CHAPTER 4
KANADA I AND ITS CLOTHING DELOUSING INSTALLATION
with a presentation of various gas-tight
doors |
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The study of Kanada I [Documents
1 and 2] and its delousing gas chamber(s) using Zyklon-B is essential for
several reasons. From the standpoint of the prisoners, it was the only place in
the camp where a normal life was maintained despite the
imprisonment, ensuring regular food for those who worked there (taken from what
the gassed victims had brought with them) and decent clothing (from the same
source). It is here that woman and men had contact and love stories
could develop, evoked in Andrzej Munks film La
Passagère (1964), or the Rudolf Vbras book
Je me suis èvadé dAuschwitz (1988
for the French version).
With its decent male and female
prisoners, Kanada I could be photographed without fear by the SS. Ten photos
from the Album d'Auschwitz [Photos 3 to 10] show the
activities of sorting the victims effects in this complex.
For
the historian the essential part of Kanada I is its Zyklon-B delousing gas
chamber(s) which operated permanently from 1942 to 1944 [Photos 7, 9 and
10]. A former prisoner. Josef Odi, explains how the operation was carried
out.
Deposition made on 25th August 1963 by Josef Odi. born 15th August
1923 at Brzeziny Slaskie. registered number 61615. now living at Oswiecim, ul.
Wiezniowzo 20.
Arrested on 20th April 1942 and prisoner at
Auschwitz-Birkenau on 22nd August 1942, Josef Odi worked in the Kanada I
commando in the spring of 1944. His description concerns only 1944. He had
already furnished other information on this subject recorded in the PMO
archives as part of the testimonies, volume 33, pages 112-116 and
volume 51, pages 119/134. |
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| Entwesungskommando / Kanada |
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...I was working in the Entwesungskommando
Kanada [Kanada disinfestation kommando: should be called
Enflausungskommando" / delousing kommando because
delousing was done in one or two Zyklon-B gas chambers] near the
Bauhof / building materials yard]. There I disinfected the effects of people
who had been killed. Furs and valuable objects that could not be disinfested by
steam were disinfested using Zyklon-B, the same method that was used in the gas
chambers to kill men. In our Kommando there were about fifteen prisoners. We
used this method in gas chambers specially set up for disinfestation. They
had one or two entrance doors and a few extractor fans. This disinfestation
was organised as follows: all the furs and valuable objects to be disinfested
were hung up. As soon as this was done, we covered the floor. Two prisoners put
on gas masks and then went into the middle of the chamber with cans of
Zyklon-B. One prisoner stood near the entrance and watched to see that the
two prisoners in the middle of the room didn't poison themselves. Using
special chisels, the two men opened the cans of Zyklon-B, poured it on the
floor and withdrew rapidly, closing the gas-tight doors behind them. One
hour later, they opened the doors and the extractor fans were switched on.
The used Zyklon B was collected by us and put back in the original cans and
cases. We took these cases to the Theatergebáude [theatre
building] to be sent to back to the gas manufacturer.
Our group also
prepared the Zyklon-B for the gas chambers. We transported four or five wooden
cases from the Theatergebäude to Kanada. When the cases were ready, a
vehicle from the Health Service arrived and the cases were loaded in it.
There were 40 or 50 cans in each case, so about 200 cans in
all.... |
[A literal translation from the Polish, this
testimony is not really good. It was too late, 1963, and though the
witness remembered what he had experienced, certain details of the environment
escape him (underlined with dashes). On the other hand, certain other details
(full underlining) are excellent.]
At the liberation of the camp none
of the homicidal gas chambers remained in their original state, they had been
dismantled, dynamited or transformed. The only intact gas chamber(s) were in
Kanada I [Photos 11 to 13]. The Soviet film Chronicles of the
liberation of the camp, 1945 shows a gas-tight door belonging to
this or these gas chamber(s) [Photos 14 and 15]. The cans of Zyklon-B
discovered in Kanada I had been used therefor delousing purposes [Photos 16
and 17]. Not one of them was full. Also found was a box containing a
chemical reagent used to check for the presence of hydrocyanic gas, a box to
which the Soviets wrongly attributed a criminal use [Photo 18].
Since the homicidal and delousing gas chambers using Zyklon-B had been
installed and equipped according to the same principle, they had identical
gas-tight doors fabricated in the same workshops, the Auschwitz DAW woodworking
and metalworking shops [Photos 28 to 31]. Confusion was inevitable,
since at this time it was not known how to distinguish between the two types of
gas chamber. Photos taken after the war [Photos 19 to 27] and before the
remains of the Kanada I delousing installation were demolished make it possible
to see that the two types of gas chamber were equipped in exactly the same way.
The only difference is in the gas-tight doors: there is a hemispherical grid
protecting the peephole on the interior of the doors of homicidal gas chambers,
a protection not fitted on the doors of delousing chambers. |
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Document 1:
(Translation of a
note of 8th July 1982 sent to the author by the PMO Archivist, Mr.
Tadeus IWASZKO) |
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| Key to the plan or Kanada
1: |
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| [The huts have been numbered (1 to
5) but the witness is not certain to which huts the numbers refer. (The photos
of Kanada I contained in the Auschwitz Album confirm this
numbering)]. |
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| 1, 2: |
Wooden huts [1 and 2)
of the Pferdestall / stable type where the deloused linen and clothing was
stored. Here the effects were cleaned, mended and patched and subsequently
transported to a brick building (7 on the drawing) |
| la. 2a: |
Awnings extending the
roof of the huts to protect the clean (deloused) linen. |
| 3: |
Wooden hut [3] of the
stable type containing linen and deloused clothes. |
| 4: |
Hut [4] of the stable
type. This contained suitcases and bags whose contents were to go to the
delousing chamber. |
| 4a: |
Wooden awning running
the length of the sorting hut [4]. There was also a temporary shower
installation for the prisoners who sorted the baggage. [Another aerial
photograph seems to show that the awning was not on the east side of but 4 but
on the northern part of the west side]. |
| 5: |
Wooden hut [5] of the
stable type used for sorting the contents of the baggage. Any valuable objects
found during sorting were put in a special chest, the "Wertkiste."
|
| 6: |
Temporary baggage
store. |
| 7: |
Brick building with a
pitched roof, used as a store, with shelving inside to hold the deloused
clothing. This is where parcels were prepared for subsequent dispatch by rail
to the Reich (Germany). |
| 8: |
Brick building
occupied by the Kanada I SS Kommandoführer and other SS employed in Kanada
I. |
| 9: |
Brick house, which
had been inhabited by a Polish family who were evicted, converted for
delousing. Inside tubular frames had been erected for hanging clothes to be
deloused using Zyklon-B gas. |
| 9a: |
Room next to the
delousing chamber where medicines and prostheses were kept. Some of the
medicines were subsequently sent to the hospital, Block 28 of KL Auschwitz
I. |
| 9b: |
Room used to store
gas masks, cans of Zyklon-B and the tools for opening them (cold chisels with a
toothed head). The cans of Zyklon-B stocked here came from the
"Theatergebäude" main store, carried on a two-wheeled hand cart
[Photo 3]. |
| 9c: |
Place in front of the
delousing chamber building where the deloused clothes were brought out.
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| 9d: |
Roof under which
objects were kept. |
| 10: |
Brick latrines for
the prisoners working in Kanada I. |
| 1 l: |
Probable location of
the wooden watch towers for the surveillance of Kanada I. |
| 12: |
Railway by which the
wagons to be loaded with recovered, deloused and prepared goods arrived. The
trains subsequently went to the Reich. |
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