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

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J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, SOBIBÓR 115<br />

out that none <strong>of</strong> the numerous eye witness accounts studied by the authors<br />

<strong>of</strong> this book mentions the removal <strong>of</strong> ashes by train (or for that<br />

matter by trucks).<br />

5.2.2. The Switch from Burial to Cremation<br />

In order to proceed with our analysis <strong>of</strong> Kola’s report, we must first<br />

determine the answers to the following two questions: when did cremations<br />

commence at Sobibór, and how many <strong>of</strong> the hypothetical corpses<br />

were cremated without prior interment?<br />

The first question is especially difficult to answer, because mainstream<br />

<strong>Holocaust</strong> historians as well as eye witnesses provide widely divergent<br />

statements. Arad strongly implies that cremations started at<br />

some point in late summer or early autumn 1942. He writes that the operation<br />

began “as a result <strong>of</strong> the hot weather in the summer <strong>of</strong> 1942.” 315<br />

In his entry on Sobibór for the Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Holocaust</strong> he writes<br />

confusingly that cremations commenced “toward the end <strong>of</strong> 1942,” only<br />

to later date this event to “the end <strong>of</strong> the summer <strong>of</strong> 1942.” 316 Novitch<br />

asserts that, “beginning with the winter <strong>of</strong> 1942, they [the corpses] were<br />

no longer buried, but were burned in large open crematoria.” 317 Neither<br />

Arad nor Novitch provide a source for their respective statement. According<br />

to Rückerl the burial pits were used only during the “first phase<br />

<strong>of</strong> extermination, lasting approximately half a year,” 318 which implies<br />

that cremations began in October or November <strong>of</strong> 1942, since the first<br />

transports to the camp arrived in the first days <strong>of</strong> May that year. 319<br />

Schelvis is slightly more exact, writing that cremations had begun “by<br />

September or October 1942,” 320 while de Jong dates the commencement<br />

<strong>of</strong> both cremations and exhumations to October 1942. 321<br />

As for the eye witnesses, there are seven who provide some form <strong>of</strong><br />

dating <strong>of</strong> the beginning <strong>of</strong> cremations. We have mentioned Bahir’s<br />

claim that flames were visible already when he arrived at the camp in<br />

late April or early May 1942. 322 This, however, is not supported by any<br />

other testimony. According to Szmajzner, a digger “accompanied by a<br />

315<br />

316<br />

317<br />

318<br />

319<br />

320<br />

321<br />

322<br />

Y. Arad, op. cit. (note 49), p. 171.<br />

See chapter 2.1.<br />

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

A. Rückerl (ed.), op. cit. (note 36), p. 165.<br />

Y. Arad, op. cit. (note 49), p. 36, 390.<br />

J. Schelvis, op. cit. (note 71), p. 38. In the German edition <strong>of</strong> his book (op. cit. (note 70),<br />

p. 51) Schelvis dates the commencement to “about September 1942.”<br />

L. de Jong, op. cit. (note 244), p. 21.<br />

See chapter 4.3., p. 96.

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