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Krema I
The Experimental Gas
Chamber
David Cole has produced
a videotape which filmed the director of the
Auschwitz State Museum [Dr. Piper] "admitting"
that the gas-chamber known Krema I was constructed
after the war ended, on the direct order of
Stalin.
Foner (Foner, Samuel
P. "Major Historical Fact Uncovered"
SPOTLIGHT Vol. XIX, Number 2, January 11,
1993) tells us:
The videotape on
which Piper makes his revelations was
taken in mid-1992 by a young Jewish investigator,
David Cole. It has just been released,
on January 1, 1993, although Cole announced
his project at the 11th International
Revisionist Conference at Irvine, California
last October.
The small gas chamber
of Krema I was used for gassing for a short
time, and then converted into an air-raid
shelter; after the war, it was reconstructed
to look as it did when it was used for gassing,
as Dr. Piper notes in his letter of response
to the Cole video. The text of Piper's letter
is a bit stilted, as Polish is his native
language, but his intent, and the facts,
are quite clear:
Cole maintains that
I first time admitted the allegedly unknown
fact the Nazis adapted the crematorium
in question in which the gas chamber were
located for air-raid shelter, the fact
allegedly unknown even for Museum guides.
It is un truth. See enclosed copies of
pages from the books which constitute
the fundamental reading for Auschwitz
guides. In a book by T-an Sehn "Concentrat
Camp Ogwiqcim-Brzezinka (Auschwitz-Birkenau)
Warsaw 1957," you may read on the
page 152 [that] in May 1944 the old Crematorium
I in the base camp was adapted for use
as an air raid shelter.
The Fact is also confirmed
in the book by Jean Claude Pressac "Auschwitz:
Technique and operation of the gas chambers,"
published by The Beate Klarsfeld Foundation,
New York 1989 515 Madison Avenue. On the
page 157 you may read: "With part
of the building converted to an air raid
shelter, this is the state in which the
SS abandoned Krematorium I in January
1945." Repeating what Pressac had
written I told what was the nature of
the adaptation works carried out by the
Nazis and what one had to do to remove
those changes in order to regain the previous
appearance.
They are all Piper's
revelations. In spite of the fact that
such secondary restoration works had to
be done, there is an undisputable reality
that the gas chamber in question is housed
in the same building which has been existed
from prewar times till now.
Breitman offers the following
as background information to the development
of Zyklon B as a killing device, and (more
specifically) to the early use to which
Block 11 was put:
Auschwitz had been receiving
trainloads of Soviet commissars and other
POW's who were subject to liquidation.
Höss's men had shot previous shipments
of Russian prisoners, but on September
3 Höss's enterprising subordinate
Hauptsturmführer Fritsch thought
of an expedient new method based on the
camp's own experience.
The buildings, many
of them former Polish army barracks, were
full of insects, and the camp administration
had previously brought in the Hamburg
pesticide firm of Tesch and Stabenow to
get rid of them. Two experts had fumigated
particular buildings with a patented insecticide,
Zyklon B, a crystalline form of hydrogen
cyanide that turned gaseous when exposed
to the air. (Höss, "Commandant
of Auschwitz," 175. Interrogation
of Höss, 14 May 1946, NA RG 238,
M-1019/R 28/63)
On September 3 Fritsch
decided to experiment. First he crammed
five or six hundred Russians and another
250 sick prisoners from the camp hospital
into an underground detention cell. Then
the windows were covered with earth. SS
men wearing gas masks opened the Zyklon-B
canisters to remove what looked like blue
chalk pellets about the size of peas,
creating a cloud of poison gas. After
they left, the doors were sealed. (Höss,
Commandant at Auschwitz, 173. See also
Yehuda Bauer, "Auschwitz," in
Jäckel and Rohwere, eds., Der Mord
an den Juden, 167-68)
Höss wrote later
that death was instantaneous. Perhaps
that was what he was told. But he was
not present to witness the event; he was
away on a business trip. Other sources
indicate that even the next day not everyone
was dead, and the SS men had to release
more insecticide. Eventually all the prisoners
died. When Höss returned to Auschwitz,
he heard about the successful experiment.
On Eichmann's next visit to Auschwitz,
Höss told him about the possibilities
of Zyklon-B, and, according to Höss,
the two decided to use the pesticide and
the peasant farmstead for extermination.
(Höss, Commandant,
175. From the History of KL Auschwitz, New
York, 1982, I, 190)(Breitman, 203)
SS-Unterscharführer
Pery Broad described a gassing in Krema
I while giving testimony (Museum,
176):
".... The 'disinfectors'
were at work. One of them was SS-Unterscharfuehrer
Teuer, decorated with the Cross of War
Merit. With a chisel and a hammer they
opened a few innocuously looking tins
which bore the inscription 'Cyclon, to
be used against vermin. Attention, poison!
to be opened by trained personnel only!'.
The tins were filled
to the brim with blue granules the size
of peas. Immediately after opening the
tins, their contents were thrown into
the holes which were then quickly covered.
Meanwhile Grabner gave a sign to the driver
of a lorry, which had stopped close to
the crematorium.
The driver started the
motor and its deafening noise was louder
than the death cries of the hundreds of
people inside, being gassed to death."
Müller's eyewitness account of gassings
in Krema I, in April, 1942, is recounted in
Hilberg's "The Destruction of the European
Jews":
The
Auschwitz procedure evolved in stages.
In April 1942, Slovak Jews were gassed
in Crematorium I, apparently with their
clothes on. Later, deportees from nearby
Sosnowiec were told to undress in the
yard. The victims, faced by the peremptory
order to remove their clothes, men in
front of women and women in front of men,
became apprehensive. The SS men, shouting
at them, then drove the naked men, women
and children into the gas chamber.
In The Encyclopedia of the Holocaust,
Jozef Buszko (Jagiellonian University, Krakow)
writes:
"The first, relatively
small gas chamber was built in Auschwitz
I. Here the experimental gassing using
Zyklon B gas first took place, on September
3, 1941. The victims were 600 Soviet prisoners
of war and 250 other prisoners. After
that experiment, the firm J. A. Topf and
Sons received a contract to build much
larger, permanent gas chambers connected
with very large crematoria in Auschwitz-Birkenau,
where the mass exterminations were mainly
carried out. Altogether four such installations
-- II, III, IV, and V -- were built in
Birkenau." (Encyclopedia, Vol.
I, 113)
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Source: The
Nizkor Project
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