Writers: Jamie McCarthy
and Ken McVay
In March 1994,
Dan Gannon
responded
[1]
to a series of ten questions which had been posted to the Usenet
computer network over a period spanning nearly two years.
In his response to questions which asked about the description of
Zyklon-B
as material for the "resettlement" and "special
treatment" of Jews, and about the meaning of the terms
"special treatment" and "special action,"
Mr. Gannon
invoked the tired arguments of Holocaust denial.
We replied by asking Mr. Gannon if he meant to claim that the code
words "special treatment," "resettlement," and so on
were never used to camoflage Nazi intentions of mass murder.
Further, we asked that he examine the evidence which we present here,
and refute it on a point-by-point basis.
We think it's clear that Mr. Gannon did make this claim, as
evidenced by the following statement:
"Special treatment" ("Sonderbehandlung") was
not a "code word" and did not automatically mean
"killing". It meant a whole range of things...
[2]
Mr. Gannon then cited two or three examples from various Holocaust
deniers, who have catalogued obscure cases in which the code words meant
something very different than what they normally did.
With this tactic, we believe Mr. Gannon sought to confuse his
audience, instead of addressing the issue. Special cases are
irrelevant, and have no impact on the chief meaning of these code words,
which we will document here.
Mr. Gannon was asked to address cases which employed "special
treatment" and other euphemisms with reference to the Nazi
extermination effort.
These cases were enumerated as follows:
- "Special treatment was killing, everyone knew that,"
says Eichmann.
- To save lives, Kaltenbrunner directs that "special
treatment is to be limited to a minimum."
- Special treatment is "elimination," writes Heydrich.
- A memo at the Reich Security Main Office explains "special
treatment" by the annotation "execution."
- Special treatment should be carried out by hanging, says
Himmler.
- A report from the Russian front equates special treatment with
"liquidation."
- "No meaning other than killing," says former
SS-Gruppenfu"rher Mazuw.
- "Everyone knew what it meant," says former
SS-Obersturmfu"hrer Hamann.
- A letter from Himmler to Korherr asks that the term
"special treatment" not be used, as the meaning is too well
known
- An SS-Hauptsturmfu"hrer requests more gas vans for Jews to
be "treated in a special way."
- A Gestapo memorandum requests that people "subject to
special treatment" be cremated.
Here, we will deal specifically with the code word
Sonderbehandlung, literally "special treatment" or
"special handling." This is probably encountered most often.
Other code words include:
- Umsiedlung, literally "resettlement"
- Sonderaktion, literally "special action"
- Evakuierung, literally "evacuation"
and, of course,
- die Endlösung der Judenfrage, literally
"the final solution to the Jewish question."
In his response, Mr. Gannon offered Kaltenbrunner's comments about
French diplomats as his reponse to the "special treatment" of
European Jews -- the mind boggles at this logical leap. He expected
readers to swallow Faurisson's assertion that the Nazis' "special
treatment" was to help keep the Jews alive. This is,
obviously, contrary to fact. The Nazis used Jews and other as
slave laborers, literally working them to death:
Starvation was a permanent guest at Auschwitz. The diet fed to I.G.
Auschwitz inmates, which included the famous "Buna Soup" - a
nutritional aid not available to other prisoners - resulted in an
average weight loss for each individual of about six and a half to nine
pounds a week.
At the end of a month, the change in the prisoner's appearance was
marked; at the end of two months, the inmates were not recognizable
except as caricatures formed of skin, bones, and practically no flesh;
after three months, they were either dead or so unfit for work that they
were marked for release to the gas chambers at Birkenau. Two physicians
who studied the effect of the I.G. diet on the inmates noticed that
"the normally nourished prisoner at Buna could make up the
deficiency by his own body for a period of three months....
The prisoners were condemned to burn up their own body weight while
working and, providing no infections occurred, finally died of
exhaustion."
[3]
Was this Mr. Gannon's idea of behavior aimed at "keeping the Jews
alive?"
Gannon's sources for this nonsense were
Robert Faurisson's
essay "Response to a Paper Historian" and
Carlos Porter's
book
Not Guilty at Nuremberg
-- they quote the same section of the Nuremberg Trial transcript in
invoking Kaltenbrunner. The only other "proof" that Gannon
indirectly quotes, apart from Kaltenbrunner's testimony, is Faurisson's
assertion that Sonderbehandlung sometimes meant
"transportation," but Faurisson does not give proof -- only a
footnote to a previous Faurisson essay.
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