Stubble wrote: ↑Fri Sep 12, 2025 2:47 pm
Well, I've actually been looking for them in German wartime documents.
To find the Jews sent to the death camps, you would need Nazi documentation that recorded mass transports from those camps to other places, or that recorded an ever-increasing Jewish population in the camps and ghettos 1939-44, such that by 1944, there were 5 to 6 million of them, at least. We both know no such documents exist.
I had always assumed some sizable percentage, like 10%, had indeed been buried at the Bug River camps based off of purported grave size.
Upon reading the reports from the excavation of Sobibor, I am no longer even considering a number in that region or that 'mass grave space' as we have been lead to believe, indeed exists.
Kola's findings were dead wrong on Sobibor. Belzec is now covered in concrete, rebar and jagged rocks, so, I guess we won't get a definitive answer on that one.
I will find these jews, something the orthodoxy has absolutely, definitively, refused to do, and continues to refuse to do.
No one on the orthodox side is interested in actually finding these missing persons, and they never have been.
Bad Arolsen, previously called the International Tracing Service.
https://arolsen-archives.org/en/
"The largest archive on victims and survivors of Nazi persecution.
USHMM
https://www.ushmm.org/remember/resource ... ctim-names
"The Museum’s Database of Holocaust Survivor and Victim Names contains records on people persecuted during World War II under the Nazi regime including Jews, Roma and Sinti, Poles and other Slavic peoples, Soviet prisoners of war, persons with disabilities, political prisoners, trade union leaders, "subversive" artists, those Catholic and Lutheran clergy who were seen as opponents of the regime, resisters, Jehovah's Witnesses, male homosexuals, and criminal offenders, among others."
JewishGen
https://www.jewishgen.org/databases/holocaust/
"JewishGen's Holocaust Database is a unique and critically valuable collection of databases which contain information about Holocaust victims and survivors. As of May 2025, more than 6 million records are available in this continually updated collection, which includes Camp Records, Transport Lists, Name Lists, and a multitude of of other record types."
World Jewish Relief.
https://www.worldjewishrelief.org/what- ... qsQAvD_BwE
"For decades, World Jewish Relief’s Case Files were lost and forgotten, until a chance discovery revealed a treasure trove of documents detailing the extraordinary help the charity gave to Jews fleeing Nazi persecution. Now, we are returning these documents to families, revealing fascinating details of your family history.
We have the names of over 315,000 people, as well as records for the 65,000 refugees we supported in the 1930s and 40s. If you think we might have records for your family, enquire by using the form below."