Stubble wrote: ↑Fri Nov 21, 2025 2:35 pm
I ran across this today;
...
It appears to be in line with the official historiography.
He leads off one video with a photo of Galewski, hilarious.
Did you notice if this YouTuber adds anything new? Most of the sources in each video's bibliography are the standard ones. A few in German I haven't seen before.
I was hoping his video on the Franz photo album actually showed more images. There aren't good scans of every page online. We could use a better look at the excavators, because the photos appear more consistent with the gravel quarry than any location at T-II.
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I think the entirety of the 1944 Soviet investigation is
here. It's all in Russian, but has transcriptions of each page, which can be auto-translated in a browser.
(There are a ton of sources on that site with archival references. Just search Russian Cyrillic words for "ghettos," "annihilation battalions," or anything.)
Reading through the interrogations, they often share a similar pattern and themes.
1. Property sorting and cleaning. Almost everyone interviewed was sorting and packing pens, using chlorinated lime to wash clothing, and watching others transport chlorinated lime around the camp.
2. Random atrocities. From poison gas bullets to homicidal chlorine lime gas, almost everyone adds a bizarre story that is then ignored and never mentioned again in any book.
3. A Year in Treblinka book club. The Russian translation of YIT was done on August 15, 1944. Not a single witness was interrogated before this date about the "death camp." In a garbled manner, each witness half-remembers some details from the Wiernik book. Some even mention Wiernik, although they get his name wrong. Some mention other characters from YIT. Few of the witnesses mention each other. The sole thread holding it together is the YIT book club discussion.
4. Soviet-Polish continuity. Six of the witnesses from the Soviet investigation were also present at the 1945 Polish investigation. That's not counting Wiernik, whose book the Soviets had in advance of their investigation. Counting him, there is a Soviet-Polish overlap of 7 out of 13 witnesses.
- Jankiel Wiernik - (book present at Soviet) + Polish
- Aleksander Kudlik - Soviet + Polish
- Henryk Poswolski - Polish
- Abe Kon - Soviet + Polish
- Aron Czechowicz - Polish
- Oskar Strawczyński - Soviet + Polish
- Samuel Reisman - Soviet + Polish
- Hejnoch Brener - Soviet + Polish
- Stanisław Kon - Soviet + Polish
- Eugeniusz Turowski - Polish
- Henryk Reichman - Polish
- Szyja Warszawski - Polish
- Leon Finkelsztein - Polish
(also many witnesses exclusive to the Soviet investigation)