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

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J. GRAF, T. KUES, C. MATTOGNO, SOBIBÓR 355<br />

and their residents evacuated. In the western Polish regions, integrated<br />

into Germany and designated “Warthegau,” the Jews were concentrated<br />

in the od ghetto to the extent that they had not been transferred to the<br />

East. In view <strong>of</strong> this ghetto’s industrial significance, it was dissolved<br />

only in the summer <strong>of</strong> 1944. Considering this general situation, it is<br />

quite possible that the only Jews still living in the former General Government<br />

or the former Warthegau were Jews who had been lucky<br />

enough to find refuge among the Aryan population.<br />

We believe the figure <strong>of</strong> 140,000 Jews who returned to Poland from<br />

the USSR, as quoted in the American Jewish Yearbook, to be far too<br />

low. By 1946 the “<strong>Holocaust</strong>” lore had already taken shape, and it<br />

would therefore have been in the interest <strong>of</strong> the Zionists to raise the<br />

Jewish losses to as high a level as possible.<br />

Could these returnees have been, to a greater or lesser degree, Jews<br />

who had taken refuge in the part <strong>of</strong> Poland which was annexed to the<br />

USSR after the German invasion <strong>of</strong> September <strong>of</strong> 1939? The number <strong>of</strong><br />

such refugees was extremely high. E. Kulischer, whose statistics are<br />

generally quite reliable, stated that there were 500,000 <strong>of</strong> them. 1059 The<br />

American Jewish Yearbook informs us that, in the first half <strong>of</strong> 1940,<br />

these refugees were given the choice <strong>of</strong> either taking on Soviet citizenship<br />

or going back into the German zone. According to the Yearbook<br />

“many” <strong>of</strong> the refugees opted for the latter alternative, but Germany refused<br />

categorically to let these Jews return. Towards the end <strong>of</strong> June<br />

1940 the Soviet government ordered them to be deported into the inner<br />

regions <strong>of</strong> the Soviet Union, where the conditions are reported to have<br />

been extremely harsh. 1060<br />

We believe it to be highly improbable that these Jews had the possibility<br />

to return to Poland from Central Asia or Siberia in 1945 or 1946.<br />

In the same way, the returnees are unlikely to have been Jews who had<br />

acquired Soviet citizenship, because Soviet citizens normally were not<br />

allowed to emigrate. Thus it is most likely that the returnees were part<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Jews who had been moved to the eastern areas by the Germans<br />

three or four years earlier.<br />

1059 E.M. Kulischer, op. cit. (note 1019), table without page number, “General Survey <strong>of</strong><br />

Population Displacement in Europe since the Beginning <strong>of</strong> the War.”<br />

1060 American Jewish Yearbook, No. 43 (1941-1942), p. 241f.

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