Defending Against the Allied Bombing Campaign: Air Raid Shelters and
Gas Protection in Germany, 1939-1945 Part 2
BACK
TO PART 1
by Samuel Crowell In Memoriam!"
Part 2: Civil Defense in the
Camps
HREE DOCUMENTS
should be kept in mind when we try to evaluate the role of civil defense
in the concentration camp administration. The first is the
LS-Führerprogramm of November, 1940, which stipulated that all
existing structures had to be modified for air raid shelter use and that
all new structures, particularly in the armaments industry, had to have
bomb shelters. The second document is an order
from Oswald Pohl, head of the SS economic administration, dated October
25, 1943, and marked Secret (Geheim!) to 19 concentration camp
commandants, including Rudolf Höß at Auschwitz, concerning the care and
feeding of prisoners. The importance of this document for our purposes
lies not in the fact that Pohl goes into pedantic detail about how the
prisoners should be clothed and fed, even to the point of emphasizing that
hot meals should not be overcooked [7], but the reasons given for the
document. Pohl begins:
In the past two years the labor in the concentration camps on behalf
of the armaments industry has become a factor of decisive importance for
the war.
Im Rahmen der deutschen Rustungsproduktion stellen die
KL. dank der Aufbau-Arbeit, die in den vergangenen 2 Jahren geleistet
wurde einen Faktor von kriegentschiedender Bedeutung dar.
The claim is specific; the prisoners are, and
have long been, necessary for the armaments industry. Therefore it is not
only natural that they would eventually fall under the rubric of the
Führerprogramm but also that the camps would eventually be targeted
for air attack, as indeed they were. Thus raids on the Buchenwald complex
(including Nordhausen) killed thousands of internees, but in the immediate
aftermath of the war the deaths were incorrectly understood. [Z222, 223,
n13] The final document, whose existence could
be inferred from the above, is an order issued by Heinrich Himmler on
February 8, 1943. The order enumerates a number of measures that are to be
carried out in the concentration camp system to prevent mass escapes in
the event of air raids. [8] Thus, no later than early February, 1943,
there was a heightened awareness at the highest ranks of the SS that the
concentration camp system was vulnerable to air attack. It should also be
noted that it was precisely at this time that the construction office of
Auschwitz Birkenau began to receive a flurry of work orders for gas-tight
fixtures. The conclusion, absent presuppositions, would seem to be
obvious. Developing the idea of bomb shelters in
the concentration camp system is not easily achieved today. Many of the
records for the camps are not widely available and most records for the
Eastern camps are still in Russian or Polish archives. But there are still
a variety of ways in which we can uncover clues to the existence of bomb
shelters in the concentration camp system, above and beyond the
documentation already noted. In the first place,
we can inspect the documents that are available and look for objects and
descriptions of objects that correspond to materials in the civil defense
literature. For example, references to "gas-tight doors" or "gas-tight
windows" as well as "Blenden" or "Holzblenden" correspond to
common civil air defense terms. Jean Claude Pressac, at the very least,
should be credited with unearthing no less than 39 documents that provide
strong documentary evidence that each of the Birkenau crematoria was
equipped with a gas-tight bomb shelter.[9] A
second method would be to inspect the physical evidence, most often
through photographs. For example, a number of the small "gas-tight" doors
for Crematoria IV and V were photographed, and there is no doubt that
these are identical to the wooden shutters that are discussed extensively
in such periodicals as Gasschutz und Luftschutz. [ATO426ff,
Ibid.]
 Graphic 1: A Blende, or protective
window for Krema IV or V
Perhaps the strongest example of such correspondence concerns a steel door
to a medium sized room at Majdanek concentration camp. Equipped with the
characteristic round peephole with perforated steel cover, this is
unambiguously a bomb shelter door, although it has never been recognized
as such. Instead, it is usually claimed as the door to a delousing chamber
[ATO557], and yet, in spite of this, a replica of this door was later made
and is currently on display
at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, where it sits as a
representation
of a door to an extermination gas chamber.
The same method can be applied to still other gas-tight fixtures. For
example, a number of photographs of gas-tight doors with peepholes from
Auschwitz-Birkenau have survived, these closely match diagrams for such
doors in the contemporary literature, although, here again, such doors are
usually said to have functioned as delousing chambers [10]. Pressac has
argued that the doors to the crematoria morgues were identical, but there
is no proof of this.
Another way in
which photographs can be analyzed involves looking for tell-tale fixtures
and features outside of a building. For example, a photograph of Höß'
residence at Auschwitz clearly shows a gas tight shutter affixed to the
right of the entrance, with a narrow Lüftungsrohre just to
its left, from which we may safely conclude that the cellar to this
building had been converted to air raid use.
Graphic 3: A side view of Block 1
Another example concerns the
so-called delousing chamber to Block 1. The bricked in window with a
smaller bricked in aperture is very similar to the outside window
indentations of ordinary above ground shelters, and the gas-tight door
parallels the kind found in the literature. On the other hand, the fact
that this space has been described as a delousing intallation makes us
cautious about identifying this space as a bomb shelter, and reminds us
that photographic analysis on its own is not always
conclusive. On the other hand, there are a
handful of work orders, which, in their abstracts from Jan Sehn's court,
make reference to gas-tight fixtures, and these not only appear to cover
the additions to Block 1 but make other references to materials which,
while adequately explained in a bomb shelter context, are inexplicable in
an extermination context. [ATO456f, ATO27ff] For
example, work order #516 for June 17, 1943 makes reference to the fittings
for a gas tight door, which was completed 10/6/43 [sic!]. But under either
date the door makes no sense in terms of the claimed operation of the
extermination gas chambers. Another work order,
dated July 12, 1943, contains a number of misspellings. Again, in the
Polish transcript it reads: " 1 Schlüssel. für Gaskammer/Melden bei
H.stuf der Apotheke im 44-Revier" Pressac has made the assumption that
the "44" is a misspelling for "SS" in its runic form, and therefore
translates it as follows: "1 key. for gas chamber. Report to SS captain of
the SS-hospital [i.e., SS-Revier] pharmacy." But this translation
seems inadequate. In the first place, Revier does not mean
hospital, normally it means district or area (although in a military sense
it can mean dispensary.) "SS-Revier" therefore makes little sense,
but if we are going to interpolate spellings for "44-Revier" we
could just as easily interpolate "LS-Revier" which makes perfect
sense, this being a common term for a civil defense district.
"Gaskammer", by the same token, could be a bracket form for
"Gas[schutz]kammer" a common civil defense term. Furthermore,
neither delousing chambers nor "gas chambers" have keys: but gas-tight
bomb shelter doors, if and when they were locked from the outside, were
supposed to have a key inside of a locked glass box nearby [CD153f]. It is
perhaps also relevant that medical supplies in air raid shelters were
usually kept in a small cabinet called a
"Schutzraumapotheke." The final work
order appears to be directly relevant to Block 1. It reads, again in the
Polish transcript, "Entwesungskamer [sic!] Die Beschläge zu 1
Tür, luftdicht mit Spion für Gaskammer, 2/1 Lattentür" (i.e.,
"Disinfection Chamber. Fittings for 1 door, airtight with peephole, for
Gaskammer, 2/1 lath door") The first thing we note is that
Entwesungskammer has been misspelled: this is chronic in the Polish
transcripts. Now it is supposed that Block 1 was at one time a
disinfection chamber (Entwesungskammer) yet the order refers to an
air tight door with peephole for a Gaskammer. But why the use of
two distinct terms for what was supposedly the same operation? It is true
that Gaskammer can also be used to describe disinfestation
facilities, the drawings for BW 5A and 5B are very clear about this, and
we stress that no one has ever claimed homicidal gassings in any of these
locations, and therefore there is nothing sinister about the word
"Gaskammer" per se. But one possible explanation would be
that the Entwesungskammer, superseded in its use by other
facilities, was being converted to a gas tight air raid shelter, i.e.,
Gas[schutz]kammer. In this respect the bricked in window and the
smaller shutter-sized aperture inside to serve for emergency exit or
ventilation, along with the gas-tight door with a peephole which required
bricking in below the old door's lintel, tend to support the bomb shelter
thesis. As to the opposite interpretation, there has still been no
convincing explanation for the need of a peephole in the gas-tight door of
a delousing facility.
 Graphic 4: Gas-tight door, Block 1
To sum up the issue with
respect to Block 1, the inference that it was converted to bomb shelter
use has significant corroboration but not proof. To put it another way,
the bomb shelter thesis explains Block 1, its physical features and its
relevant work orders. The gas chamber thesis, which holds that references
to gas-tight fixtures usually have a sinister connotation, does not. And
that underlines another characteristic of the bomb shelter thesis versus
the gas chamber thesis: the bomb shelter thesis explains where the gas
chamber thesis is left with strange clues that cannot be made to fit the
model. All three of the documents noted above fit easily into an
explanatory model keyed to bomb shelter construction. None of them can be
made to fit the extermination model. Of course, one could ask where the
original documents are today, since they were obviously in the hands of
the Polish authorities at the time of the Höß trials, and their emergence
would help resolve these ambiguities. But in this case we have an
unprecedented situation where the original documents have not yet been
made available to Western scholars more than 50 years after their
discovery.
Graphic
5: Probable bomb shelters at Birkenau
Another particularly striking
example of photographic evidence concerns the existence of long low mounds
in front of the barracks in Birkenau, which appear in both aerial
photographs and ground shots. These correspond to the Splittergrabe
that are described in other concentration camps, for example, in
Buchenwald, and which were designed for internees.
Graphic
6: Plans for simple underground shelter
The United States Strategic
Bombing Survey describes them as follows:
The trench shelter was slightly below ground and usually covered by
a concrete slab from one foot to three feet thick on which one foot to
five feet of earth had been placed. The trench was usually about seven
feet high on the inside and about six feet wide. The walls were of
either concrete or wood. The length of the trench varied seemingly with
the available space, but sections or off-sets usually divided it into
galleries for some 50 persons each, and minimized a longitudinal blast.
At each end of the trench there was an entrance usually through a wooden
door, although some had steel. With few exceptions, wooden benches had
been provided for each side of the trench. Forced ventilation, toilet
facilities, and running water were not available. Little if any
protection could be had from a direct hit of the smallest bomb although
they were, in most cases, splinter-proof. The advantages of the trench
type were rapidity of construction and low cost. This type of protection
was standard for slave labor or foreigners but was used by others in
emergencies. [CD156] Still another category of evidence
to be evaluated concerns the design drawings for facilities. The Central
Sauna at Birkenau, for example, which was constructed after the four
crematoria and which stood to the West of Crematoria IV and V, was
equipped with a basement which also clearly shows the typical
configuration of an emergency exit. [ATO70, Schnitt C-D]
 Graphic 7: Details of bomb shelter
emergency exit Another
characteristic of bomb shelters which is commonly shown in the drawings
are the presence of small rooms that lead into larger rooms, that is, gas
locks that are sealed with gastight doors (e.g., Vorraum,
Gasschleuse) . The floorplan to the Auschwitz Crematorium I, in
drawings from its role as an air raid shelter clearly show these squarish
closetlike entries. [Z253] The drawings for BW 5A and 5B in some versions
have clearly marked "Gasschleuse"(gas locks), [ATO57] and the
intact Bath and Disinfection Center at Majdanek has three such entries,
whose doors are clearly air raid shelter doors. [Z 276]
Graphic 8: The entry space 6 is the gas lock for this
layout of Krema I. Graphic
9: Disinfection Bldg. Lublin-Majdanek
Some further remarks
concerning Majdanek seem appropriate. Most of the alleged gas chambers in
that camp were supposed to have been part of the Bath and Disinfection
Complex II, whose floor plan is reproduced above. There is no doubt that
this structure originally served the purpose of showering arrivals in its
still operable shower room, and delousing clothing in other rooms, by a
variety of methods, including the use of Zyklon B. [Z 276, and n125
referencing Marszalek] Thus the question concerns the nature of further
adaptations. Room "A" noted above, has
occasionally been cited as an extermination gas chamber, but it has a
plate glass window with some blue staining around it, which means that the
window must have been in place at the same time as any Zyklon usage. But
Room "A" also has extensive wooden strutting, as well as a square wooden
opening in the ceiling that leads into the roof crawl space. It should be
emphasized that this opening was plastered after construction: but this
plaster, unlike that around the window, shows no blue staining. [Z 277]
Therefore it would apparently not have been exposed to ambient cyanide.
The characterization of this room as a homicidal gas chamber is difficult
to substantiate in view of the window, the nature of the two inward
opening doors, and other characteristics that have been commented on in
David Cole's "46 Unanswered Questions About the Gas Chambers".
However, the strutting accords with typical expedient adapatations for
bomb shelter use, and the wooden opening looks very much like a typical
emergency exit. Moreover, the absence of iron berlinate on the plaster
around the ceiling opening would accord with the concept that this room,
once used for delousing, was converted later to an air raid
shelter. It should be noted that Room "A" and
Room "B" are both equipped with boiler rooms, which, in their original
configuration, would have been equipped with fans for blowing hot air.
However, under bomb shelter adaptation, the removal of these fans would
convert these rooms into instant gas locks. Further, on the far left of
the diagram, we can see another gas lock [Vorraum] in a part of the
building with no known sinister connotations.
Rooms "B", "C" and "D" are also alleged to have been gas chambers. But
interestingly, all three are equipped with steel doors with peepholes
covered with perforated steel plate -- in other words, typical German bomb
shelter doors -- and the glass of these peepholes is exposed to potential
breakage from inside. Finally, these steel doors can be opened from inside
or outside [Cole, op. cit.], and appear to have latching mechanisms
both inside and outside [ATO, 557]: Michael Berenbaum's The World Must
Know (p. 138) provides a reverse image of one of these chambers (Room
"B"), and there is apparent smudging precisely at the points on the door
where the latching mechanisms would be visible.
Finally, and returning now to Birkenau, there is a further characteristic
of Morgue #1 for both Crematoria II and III which is
significant. Morgue #1 of Crematorium II has a vertical passageway along
its western wall which features a concrete lid and metal
rungs.
 Graphic 10: Steps to manhole
cover, Morgue 1 While Pressac
describes this as a sewer, it is unclear why a sewer entrance that would
allow people to climb in and out would be necessary next to Morgue
#1.[ATO228,229] According to the bomb shelter thesis, this would be an
emergency exit. It should be noted that Crematorium III's remains are
similarly equipped. There is also oral
testimony and other records. Numerous testimonies describe air raids at
the Auschwitz complex, including testimonies concerning seeking shelter in
below ground spaces. Danuta Czech's Auschwitz Chronicle [11]
enumerates several raids on the Auschwitz complex, including a raid that
ended up dropping bombs on Birkenau by mistake (this destroyed a "dugout"
in Czech's words, clearly a reference to a trench shelter.) The testimony
of Dr. Nyiszli specifically describes the use of Morgue #1 of Crematorium
II as a bomb shelter, although he also claims the same space was used for
a gas chamber. [12] Other testimonies from Buchenwald, for example,
describe trench shelters, while some subcamps of Buchenwald (i.e.,
Nordhausen) clearly describe Stollen. To
sum up, we can reconstruct the existence of bomb shelter facilities from a
number of different sources. The two most prominent are words that
correspond to the civil defense literature, and photographs or drawings
that depict ordinary civil defense features, such as gas tight doors,
shutters, wire screens or other protected apertures, emergency exits,
ventilation ducts, camouflage, bricked in windows, ventilation chimneys,
and cellar spaces that suggest adaptations or are equipped with the
characteristic zigzag construction of emergency
exits. It should be stressed that the
identification of features in photographs does not prove bomb shelter use.
However, the photographic evidence, supplemented by the documentary
evidence and drawings, seems fairly conclusive -- the crematoria at
Birkenau were adapted to added bomb shelter use at a time when several
other locations in that camp were also being adapted for that purpose.
Keeping in mind the stipulations of the LS-Führerprogramm, which
mandated that all buildings old and new should provide bomb and gas
protection, the claim that the Birkenau crematoria contained gas tight
bomb shelters should arouse no further controversy. The question, why
would there be bomb shelters in crematoria is incorrectly framed: the
crematoria were buildings, buildings were supposed to have bomb shelters,
and therefore they had them. The real question is that, given that the
crematoria had bomb shelters, why has this fact never been
recognized? Conclusions The
primary impetus for this article arose out of the desire to explore the
claim that the Birkenau crematoria were equipped with gastight bomb
shelters. But in the course of exploring this issue we found out much
about the experience of the German people in the air war. Therefore it
seems fitting that our conclusions begin and end with remarks on the
bombing campaign, and the defense against it, among the civilian
population. We have found that the civil defense
establishment in Germany was huge. With a 1939 enrollment in the
RLB of 12 million, we are describing a body that embraced about 1/7
of the population: it seems likely that there were as many people involved
in civil air defense at least part-time as in all three branches of the
Wehrmacht. At a cost that would project to
billions of marks, we have found that tremendous sums were expended on
shelters of all types, including what we would conservatively estimate to
be hundreds of above and below ground public shelters of reinforced
concrete, thousands of public access shelters (ÖLSR), and tens of
thousands of air raid cellars (LS-Keller) and home shelters. The
regulations stipulated that all of these shelters were to be
equipped for chemical warfare defense, and the references to gas or air
tight steel doors in the literature and testimony are so frequent as to
scarcely deserve further comment. Supporting
these structures was the clearly articulated supporting staffs of the
SHD, numbering thousands, which included decontamination crews
especially equipped for chemical warfare, and specially designated
locations (laundries, public baths) that in the event of gas attack would
have their normal function subordinated to the role of chemical warfare
decontamination. The decontamination crews, in addition, were specially
trained and equipped, which soon led to their involvement in corpse
handling and other sanitation procedures. The sanitation service was in
turn engaged in all kinds of sanitation prophylaxis including
disinfection, pest control, and delousing of citizens to prevent the
spread of infectious diseases including typhus. The fundamental identity
of the decontamination, disinfection, and delousing paradigms could hardly
be more clear. Running throughout this service
and its wartime operation was an intense awareness of the possibilities of
gas warfare. Not merely the decontamination squads are evidence of this,
but also the gas testing centers, the locations earmarked for
decontaminating belongings, the special trucks loaded with decontamination
equipment, the 12 million gas masks issued, the demands for gas tight
doors, and ventilation systems that could filter poison gas. And, as we
have seen, the fear of poison gas even entered the popular mind, such that
the grotesque appearance of the victims would lead many to rashly assume
that the enemy had decided to use this terrible
weapon. It would take a philosopher or a
psychologist to appreciate what happened next. For the documentary,
forensic, and photographic evidence clearly shows that the majority of the
hundreds of thousands of German men, women, and children indiscriminately
killed in the air war perished from the inhalation of poisonous carbon
monoxide gas and were in many cases at least partially cremated. Yet their
plight was totally submerged in the postwar period by even more horrifying
claims of gassing and burning made against them. One begins to wonder
whether the suffering of the German people was forgotten, or whether it
was simply inverted. Contrasting the situation
among the civilian population with that in the concentration camps, we
find ample reason to expect analogous levels of bomb and gas protection.
The camps were important to the war effort. Himmler expressed concerns
about prisoners escaping from the system during air raids, including
Auschwitz Birkenau, at precisely the time when Auschwitz Birkenau began to
make numerous requests for gas tight doors and other gas tight fixtures
such as were common for civil defense in other parts of
Germany. In addition to the morgues in the
Crematoria, which show evidence of having been converted from morgues to
also serve as anti-gas shelters and decontamination centers in the event
of gas attack, we find that the dormant morgue in Crematorium I in
Auschwitz was in fact converted to a bomb shelter. And, given what we have
found out about the need for cleanliness in the handling of corpses when
discussing the bombing victims, the original presence of showers for
corpse handlers in any crematoria should not surprise
us. The blueprints for the Central Sauna also
show evidence of dual purpose, and the characteristic aperture of an
emergency exit can be clearly seen in its cellar. The disinfestation
blocks BW 5A and BW 5B, which were no longer used for that purpose after
late 1943, are equipped with gas locks and thus could have been easily
converted, if, indeed, they were not built with a dual purpose in mind.
Block 1 at Auschwitz provides visual evidence of having been converted to
a bomb shelter in late 1943. The Commandant's house was clearly converted
for bomb shelter use. Finally, it appears that the prisoners themselves
were equipped with splinter trenches in front of every barrack. Apparently
there were dozens, if not hundreds, of air raid shelters at Auschwitz
Birkenau; and again, bomb protection in the German scheme of things also
meant gas protection. Turning now to Majdanek,
we find that the Bath and Disinfection Complex II was equipped with no
less than three gas lock entries as well as standard steel bomb shelter
doors with peepholes. In addition, the interior rooms had added wooden
strutting for reinforcing the roof, and at least one wooden emergency
exit. In the context of the documents, the contemporary civil defense
literature, and the photographic evidence, it should be obvious that the
Bath and Disinfection complex at Majdanek was converted at some point in
its career to also provide bomb and gas protection, and that its showers
were meant to serve as a decontamination center for gassing
victims. We should note here that this same
complex was claimed by the Soviets in a Special Commission report from
1944 as having been the site where 1.5 Million people were gassed with
Zyklon B. Yet, while no one claims more than 1/10 of that number of
victims for Majdanek today [Z 277, n129 surveys contemporary downward
revisions], neither has anyone explained how these manifest bomb shelter
features could have been misunderstood or misinterpreted for so many
years. The nature of the German people's plight
in the air war has also been misunderstood. Although doubtless thousands
perished in utter helplessness, hundreds of thousands more survived,
thanks to the skillful preparations of the people and the RLB, and
due to the courage and resourcefulness of the sergeant majors, fire
wardens, and countless others. We recall that the twin objectives of the
air war were the destruction of German industry and the breaking of German
morale. But neither of these twin objectives was achieved, and it is
tragic that more than 50,000 brave British airmen perished in a fruitless
venture that left a blot on Britain's conduct of the war. Far from being
mere passive martyrs, the German people won the air war because they, too,
did not "flag or fail." Even so, their sacrifice remains unmourned and
unremembered. Unremembered and unmourned: except
for a curious and ironic artifact. If you travel to the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC, you will find many reminders
of the terrible ordeal of the Jewish people in the course of their
persecution by the German National Socialists. These objects serve as
memorials to the many Jews who suffered, died, and were killed in what has
come to be known as the Holocaust. But in another part of the building,
alone, and dimly lit, we find a silent sentinel, who, by its presence,
serves as an admonishment to those who insist on the most narrow
interpretation of history, an Eulenspiegel-ish reminder that
remembrance is irrepressible, and a memorial to those German women and
children who perished in the gas and flames of the air war holocaust: a
steel door, with handles, a peephole, with a perforated steel cover -- a
German bomb shelter door.
   Left: USHMM replica displayed
as "gas chamber" door. Right: German ad for bomb
shelter doors. ©Copyright
1997, Samuel Crowell
Key to Sources Used: A = Astor, Gerald, A
Blood-Dimmed Tide, (NY:1992) ATO = Pressac, Jean Claude,
Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers,
(NY:1989) B = Vogt, Helmut, Das 5. Luftschutzrevier von
Bonn, (Bonn:1994) CD = United States Strategic Bombing
Survey, Civilian Defense Division Final Report, 2nd edition
(n.p.:1947) D = Irving, David, The Destruction of
Dresden, (NY:1964) DD = Höß, Rudolf,
Death
Dealer: The Memoirs of the SS Kommandant at Auschwitz (ed.
Steven Paskuly), (NY:1996) G = Musgrove, Gordon, Operation
Gomorrah: The Hamburg Firestorm Raids, (London:1981) H =
Hastings, Max, Bomber Command, (NY:1989) I = Iserson,
Kenneth V., Death to Dust: What Happens to Dead Bodies?
(Tucson,AZ:1994) N = Schramm, Georg Wolfgang, Der
zivile Luftschutz in Nürnberg, 1933-1945
(Nürnberg:1983) P = Steiner, Walter, Die Parkhöhle von
Weimar: Abwasserstollen, Luftschutzkeller, Untertagmuseum
(Bremen:1996) S = Stahl, Joachim, Bunker und Stollen für
den Luftschutz im Raum Siegen (Kreuztal:1980) SF =
Vonnegut, Kurt, Slaughterhouse Five, (NY:1993) US =
United States Strategic Bombing Survey, The Effect of Bombing on Health
and Medical Care in Germany, (Washington, DC:1945) V =
Steinhoff, Johannes, et al., eds., Voices From the Third Reich,
(NY:1994) Z = Gauss, Ernst [Rudolf, Germar],
Grundlagen
zur Zeitgeschichte, (Tübingen:1994)
End
Notes: 1) "Vergasungskeller" was first published
on August 6, 1996, revised on November 7, 1996, in which form it was
published by the Adelaide Institute in January, 1997, and then
again revised on January 7, 1997 and June 26, 1997. The article may be
found on Dr. Butz' web site at:
http://pubweb.acns.nwu.edu/~abutz/di/dau/vk.html 2)
"Technique and Operation of German Anti-Gas Shelters: A Refutation of
J. C. Pressac's 'Criminal Traces'" was first published on the CODOH
website on March 23, 1997, revised April 7, 1997, further revisions April
30, 1997. It is located at
http://www.codoh.com/incon/inconpressac.html 3) Pressac's
magnum opus, Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the Gas
Chambers, (NY:1989) is hard to find. His The Crematoria of
Auschwitz (NY:1993) is more accessible. Beginning with an article in
Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp (NY:1994), Gutman, Berenbaum,
and Gutman, eds., he has been assisted by Robert Jan van Pelt, who has
also written, with Deborah Dwork, Auschwitz: 1270 to Present
(NY:1996) The general thrust of all of these interpretations is
consistent. 4) An excellent treatment of the evolution of
British strategic bombing thinking may be found in Hastings, op. cit.,
supra, esp. pp. 37-58; 106-122. 5) The
Reichsluftschutzbund is usually rendered ARP or A.R.P. by British
historians, apparently on the analogy with their own Air Raid Protective
services. Its members would extend all the way down to the operation of
each shelter: the SHD, on the other hand, worked from centralized
locations. 6) On municipal disinfection centers in Germany,
see "Die Umgestaltung und Vergrosserung der Desinfektionanstalt der
Stadt Dortmund" in Gesundheits-Ingenieur, 27.IX.41, p.
523ff 7) Friedlander, H. and Milton, S., Archives of the
Holocaust, vol. 20, Document 169, p. 462ff, 463. 8)
Hilberg, Raul, The Destruction of the European Jews, (NY:1960), p.
584 9) See the extensive discussion of the "Criminal Traces"
in "Technique and Operation of German Anti-Gas
Shelters" 10) Ibid. 11) Czech,
Danuta, Auschwitz Chronicle: 1939-1945, (NY:1997), p. 692, 697n, p.
708. These entries fairly well explode the claim that Auschwitz was never
bombed. My thanks to Richard Widmann for these references, and for other
editorial suggestions. 12) Nyiszli, M. Auschwitz
(NY:1993), p. 128
END OF PART 2 -- Back
to
PART 1
Back
to Index |