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

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

supervision <strong>of</strong> a few SS men and Ukrainian guards. To begin with,<br />

only young, strong men were chosen for the commando; later young<br />

women also became eligible. One <strong>of</strong> the few postcards that remain<br />

reveals that Walter Poppert from the Netherlands was the commando<br />

foreman at the end <strong>of</strong> August 1943.<br />

The mass cremations resulted in huge fires, which flared up so<br />

high they could be seen far and wide, especially at night. The Ukrainians<br />

in their watchtowers could see the flames whenever the wind<br />

blew in their direction, making it hard for them to breathe. They<br />

were visible even from Piwonski’s house in the village <strong>of</strong> Zlobek<br />

three kilometres to the north-west, and the stench was also noticeable<br />

from there. Some Ukrainians told him that in a single day as<br />

many as 5,000 to 6,000 bodies were exhumed and burnt.”<br />

Schelvis later comes back to this question and writes: 417<br />

“When it was decided around September 1942 to burn the bodies<br />

instead <strong>of</strong> burying them, firewood had to be collected from the nearby<br />

forest. A Waldkommando was formed, initially consisting <strong>of</strong> 20 to<br />

25 men – the composition varying each day – who had to fell trees<br />

and chop them up. […] The work was carried out in an area situated<br />

between one and three kilometres away.”<br />

Finally, Zdzisaw ukaszkiewicz writes: 418<br />

“The burning <strong>of</strong> the corpses was, however, difficult to hide, as<br />

the wind would spread a specific smell <strong>of</strong> fire all around and because<br />

the smoke and the fire from the burn sites were visible from<br />

far away.”<br />

As we have already seen, Sobibór was surrounded by a forest consisting<br />

mainly <strong>of</strong> red pines. The wood <strong>of</strong> that tree has an upper heating<br />

value <strong>of</strong> 9,078 BTU/lb or 5,040 kcal/kg. 419 However, green wood contains<br />

at least 60% <strong>of</strong> water 420 and has a heating value <strong>of</strong> only some<br />

417<br />

418<br />

419<br />

420<br />

Ibid., p. 138.<br />

Z. ukaszkiewicz, op. cit. (note 25), p. 55.<br />

Peter J. Ince, “How to Estimate Recoverable Heat Energy in Wood or Bark Fuels,”<br />

www fpl fs fed.us/documnts/fplgtr/fplgtr29.pdf.<br />

“The green moisture content <strong>of</strong> wood is normally above 60 percent, and can range as<br />

high as 120 percent for some species,” in; “Moisture Content <strong>of</strong> ‘Seasoned’ Firewood,”<br />

www.utextension.utk.edu/publications/wfiles/W179.pdf; “Mostly English and European<br />

Oak, when freshly felled, has a moisture content <strong>of</strong> between 60% and 80%,” in: “South<br />

Downs Green Wood Centre – Timber Frame Green Oak Timber Frames,”<br />

www.southdownsgreenwoodcentre.co.uk/timberframes html; “What is the moisture content<br />

(MC) <strong>of</strong> wood compared to its dry weight? Typically 60% for green hardwoods, up<br />

to double that for s<strong>of</strong>twoods.” John Sankey, “Wood Moisture,”<br />

www.johnsankey.ca/wetwood.html

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