Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

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Wetzelrad
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Wetzelrad »

HansHill wrote: Sat Jan 24, 2026 1:46 pm If we assume that the delousing facilities in question were built (but more importantly finished and most importantly, plastered) in late 1942, then I think this timeline works for the alkalinity to be inhospitable to PB formation until some time early 1946. Mainstream, non-Holocaust source to support the idea of high alkalinity of fresh plaster: https://kentplasterers.co.uk/best-paint ... w-plaster/

I think people like Fred and Wetzelrad are a bit more firm on the timeline of these facilities, so interested for them to review and interpret this new argument!
I hope my post above adequately answers your chemistry arguments.

As to the timeline, we can establish it more definitively by using this edition of the museum's Varia magazine. Page 14 gives "autumn of 1942" as the estimated date that the bunker was built. Page 16 tells us that the damaged roof was not dismantled until 1947, which could mean the 1946 photo dates to as late as that. If we stretch, we could say this gap in time was at a minimum 3.25 years and at a maximum 5.33 years.

But the main problem with this timeline is that we don't know when the stains did form, only when they didn't. As of the 1946 photo, there is no sign that they have begun to form, not even faintly. The earliest images I can find of the stains come from tourist videos in the early 2000s. It's not known how many years or decades passed before the stains were created.

The platerers article you link appears to be AI. Not that I see any errors in it, but AI is making it increasingly difficult to find useful and reliable information by web search.
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Wetzelrad
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Wetzelrad »

Booze wrote: Sun Jan 25, 2026 7:32 am I saw a video on YouTube several years ago showing that Russians were experimenting with cans of Zyklon after liberation of a camp and to my recollection it was Majdanek. I have always thought it possible that the staining of the walls of the undressing room took place post-war.
You're probably misremembering, but there are a few photos or videos of the Soviets handling or posing with Zyklon at Majdanek. But all of that is from 1944 or maybe 1945. I'm less inclined to believe they were still doing it two+ years later, and yet that's where the evidence points.
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bombsaway
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by bombsaway »

Wetzelrad wrote: Mon Jan 26, 2026 9:19 pm
bombsaway wrote: Fri Jan 23, 2026 2:17 am Likely there wasn't a lack of respect, just a general apathy to honest historical inquiry that drove policy around these sites in the post-war period.
bombsaway wrote: Fri Jan 23, 2026 6:58 pm A museum that didn't really respect the history but this is also clear from the stated death tolls. What's the point here?
You're contradicting yourself, but thanks anyway for confirming what I've written here.
The lack of respect I mention was just on the hypothetical point of them using HCN in these chambers.
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Booze
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Booze »

Wetzelrad wrote: Mon Jan 26, 2026 9:27 pm
Booze wrote: Sun Jan 25, 2026 7:32 am I saw a video on YouTube several years ago showing that Russians were experimenting with cans of Zyklon after liberation of a camp and to my recollection it was Majdanek. I have always thought it possible that the staining of the walls of the undressing room took place post-war.
You're probably misremembering, but there are a few photos or videos of the Soviets handling or posing with Zyklon at Majdanek. But all of that is from 1944 or maybe 1945. I'm less inclined to believe they were still doing it two+ years later, and yet that's where the evidence points.

Why would you say that I misremembered? I'm not offended by it in anyway, I'm just curious that you might have a logical basis for it.
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Wetzelrad
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Wetzelrad »

Booze wrote: Mon Jan 26, 2026 9:59 pm Why would you say that I misremembered? I'm not offended by it in anyway, I'm just curious that you might have a logical basis for it.
Yeah, no offense. I haven't seen or don't remember the video you mention, and evidently neither does anyone else here, but it does kind of sound like Soviet liberation footage. This kind of partial memory is a common culprit for misremembrances, in my experience.

Still, if you can find it it would be highly relevant. I might do some searching.
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Wetzelrad
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Wetzelrad »

Somehow it totally escaped me that Rudolf returns to the matter of the churches near the end of TCOA, and here he explicitly writes on quantities of time again. From page 356:
The disfiguration of the churches quoted (G. Zimmermann 1981, pp. 120f. as well as Note 16, p. 28) are typical exceptions, since these unheated churches, notorious for their humid walls, had been freshly plastered only a few weeks earlier with cement mortar, which is known to remain alkaline for many months. These are exactly the conditions which in this study have been demonstrated to be favorable to the formation of Iron Blue. With increasing setting of the cement plaster over the course of months, the pH of the masonry in the churches finally dropped, so that the final reaction led to the formation of long-term-stable Iron Blue. This final reaction of the adsorbed cyanide into Iron Blue was only completed after approximately two years. The prior stage of this reaction, the formation of considerably paler iron cyanides, could already have been completed or well progressed prior to this.
Adding in a footnote:
Incidentally, all the plaster in the church at Wiesenfeld had be to knocked off the walls and replaced, since there was no other way to get rid of the Iron Blue. Communication from Konrad Fischer, head architect during the renovation of the church at that time.
I might have to read the referenced text to better understand these cases, but if a church actually needed "two years" for blue to appear then that is much better support for delayed formation at Majdanek than anything discussed so far. This seems more plausible now. I still lean toward it not making sense for the stains we're discussing for reasons I won't reiterate.
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HansHill
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by HansHill »

Wetzelrad wrote: Mon Jan 26, 2026 9:21 pm I hope my post above adequately answers your chemistry arguments.

As to the timeline, we can establish it more definitively by using this edition of the museum's Varia magazine. Page 14 gives "autumn of 1942" as the estimated date that the bunker was built. Page 16 tells us that the damaged roof was not dismantled until 1947, which could mean the 1946 photo dates to as late as that. If we stretch, we could say this gap in time was at a minimum 3.25 years and at a maximum 5.33 years.

But the main problem with this timeline is that we don't know when the stains did form, only when they didn't. As of the 1946 photo, there is no sign that they have begun to form, not even faintly. The earliest images I can find of the stains come from tourist videos in the early 2000s. It's not known how many years or decades passed before the stains were created.

The platerers article you link appears to be AI. Not that I see any errors in it, but AI is making it increasingly difficult to find useful and reliable information by web search.
Yes, quite helpful as always Wetzelrad, thank you.

So from my current persepective, and as supported by not only Rudolf but Green also is that the situation is presented as a mechanism for a delayed PB formation is indeed possible at Majdanek, it simply depends on certain variables. Notably, one thing missing from the timeline is when the fumigations began. Do we know if the fumigations began immediately after completion in late 1942, or perhaps delayed somewhat until 1943?

If not, then i'm happy to go with your timeline that fumigations began in late 1942.

With that then, the variables are 1) pH of the plaster, and 2) composition of the plaster. Re the plasterers link, yes fair enough, but i wanted to take the most mainstream, non-controversial everyman source I could find, just to demonstrate how commonly understood this concept is. So the recently plastered wall, late 1942, began with a pH in the range of 12-13.

We are indeed almost finished with TCOA, but not with Rudolf quite yet, because it's interesting to frame this mechanism in Rudolf's "Prussian Blue Formation in Five Steps", from 6.5.1 of TCOA. It is step 3, or step c as he denotes in the book that we are most interested in here.

This step as per TCOA is written as:
Complexing of trivalent iron (Fe3+) to the complex iron(III) cyanide (hexacyanoferrate(III)), that is, the displacement of oxygen and/or OH- ions in rust by cyanide ions
We can move now to the Rudolf / Green exchanges to see where it is stress-testesd and, funnily enough, this exact step is where they part ways - although not from a disagreement on the mechanism / process, but specifically on the presence / absence of the variables - which is also relevant for us in the Majdanek case!

In his article titled "Some Considerations about the Gas Chambers of Auschwitz and Birkenau
Complexing of Fe3+ with 6 molecules CN- to [FeIII(CN)6]3-. This requires reactive iron
which is part of all mortars and concrete due to the sand and/or cement added, which
frequently has an iron oxide (i.e. rust) content of 1 to 4%.[18] The reactivity of iron
increases with decreasing pH-value. This means that at pH-values beyond 11 (to be found
in freshly mixed mortars and concrete) the complexing step is unlikely, because the iron
complexes are no longer stable
.
From Green's reply, the article called "Chemistry is not the Science":
Step three. Without this step, Prussian blue will not form by Rudolf's mechanism. Alich et al.
[57] exposed Fe(III) to CN- and observed no Prussian blue formation within the timescale of the
experiment. This fact shows that step 3 is not a fast process by any means, and yet it is a
necessary step. Cyanide ions in the presence of Fe3 do not reduce the iron. Rather, the iron
must already be complexed to cyanide in the form of Fe(CN)63-.
Rudolf notes correctly that basic environments inhibit this process. An oversimplified way of
considering this reaction is the following reaction:

Fe(OH)3 + 6CN- <=> 3OH- + Fe(CN)63-

in which we have omitted the complexing of water molecules for simplicity. Lechatelier's well-
known principle predicts that a higher concentration of hydroxide ions (OH-) should drive this
reaction to the left. The basicity that Rudolf needs to have even a snowball's chance in hell of
producing Prussian blue by his proposed mechanism (under the conditions in the gas
chambers) inhibits the formation of a necessary precursor! Rudolf claims that the pH must
reach 11
to hinder the process, but offers no support for this assertion
So as we can see, Rudolf and Green essentially agree on the chemistry (as you would expect) but disagree on conditions and variables within the mortar. This obviously is in the context of Brirkenau so I won't address Green's argument here, but want to zone into the last sentence, as this is what applies to Majdanek. "Offers no support for this assertion" is ludicrous from Green, as i've demonstrated above, very high alkalinity of fresh mortar / plaster (12-13) is commonly understood, even from mainstream sources.

From his postscript:
Rudolf makes a minor point. Rudolf's claim that a measurement of the pH many years later may
not be indicative of the pH at the time is valid. Unfortunately we cannot go back in time and
measure the pH. Notwithstanding that fact, our conclusions about Prussian blue formation
simply do not hinge on the pH. Rudolf has argued for a high pH because it makes the possibility
of reduction more likely. On the other hand a high pH makes the formation of a necessary
precursor to Prussian blue less likely
. In the end, even granting Rudolf his high pH, our
conclusions are valid, and we point this fact out in the article.
To which Rudolf then rebuts in "Dr Green's Evasions":
I strongly recommend that Green finally consults some literature on building materials -- as I did
in preparation of my report -- so he can find out for himself that my claims about considerably
higher and longer lasting pH values in cement mortars as compared to lime mortars are true.
There is no need to "go back in time". Just stop ignoring the facts, my quoted literature, and
start going to a library! Also, it might well be that his argument does not hinge on the pH value,
but that is only because his argument is flawed, as the pH value strongly influences the
equilibrium concentration of cyanide ions in aqueous solutions (see my subchapter "pH Value,"
and especially Graph 5). I therefore have to repeat that Green keeps ignoring the most
important facts. As a matter of fact: lime plaster older than several weeks (pH of ca. 6.5-7,
delousing chambers) accumulates a concentration of cyanide 10,000 to 100,000 times lower
than of a cement plaster of several weeks (pH 11-12, all in equilibrium and at the same
temperature). How can anybody claim that this issue does not hinge on the pH value?
As per the 2nd variable, composition as I called it above - I'm almost certain we don't know if the plaster of this wall in Majdanek is lime plaster or cement plaster. Cement plaster obvious is more favourable for "delayed" reaction, and lime for "quick" reaction.
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Wetzelrad
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Wetzelrad »

HansHill wrote: Tue Jan 27, 2026 11:42 am Notably, one thing missing from the timeline is when the fumigations began. Do we know if the fumigations began immediately after completion in late 1942, or perhaps delayed somewhat until 1943?
No, exact dates are undocumented. Both revisionists and the museum speak in terms of what's "probable" rather than what's definitely known. The museum claims the first gassing was in September 1942 or earlier. Graf/Mattogno imply the bunker was being used for disinfestation at around that same time. It's inconceivable that it could have begun operation any later than January 1943 since a report of January 20 put it that delousing facilities were "adequate" at that time (p.62).

My personal belief is that it would be put into operation as soon as possible because of the desperation over typhus. Mortality in Majdanek had been constantly increasing since spring, and we know that at this time throughout the camp system work was being done explicitly to reduce mortality.

One still further consideration to confuse the timeline is that the specific gas release that created these stains on the outside of the building may have been an isolated incident. We can assume that this incident occurred anytime between 1942 and July 23, 1944, when the Germans fled.
HansHill wrote: Tue Jan 27, 2026 11:42 am So from my current persepective, and as supported by not only Rudolf but Green also is that the situation is presented as a mechanism for a delayed PB formation is indeed possible at Majdanek, it simply depends on certain variables.
Yes. And I'll just say broadly that I agree with all your chemical musings in this post.
HansHill wrote: Tue Jan 27, 2026 11:42 am In his article titled "Some Considerations about the Gas Chambers of Auschwitz and Birkenau
Complexing of Fe3+ with 6 molecules CN- to [FeIII(CN)6]3-. This requires reactive iron
which is part of all mortars and concrete due to the sand and/or cement added, which
frequently has an iron oxide (i.e. rust) content of 1 to 4%.[18] The reactivity of iron
increases with decreasing pH-value. This means that at pH-values beyond 11 (to be found
in freshly mixed mortars and concrete) the complexing step is unlikely, because the iron
complexes are no longer stable
.
FYI, Rudolf explains this step better in pages 195-196 of TCOA. He gets in to the contradictions that Green tried to seize upon.
HansHill wrote: Tue Jan 27, 2026 11:42 am I'm almost certain we don't know if the plaster of this wall in Majdanek is lime plaster or cement plaster. Cement plaster obvious is more favourable for "delayed" reaction, and lime for "quick" reaction.
The fact that Prussian Blue did form tells us definitively that the bunker is concrete/cement. We know lime plaster would not produce Prussian Blue after it aged for weeks, much less years.

I'm comfortable leaving the chemistry discussion here. Hopefully something will resolve this in the future.
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by HansHill »

I have come across one more datapoint which may be useful on this point. It appears that the Soviets conducted a test gassing in Majdanek in August 1944 using two cans from the extant Zyklon B supply.

From Chapter VI in HH Vol 5:
Spoiler
The contents of the cans were tested for the presence of hydrocyanic acid: with
indicator paper dipped in benzidine acetate as well as with sodium picrate, the
formation of Prussian Blue was effected.
Samples were taken from 18 cans, and 48 individual tests were performed. All
samples clearly indicated the presence of hydrogen cyanide by means of reactions
specified above.
Two cans of ‘Zyklon’ weighing 1,750 grams were opened, and the hydrogen
cyanide was driven out for two hours by means of heating to a temperature of 23
to 28 °C; the remnant, including the can, weighed:
1. – 2,330 grams
2. – 2,310 grams
An empty can weighs 600 grams.
Therefore, the evaporable component of the substance ‘Zyklon B’ weighs from
1,430[320] to 1,440 grams per large can.
I cannot find whereabouts this test gassing took place. What we do know is that the test gassings were reasonably controlled for time and temperature.
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Wetzelrad
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Wetzelrad »

You're right. I should have included that in the thread.

Related to that and to what Booze wrote above, the Soviets took posed photos of Zyklon at this exact location. Directly in front of the stained corner. The photos were taken by Soviet photojournalist Victor Temin. Date given as either 1945 or July 1944, i.e. liberation.

Photo 1: https://waralbum.ru/268612/
Photo 2: https://waralbum.ru/393440
Photo 3: https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/ ... -b-pellets

The first photo might have taken place first, chronologically. The second photo was taken just a few steps to its right. In neither photo do I see any sign of the blue stains on the walls, but they're too obscured to say that confidently.

The second photo includes exactly two cans -- the same number they tested -- which is suggestive that testing was conducted simultaneously with this photo op.

I can't determine the exact location of the third photo, but it is claimed (by https://russiainphoto.ru) to be from Majdanek and the same photographer.

Also notable about the first photo is that one of the cans appears to be opened, with pellets exposed. These pellets must have already been depleted by either the Germans or Soviets.

All of this contributes to the idea that the Soviets played with Zyklon here. The chemistry question remains unresolved.
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Fred Ziffel
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Fred Ziffel »

I tried opening the third link and the other
If you can show it, perhaps I can help?

as for the open can in photo, I once read somewhere that the German recycled the pellets and cans
I may be wrong, but those pellets could be spent? Then put in the can. I say that because the can is very full. Again I may be wrong
I do not believe anything one is not allowed to question
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Wetzelrad
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Re: Why did the Soviets continue to use the Majdanek gas chambers postwar?

Post by Wetzelrad »

Photo 3 is a common photo of a pile of pellets with a hand pointing to them. I'm not sure why you have a problem with USHMM links. Here is a clunky link to it on russiainphoto. Because of its format it may work only temporarily if it works at all: https://russiainphoto.ru/search/photo/y ... ate_page=2

Yes, I believe recycling spent pellets was the norm. NI-9912 says: "Remove remains of Zyklon from the fumigated rooms. They should generally be sent back to the factory in the same way as cans or boxes." But I couldn't say whether the fullness of that can is normal.
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