzsch, Maier, and Palitzsch, the Camp Doctor Schwela, and the SS men who occupy positions as Block Laders are already there. Prisoners Obojski and Bansiuk receive gas masks and go with Palitzsch and the SS men, who also wear gas masks, to the cellar of Block 11. They return from the cellar without gas masks to show that the gas has evaporated. The prisoners are divided into four groups. One group, with gas masks, hauls the bodies of the murdered men out of the cellar to the ground floor; the second group strips the bodies; the third group carries the bodies to the courtyard of Block 11, where they are loaded onto the trucks by the fourth group. The Russian prisoners of war are dressed in uniforms; in the pockets are documents, family photos, money , various trinkets, and cigarettes. In the courtyard, under the supervision of the SS men, seven dentists extract gold crowns and teeth from the corpses. The prisoners pull the cart loaded with the bodies of the prisoners of war and the Polish prisoners from the courtyard of Block 11 to the crematorium, accompanied by Obojski and Bansiuk and under supervision of the SS men. Among the murdered are also the bodies of the 10 inmates who were locked in the bunker and condemned to death by Fritzsch on September 1 in retyaliation for the escape of Jan Nowaczek. The bodies of the prisoners selected in the hospital are in underwear. The hauling, stripping, searching, and transporting of the bodies lasts until dawn and is not finished. September 5 [1941] ...After evening roll csll, a cmp curfew is ordered. The same prisoners who were detailed the night before march into the courtyard of block 11 to complete the transporting of the bodies to the crematorium. There, the corpsesare laid in a big, long hall* which is already half full. The crematorium unit cannot keep up with the cremation of corpses. It is a few days before all the bodies are incinerated. ** * The morgue is later changed into a gas chamber. Prisoners are also shot there. ** The news of the deaths of about 600 Russian POW's and some 250 Polish prisoners by gas leaks out. On November 17, 1941, in _Informator biez'acy_, the underground bulletin of the high command of the Federation for Armed Struggle, a notice about it appears. "The night of September 5 to September 6" is given as the date, i.e. the day on which the transport of the bodies to the crematorium is completed (CA KC PZPR, 2020/III-7, Documents of the Delegation of the Polish Government in Exile, p.12). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Mark -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Gradually it was disclosed to me that the line separating good and evil passes not through states, nor between classes, nor between political parties--but right through every human heart--and all human hearts." -- Alexander Solzhenitsyn, "The Gulag Archipelago" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Home ·
Funding ·
Site Map ·
What's New? ·
Search
Nizkor
© The Nizkor Project, 1991-2009
This site is intended for educational purposes to teach about the Holocaust and to combat hatred.
Any
statements or excerpts found on this site are for educational purposes only.
As part of these educational purposes, Nizkor may include on this website materials, such as excerpts
from the writings of racists and antisemites. Far from approving these writings, Nizkor condemns them and provides
them so that its readers can learn the nature and extent of hate and antisemitic discourse. Nizkor urges the readers
of these pages to condemn racist and hate speech in all of its forms and manifestations.