| CHAPTER TWO |
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The unrealized future of
the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp BIRKENAU 1945: THE
EXTERMINATION STATION |
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BIRKENAU 1945 or THE UNREALIZED FUTURE:
PROJECT FOR AN EXTERMINATION STATION |
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| Drawing 4054 [Document 1], which in the light of
present knowledge might be called the extermination station, is
something of an enigma. It depicts the very first stage of the definitive
arrangement of the special part of Birkenau. In
Commandant of Auschwitz (Pan Books, London 1961),
Rudolf Hoess says on page 217: |
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The three railway tracks between building
sectors I and II [B.a.I and II] in Birkenau camp were to be reconstructed as a
station and roofed in and the lines were to be extended to crematoria III[IV]
and IV[V] so that the unloading could also be hidden from the eyes of
unauthorised people. Once again shortage of materials prevented this plan from
being carried out. |
In fact, linking Krematorien II and III with Krematorien IV
and V by rail would appear to be rather difficult because of the proximity of
the second sewage treatment plant [Kläranlage II] and the sewer evacuation
channels crossing the area where the trains would have to pass. No drawing for
this project is known. However, drawing 4054 confirms the intention of the SS
to convert the notorious Birkenau ramp into a true reception
station.
Krematorien II and III are precisely shown on the
drawing, exactly as captured on the photographs in the Auschwitz
Album, taken in May-June 1944 and the aerial photograph of 25th
August 1944 [Documenl 2], with the additional installations not shown on
the initial drawings: in the case of Kr II, a lean-to shed extending eastwards
the roof over the waste incineration furnace, in which goods with no market
value (personal papers and prayer books taken from new arrivals) were stored
awaiting destruction: in the case of Kr III, a smaller construction having the
same function built onto the east wall of the waste incinerator wing. The
access stairways to the Leichenkeller 2 (undressing rooms) are drawn and
clearly visible.
The ambiguity of this drawing lies in the term
Gemüsehalle / vegetable hall. If each of the six buildings
alongside the railway had been labelled Effektenhalle / hall for
effects, the drawing would have become an extremely incriminating piece
of evidence against the SS, and I believe in fact it still is. This camouflage
of a drawing of installations whose purpose a posteriori, I hasten to
add leaves no doubt, would appear to be the only example of such
camouflage, for the Bauleitung NEVER DISSIMULATED ANYTHING on its drawings of
the Krematorien. The only device used by the Bauleitung was to avoid indicating
the true function of some rooms (for example, the case, which is in fact
somewhat dubious, of drawing No 2036 of Krematorium IV, of Soviet source). The
only camouflage was by omission. Workers employed by outside civilian
contractors were in no way misled, which explains their numerous incriminating
slips.
It might be claimed that the six
Gemüsehallen were indeed stores for market garden products
generously sent by the WVHA [SS Economic Administration Head Office] in order
to supplement the rations of the Auschwitz prisoners employed in various
factories and mines that had sprung up in the area. Three factors render this
affirmation null and void. In June 1944, the Reich was already too weak and
drained to be able to divert for the benefit of prisoners sufficient quantities
of fresh vegetables as to regularly fill SIX stores of 930m³. These
Birkenau halls were no Covent Garden. What do the two Krematorien at the end of
the platform symbolize? It would have been better, if the SS had been trying to
prove their humanitarian aims, not to show them on the drawing. The silhouettes
of the three lorries ON THE OTHER SIDE of the hall and for which a road had to
be built, call for no special comment, in view of the contemporary photographs
that show them on the camp roads loaded with personal effects and heading for
the two Kanadas.
Two documents in file BW 30/32, conserved
by the PMO, are connected with drawing 4054. The Bauleitung contracted out the
design and building of the roof of the Abfertingungshalle / clearance
hall to the civilian firm Konrad Segnitz of Beuthen. With a covering
letter of 8th June 1944 [Document 4], Segnitz sent the Bauleitung the
drawing of the roof frame [Document 3] and the list of timber and other
materials required. Taking account of the delays in transmission, the
construction of this hall/warehouse must have been decided in the first half of
May, just before the resettlement of the Hungarian Jews. Although
chronologically associated with this Action, the title given to
this building by Messrs Segnitz, ABFERTIGUNGSHALLE FÜR TRANSPORTE /
clearance hall for transports, is vague. Who or what is supposed to
depart from this hall, Hungarians fit for work leaving for the Reich or effects
taken from those declared unfit for work and destined to be gassed? Only a
member of the Bauleitung confronted with these drawings could tell us, but this
is no longer possible. The fact remains that, despite its uncertain function,
this building, even in the design stage, is linked with the Hungarian action
through its presence on drawing 4054 and the use of the word
Transporte.
The drawing of this station raises
the question of what its future was to be. Looking at these projects, Polish
historians reply that after the Jews it would have been the turn of other
peoples considered to be racially inferior. The gassing of humans
is a plague that developed and reached its height at Auschwitz, even though it
did not originate there. This plague infected other camps before or at the same
time, but never reached the same virulence as at Auschwitz-Birkenau. At the
time of the withdrawal in January 1945, it affected the refuge camps, where
centers were set up and tests were carried out by former Birkenau
technicians.
Whether the Third Reich had emerged victor or
defeated from the Second World War, this vile epidemic was in decline by 1945.
The Gaussian curve can apply to many different types of event or phenomenon and
depict them satisfactorily. The horror had gone too far by May-June 1944. The
highest point on the curve had been reached. Escaped prisoners had testified
and, above all, made their stories public. Publicity is incompatible with an
essentially secret practice. Himmler was aware of this and on 26th November
1944 he ordered the gassings to cease. Whatever the situation had been at the
end of the war, the Mills of Auschwitz would never have been able
to continue turning. There are limits to everything, and even the darkest
periods come to an end. Unlike the Poles, I do not believe that the Krematorien
and their gas chambers would have gone on working very long. These complexes
were destined to be dismantled.
I shall end by quoting Victor
Méric, the author of the celebrated novel about the next war [that of
39-45], La Der des Der [The war to end all wars],
written in 1930. Although this convinced pacifist was completely wrong about
the use of gas in 39-45, and overestimated the role of bombers in the early
years of the war, on page 39 of a pamphlet published in 1932 by Editions
Sirius, La guerre qui revient: FRAICHE and GAZEUSE,
he gives a quotation from General von Altrich, who had written in a
Militär Wochenblatt [Military Weekly]: "THE
NEXT WAR WILL BE MUCH MORE A MASS EXTERMINATION OF THE CIVILIAN POPULATION
THAN A FIGHT BETWEEN TWO ARMIES", Méric claims on page 178 that: "The
next war, the war on civilians, is upon us. A vile butchery. The Massacre of
the Innocents."
These extracts have a premonitory note, of which Victor
Méric could have justly been proud after the war, while at the same time
being throughly disgusted by the human race. Two common gasses, he would never
have dared think of, carbon monoxide produced by internal combustion engines,
and hydrocyanic acid used to combat lice, had killed at least a million people.
He could not foresee that most of the victims woud be Jews. |
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