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

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J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, SOBIBÓR 127<br />

Arad writes that “the whole area was swampy, wooded, and thinly<br />

populated.” 361 The 1933 map in fact shows symbols denoting marshland<br />

in the immediate vicinity <strong>of</strong> the future camp I. 362 At the beginning <strong>of</strong> his<br />

archeological survey in 2000, Kola identified an old drainage ditch at<br />

the former eastern border <strong>of</strong> the camp, beyond which a marsh<br />

emerges. 349 How high then was the ground water level in the area <strong>of</strong> the<br />

“death camp proper”? During the 2001 survey <strong>of</strong> the former camp III<br />

area, Kola and his team discovered the remains <strong>of</strong> a well filled with<br />

sand (“Object C”) in the northern half <strong>of</strong> the hectare numbered XXV,<br />

not far from the mass graves. When excavating this well, ground water<br />

was encountered already at a depth <strong>of</strong> 3.60 m, and the work had to be<br />

halted at a depth <strong>of</strong> 5 m because <strong>of</strong> the steady inflow <strong>of</strong> ground water.<br />

The 1933 map reveals that the Sobibór station is found at an elevation<br />

<strong>of</strong> 167 meters. Lake Spilno, about a kilometer to the west, has an<br />

elevation <strong>of</strong> 164 meters, as is also the case with the swampy area located<br />

north <strong>of</strong> the future camp area and the road to the village <strong>of</strong><br />

obek, just to the west <strong>of</strong> the railroad. This was likely also the ground<br />

water level. The brown contour lines around the camp area indicate that<br />

it had a higher elevation. A look at a modern topographical map <strong>of</strong> Sobibór<br />

363 in turn shows that the open, vaguely trapezoidal area with the<br />

memorial mound, 364 where the mass graves are located, has an elevation<br />

<strong>of</strong> 170 meters. 365 This means that the ground water level in this part <strong>of</strong><br />

camp III was found (170 – 164 =) 6 m below the surface. It is known,<br />

however, that the ground water level varies with the seasons and rainfall<br />

(or the thawing <strong>of</strong> snow). It is also possible that the average level was<br />

somewhat different in 1942-43.<br />

The location <strong>of</strong> the Sobibór camp was not chosen at random, but<br />

carefully selected by the SS Central Construction Office <strong>of</strong> the Lublin<br />

District. 366 The local Polish witness Jan Piwonski states that German <strong>of</strong>-<br />

361<br />

362<br />

363<br />

364<br />

365<br />

366<br />

Y. Arad, op. cit. (note 49), p. 30.<br />

That this was true also in the early 1940s is shown by the aforementioned sketch drawn<br />

in custody by Kurt Bolender (see note 308), which has the word Moor (bog) written just<br />

above (i.e. west <strong>of</strong>) the workshop area (= camp I).<br />

Document 4, p. 403.<br />

This monument is commonly referred to as the “mound <strong>of</strong> ashes” and described as containing<br />

ashes from the victims. However, when Kola investigated its contents, he discovered<br />

that it contains no human remains whatsoever; A. Kola, op. cit. (note 302), p. 91.<br />

A comparison with a picture showing the present day memorial structures overlaid on the<br />

Rutherford map (www.deathcamps.org/sobibor/pic/Sobibór.jpg) reveals that the small<br />

round spot with an elevation <strong>of</strong> 171.5 m, to the west <strong>of</strong> the mound, is located outside <strong>of</strong><br />

the grave area.<br />

Y. Arad, op. cit. (note 49), p. 30.

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