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Sobibor - Holocaust Propaganda And Reality - Unity of Nobility ...

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J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, SOBIBÓR 99<br />

As we have already seen in our first chapter, the witness Moshe Bahir<br />

is especially fond <strong>of</strong> ascribing cruelties <strong>of</strong> the more extreme and unbelievable<br />

kind to members <strong>of</strong> the camp staff. His mendacity is further<br />

demonstrated by the claim that the guard dog Barry, well-known also<br />

from Treblinka, was “the size <strong>of</strong> a pony.” 246 Ada Lichtman states that<br />

young girls were “raped before being gassed” and that a newborn baby<br />

was drowned in the latrines by Gustav Wagner. 247 However, she also<br />

maintains that Wagner always was very nice to her, that he once saved<br />

her from being beaten by a Ukrainian guard, and that, at another occasion,<br />

he let Ada go without punishment after discovering her eating stolen<br />

food. 248 Esther Raab in turn recounts that Wagner once gave her<br />

candy. 249 Clearly the man was something <strong>of</strong> a split personality!<br />

Other witnesses claim that inmates were forced to climb trees which<br />

were then cut down, so that they fell to their death, and that SS Gomerski<br />

and Wagner amused themselves by using babies as slingballs.<br />

250 In court the former camp commandant Stangl gave a rather different<br />

version <strong>of</strong> the alleged tree climbing murders: 251<br />

“It came to my attention that Bolender was bullying the Jewish<br />

inmates by forcing them to climb up the trees. He would make them<br />

whistle or sing, and then they had to jump down. […] I called Bolender<br />

to order and told him that as long as I was at the camp, this<br />

must not continue any longer. I forbade him to engage in any more<br />

such bullying. At the subsequent meeting with the other <strong>of</strong>ficers I let<br />

it be known that I would not tolerate such bullying.”<br />

246<br />

247<br />

248<br />

249<br />

250<br />

251<br />

who was killed in the revolt, and Walter Novak, who is said to have disappeared in 1947<br />

after having spent some time as a prisoner <strong>of</strong> war. Schelvis notes that the Pirna police in<br />

1946 searched the home <strong>of</strong> Walter Novak’s wife, and that valuables supposedly taken<br />

from the camp were found, but mentions nothing <strong>of</strong> photographs or other documents; J.<br />

Schelvis, op. cit. (note 71), p. 260.<br />

Ibid., p. 150. Photos taken <strong>of</strong> Barry at Treblinka by Kurt Franz show him to have been <strong>of</strong><br />

perfectly ordinary size (www.deathcamps.org/treblinka/pic/bigz04.jpg). According to<br />

Kurt Bolender, the dog was “rather aggressive,” but never severely harmed any <strong>of</strong> the<br />

inmates; J. Schelvis, op. cit. (note 71), p. 92.<br />

M. Novitch, op. cit. (note 39), p. 55.<br />

A. Lichtman, op. cit. (note 167), p. 42, 44.<br />

R.L. Rashke, op. cit. (note 44), p. 319.<br />

“Sobibór – Mordfabrik hinter Stacheldraht,” Frankfurter Rundschau, 25 August 1950, p.<br />

5.<br />

Statement made by Franz Stangl in Duisburg on 29 April 1969, Zentrale Stelle der Landesjustizverwaltungen<br />

Ludwigsburg (subsequently quoted as ZStL) 230/59-12-4469;<br />

quoted in J. Schelvis, op. cit. (note 71), p. 113.

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