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

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J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, SOBIBÓR 113<br />

where, even though the new grave was not yet ready. I still clearly<br />

remember arriving for work at the second grave one morning to find<br />

that the bodies which had already been piled up along one side had<br />

decomposed to such an extent that in the sweltering heat blood and<br />

body fluids had run all along the bottom <strong>of</strong> the unfinished grave. It<br />

was clear that we could not continue working under such circumstances.”<br />

Due to such problems the burial <strong>of</strong> uncremated corpses was stopped.<br />

Schelvis writes: 307<br />

“It was then decided to start burning the bodies instead and to<br />

get a machine in to dig up the tens <strong>of</strong> thousands <strong>of</strong> buried bodies to<br />

burn them as well. […]<br />

The machine was taken to Lager 3 and, within a few days, work<br />

was begun on the very spot where the third grave was to be dug,<br />

with the digger pulling out trees and roots. A pit was excavated, but<br />

it was smaller and shallower than the other two. Once it was finished,<br />

rails were criss-crossed over the top, forming a rudimentary<br />

grid.”<br />

Accordingly there are said to have been three pits in camp III: two<br />

used for the interment <strong>of</strong> corpses and one on top <strong>of</strong> which the cremation<br />

pyre was constructed. The number <strong>of</strong> burial pits was confirmed by a<br />

sketch drawn by Bolender while in custody. 308 This shows two graves,<br />

one <strong>of</strong> which is only half the size <strong>of</strong> the other.<br />

Arad gives the following description <strong>of</strong> the Sobibór mass graves: 309<br />

“The burial pits were 50 to 60 meters long, 10 to 15 meters wide,<br />

and 5 to 7 meters deep. For easier absorption <strong>of</strong> the corpses into the<br />

pits, the sandy sidewalls were made oblique.”<br />

Arad never states the number <strong>of</strong> graves, and the map reproduced by<br />

him does not outline the graves. 310 Novitch only mentions an unspecified<br />

number <strong>of</strong> “common graves,” 311 while Schelvis accepts Bolender’s<br />

claim that there only were two burial pits. 307<br />

Arad’s description lacks a reference, but it is apparent that he has<br />

simply copied it from Adalbert Rückerl, 312 who in turn is summarizing<br />

307<br />

308<br />

309<br />

310<br />

311<br />

312<br />

J. Schelvis, ibid, p. 111.<br />

Viewable online at: www.deathcamps.org/sobibor/pic/bmap4.jpg<br />

Y. Arad, op. cit. (note 49), p. 33.<br />

Ibid., p. 35. This map is identical with the so-called Blatt-Bauer map.<br />

M. Novitch, op. cit. (note 39), p. 24.<br />

“A camp railway led from the outer doors <strong>of</strong> the cells <strong>of</strong> the gas chamber building to<br />

large pits for placing the corpses, which had been dug, one after another during the first

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