How about Tauber?
I challenge Bombsaway's claim that there are no material contradictions between the eyewitnesses and the experts (or the eyewitnesses and other eyewitnesses). Removal of the murder weapon from a crime scene is material by definition.[Greif] Did the grid column through which the gas was dropped reach all the way down to the floor?
[Chazan] Nearly to the floor. One had left a space which made it possible to clean there. One poured water out and brushed up the remaining pebbles.”
G. Greif, Wir weinten tränenlos… Augenzeugenberichte der jüdischen “Sonderkommandos” in Auschwitz, Böhlau Verlag, Cologne/Weimar/Vienna 1985, p. 237.
have not seen any testimony from any of these people that contradict orthodoxy in a significant way.
It is quoted in part in HH2, pg. 148 (two pages in Polish are reproduced in the appendix, pg. 410-411). As far as I know, the full transcripts of the Hoess trial are not available online.
GR's comments:On Höss’s order, the gassing columns that were used for the gassing were
made by the metalworking shop. The columns were 2 meters and a half high,
the inner space 150 square mm in diameter, the following [layer170] at a dis
tance of 30 mm, the third 15 mm away. The wire mesh used was like those
used for windows, green in color; between the mire mesh and the sheet metal
there was a distance of 15 mm. All this was about 1 meter and a half tall. At
the mouth of this network was a so-called distribution cone. 7 pieces of these
columns were made. The columns were installed in the gas chamber right next
to the opening through which the can of gas was thrown in. This column was
installed beneath this opening, the gas was poured directly onto the distribu
tion cone. The cone was to uniformly distribute the gas into these four slots of
15 mm between the sheet metal and the netting, since that increased the gas
evaporation surface. That way the victims could be killed more rapidly. [Ques
tion:] What did such a gas chamber look like? [Answer:] In one crematorium,
it was calculated for 2,500 men, in the other, smaller one [gas chamber] in the
same crematorium for 1,500. The workers of the metalworking shop, inmates,
had built this chamber. The chamber was higher than 2 meters, at the top were
closed rectangular channels; these were the air-extraction openings through
which fans expelled the gas. Zyklon is lighter than air; hence it dissipates
quickly after the gassing. Makeshift [fake] showers were made so that the
whole thing looked like a bath. Lamps were lit, the concrete floor was always
wet. After a homicidal gassing, inmates of the Sonderkommando cleaned the
concrete [floor]. These were Jewish inmates who were assigned to doing that
work. Every three months, the Sonderkommando was exterminated, gassed, yet
not at Auschwitz, but somewhere in the vicinity of Gleiwitz instead. The leader
of this unit was Hauptscharführer Moll, […]
According to his first, pre-trial deposition, the column was 3 meters high, which he changed to 2.50 meters during
the trial. While the inner core measures 150 mm wide in both testimonies, the
column described in his testimony during the trial was only
(15+30+150+30+15=) 240 mm wide in total, compared to the 700 mm of his
pre-trial statement. These are obviously two entirely different objects he is
describing. While one can confuse 3 m with 2.5 m, confusing 70 cm with 24
cm is not likely. Hence Kula has adjusted his statement. I’ll get to the proba
ble reason for this later.
I would agree that the 3 example statements are not strictly contradictory.bombsaway wrote: ↑Sun Mar 29, 2026 5:24 pm I feel like you're misunderstanding something very basic
Picture a car accident at an intersection:
Witness 1: “I saw a car run a red light.”
Witness 2: “I saw a driver on their phone.”
Witness 3: “I heard a loud crash but didn’t see anything.”
These accounts are:
Partial (incomplete)
Focused on different details
They don’t contradict unless someone says:
“The light was green."
or “No crash happened".
Huh?
I'm confused. This could refer to separate parts of the columns, but there were not actually seven parts in his description. The location of this statement in the text suggests it is the number of these columns the shop produced. Did Kula think there were seven insertion columns because there were seven support columns in LK1?
Kula thought there were two gas chambers in Crematorium II?
He has constructed it in such a way to avoid the aspect that matters most; that is the matter of mutual exclusivity. Running a red light and being on the phone are not mutually exclusive. However lets tweak his example to be more relevant to the mutually exclusive nature of our eyewitnesses.