Wetzelrad wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 5:46 am
Stubble wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 3:25 am
This is 'grave #1' from Kola's Study?
Yes, Yaimi talked about it in his 2013 report, with similar photos. A quote: "it appears that the grave was not used as a mass grave".
https://codoh.com/library/document/prel ... 3-May2014/
I think Lamprecht said it best, in writing this:
The most striking thing about these reports is that they claim to have excavated and proven the existence of human remains, but do not show us any of them. They do have plenty of color photographs of excavated pits containing no human remains, trinkets, and random rubbish so I guess it's quite apparent that their cameras were functioning quite well.
https://archive.codohforum.com/20230609 ... ml?t=12901
A few quotes from the report;
"In Grave 2, we opened an excavation trench, five meters wide and 15 meters long and
three meters in depth from the western edge to the center of the grave (Fig 12). At a
depth of 3 meters we again encountered ground water. The excavation revealed the
remains of whole and crushed human bones from the surface to a depth of ca. 3
meters (Fig 13). Some of the bones were burnt while others were not and artifacts
were discovered among the remains. Near the center of Grave 2, the rabbinical
supervisor requested that we refrain from excavating due to the presence of greater
quantities of human remains"
"Grave 7...The area was found to be heavily disturbed and contained the remains of human bones, artifacts and ash to
a depth of 0.5 meters."
"Grave 15, was uncovered several meters south of the crematorium (Figs. 2 and 20).
This grave is similar to Grave 1, with a thin 0.10 m. layer of dark soil mixed with
crushed bone fragments discovered at a depth of 2.5 m. and under the layer of sterile
sand described above."
Can you point to any other mass grave site, like that, anywhere in the world? The only equivalents I know of are at TII, Belzec and Chelmno.