Irving v. Lipstadt
Defense Documents
David Irving, Hitler and Holocaust Denial: Electronic Edition, by Richard J. Evans
Table of Contents| << (iv) Other relevant docu... | < (i) Background | (vi) Conclusion. > |
(v) The fate of the Roman Jews: the question of language.
1. As it was, on 16 October 1,259 people were seized and after two days and a sifting process the remaining Jews were shipped off, not to Mauthausen, but to Auschwitz.38 The exact
number of deportees is unclear. Kappler's report gave the number as 1,007, but the Italian literature puts the number at somewhere between 1,030 and 1,035.39 On arrival on 23 October 149 men were admitted to the camp and given the numbers 158491-158639, and 47 women were admitted and given the numbers 66172-66218. Katz traced 14 male and one female survivor. Tagliacozzo traced 17 men and one woman and Ebrei in Italia 15 men and one woman.40 The rest were gassed.41
2. Even after the analysis above, the question remains if it is possible to reconcile 'liquidation' in 'upper Italy', 'hostages' in Mauthausen, and deaths in Auschwitz. Four points can be made: First, where exactly in Northern Italy Himmler ordered the Jews to be taken and how they were to be 'liquidated' is unclear. The first large concentration camp on Italian soil (Fossili near Carpi) was not operational until December 1943.42 'Upper Italy' was probably a convenient euphemism for 'the East'. This is supported by a note by the head of the Inland II department of the Foreign Office, Horst Wagner on a conference in Berlin on the Italian Jewish problem on 4 December 1943. By this time the Italians had gone some way to rounding up the Jews themselves. Inland II had persuaded the RSHA to 'delay' [abwarten] with a request for an immediate transfer of Jews concentrated in Italy to the East: Ribbentrop saw the note and concurred.44
Group Inland II considers it, however, advisable to delay this request for the moment because the concentration process will probably proceed with less trouble if the transfer to concentration camps appears for the moment as the final solution and not as a propr step to the evacuation to the eastern territories..43
3. The verbal camouflage surrounding the Final Solution is notoriously hard to penetrate. That Moellhausen used the word 'liquidate' is reason enough to surmise that Hitler's order used 'Mauthausen' and 'hostage' to reassert the prescribed phraseology. It should suffice to quote
another order of Hitler's. On 11 July 1943 Hitler's private secretary and close collaborator Martin Bormann addressed a circular to all Reichsleiter, Gauleiter, and Verbändeführer:
Re: treatment of the Jewish question. By order of the Führer I hereby notify: in the public handling of the Jewish question every discussion of a future total solution must be discontinued. It can be said though that the Jews will be drawn into appropriate work detail en bloc.45
4. The concern to use camouflaged language and avoid all use of words such as 'liquidation' and 'final solution' in public thus emanated from Hitler himself.
5. As for Mauthausen, if Hitler did indeed mean what he said when he ordered the Roman Jews to be sent there, he was surely aware that it was perhaps the deadliest of all concentration camps. In January 1941 the head of the Reich Security Service SS-Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich divided the concentration camps into three grades to determine conditions of detention and work in each.46 Those camps in Grade III were to deal with the worst category of prisoner; protective custody prisoners with bad records, particularly criminal records and anti-social elements, i.e. those who could not be re-educated.47
6. Grade III was reserved solely for Mauthausen. The mortality rate, especially for Jews, was terrible. Deportation to Mauthausen was effectively a death sentence, often by forced labour
in the quarries or in camp construction. For example, between 26 November 1942 and 1 March 1943, 10,191 state prison inmates were transferred from German state prisons to concentration camps. 7,587 of them were transferred to Mauthausen/Gusen. By 1 March 1943 3,853 of the original ten thousand were dead, 3,306 of them in Mauthausen alone.48 Marsálek estimates that of the 25,732 Jews committed to Mauthausen between 1938 and 1945, 14,356 were registered in the camp's deaths register [Totenregistratur] as 'deceased'. This figure excludes 4,005 retransferred to other camps.49 The fate awaiting Jewish 'hostages' in Mauthausen is clear from the example of Holland. In Febuary of 1941 a German security detachment suprised a Jewish 'illegal terror group' and were doused in ammonia.50 In retaliation some 400 young men between eighteen and thirty-five were rounded-up in the Jewish quarter. They were taken as 'hostages' first to Buchenwald and then 348 of them on to Mauthausen on 17 June 1941. A second group of 291 'hostages' arrived direct from the concentration camp Schoorl outside Amsterdam on 25 June. Only one of the original 400 young men survived.51
Notes
38. A Gestapo report was
sent to Wolff, the SS commander in Italy, signed by Kappler, but
presumably written by Dannecker. It read: 'Judenaktion according to plan worked out in this
office exploiting all possibilities was today initiated and
completed. Put into action were all the available forces of the Sicherheits- und Ordnungs Polizei [Security- and
Order Police]. Participation of the Italian Police in the affair was
not possible, given their unreliability ... Blocking off entire
streets was not practicable considering the character of the Open City
and also the insufficient aggregate of only 365 German
police. Nevertheless during the action, which lasted from 5.30 a.m. to
2 p.m., 1,259 persons were arrested in Jewish homes and brought to a
central collection point at a military college here. After the release
of the half-breeds, the foreigners (incl. one citizen of the Vatican
City), the members of mixed marriages (incl. the Jewish partners), the
Aryan domestics and subtenants, there remained in custody 1,007
Jews. Deportation set for Monday, 10/18 at 9 a.m., with
through-accompaniment of 30 Order-Police.' IfZ NO-2427 (17-18 October,
1943), as cited in Michaelis, p. 367. A rump of the original German
text is printed as document 154 in Longerich (ed.) Die
Ermordung der Europäischen Juden, pp. 330-31.
39. Centro di
Dokumentazione Ebraica Contemporanea di Milano [CDECM - Centre for
Contemporary Jewish Documentation, Milan], Ebrei in Italia:
Deportazione, Resistenza (Florence, 1974), p. 13; Michael
Tagliacozzo, 'La persecuzione degli ebrei a Roma',
L'occupazione tedesca e gli ebrei di Roma: Documenti e
fatti, ed. Liliana Picciotto Fargion (Rome: Carucci, 1979),
pp. 149-71. Both mentioned in Susan Zuccotti, The Italians and
the Holocaust. Persecution, Rescue and Survival (London,
1987), p. 117, fn. 43. Danuta Czech, Auschwitz Chronicle
1939-1945 (London, 1990), p. 512, gives the number as 1,006,
but likewise cites Ebrei in Italia. The full CDECM list
of deportees minus those names unconfirmed by the sources is given as
Appendix I in Katz, pp. 331-340. Liliana Picciotto Fargion gives the
number deported as 1,023, the number of survivors as 17 and the number
of victims as 1,005 in 'Italien' in Wolfgang Benz (ed.),
Dimension des Völkermords, Die Zahl der jüdischen
Opfer des Nationalsozialismus (Munich , 1991), 199-228,
p. 220. See also L. Oicciotto Fargion, Il libr della
memoria. Gli ebrei deportati dall; Italia (1943-1945) (Milan,
1991), p. 42, and the same author's Per ignota
destinazione. Gli ebrei sotto il nazismo (Milan, 1994),
p. 63.
40. Katz, pp. 293-4 and
appendix II, p. 341; Tagliacozzo, 'La persecuzione degli ebrei a
Roma', p. 164; Ebrei in Italia, p. 13. The most
important survivor was Armino Wachsberger whose fluency in German
secured him a position as translator to the deportation. He witnessed
the selections at Auschwitz and conversed with Doctor Josef Mengele on
more than one occasion. A. Wachsberger, 'Les deportations des juifs
italiens', 25 December 1955, CDEC doc. E11; report prepared for Katz
by A. Wachsberger, 8 October 1967, and 1 January 1968, Katz,
p. 345.
41. The liquidation of the remaining (839?) Jews was witnessed by a rare survivor of the Sonderkommandos, a Czechoslovakian Jew called David Karavet. In January 1946 he met the Roman Jewish historian Michael Tagliacozzo, who had himself avoided the round-up of 16 October. Karavet detailed the last moments of the Jews of Rome to Tagliacozzo in a number of transcribed talks which followed this chance meeting. Katz, pp. 275-9.
42. Fargion, 'Italien', p. 204
43. Gruppe Inland II
hält es jedoch für ratsam, mit diesem Verlangen
zunächst abzuwarten, da sich die Konzentrierung vermutlich wird
reibungsloser abwickeln lassen, wenn die Überführung in
Konzentrationslager zunächst als die Endlosung und nicht als
Vorstufe für die Evakuierung in die Ostgebiete erscheint.',
NG-5026, Inland II (signed Wagner) via Hencke to
Ribbentrop, 4 December 1943.
44. NG-5026, Hilger via Steengrach and Hencke to Inland II, 9 December 1943.
45. 'Betrifft:
Behandlung der Judenfrage. Im Auftrage des Führers teile ich
mit: Bei der öffentlichen Behandlung der Judenfrage muß
jede Erörterung einer künftigen Gesamtlösung
unterbleiben. Es kann jedoch davon gesprochen werden, daß die
Juden geschlossen zu zweckentsprechendem Arbeitseinsatz herangezogen
werden.', NG-2710-NO, quoted in Eugen Kogon et al. (eds.), Nationalsozialistische Massentötung
durch Giftgas. Eine Dokumentation (Frankfurt a. M., 1986),
p. 23.
46. Helmut Krausnick et al., Anatomy of the SS State (London, 1973), p. 227.
47. .'für
schwerbelastete, unverbesserliche und auch gleichzeitig kriminell
vorbestrafte und asoziale, das heißt kaum noch erziehbare
Schutzhäftlinge', quoted in Hans Marsálek, Die
Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers Mauthausen. Dokumentation
(Vienna, 1980), p. 39. Heydrich's ordinance of 1 January 1941,
Mauthausen Museum Archive, A 7/1 and 2.
48. Chief of the SS
Economic and Administrative Department Oswald Pohl to Heydrich, 16
March 1943, Mauthausen Museum Archive, O 2/4, quoted in
Marsálek, p. 41.
49. Marsálek,
p. 283. This excludes the fate of the mainly Hungarian Jews who
arrived at the camp in April 1945.
50. Higher SS and Police
Leader Hans Albin Rauter to Himmler, 20 February 1941 in N. K. C. A
In't Veld (ed.) De SS en Nederland. Documenten uit SS-Archiven
1935-45 ('s-Gravenhage, 1976), vol. 1, 1935-42, doc. no. 61,
pp. 543-48; NG-2285, proclamation by Rauter, 25 Februay 1941.
51. Gerhard Hirschfeld,
'Niederlande' in Wolfgang Benz (ed.), Dimension des
Völkermords, Die Zahl der jüdischen Opfer des
Nationalsozialismus (Munich, 1991), 137-165, pp. 141-2 and
165; J. Presser, Ashes in the Wind. The Destruction of Dutch
Jewry (London, 1968), pp. 50-55, 70-72; Hilberg,
p. 372-4.
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