After careful review, I must say I don't know where it was. And I believe the issue is irrelevant. I can concede to it being wherever you want, and it doesn't make your argument stronger, in a relative sense.PrudentRegret wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 3:41 pm It's a very very interesting turn of events that Believers are now trying to say John Ball was right about that being a transit camp. They fear the Transit Camp at the Malkinia Loop.
Bombsaway, do you concur with Nessie that this was the location of the Malkinia Transit Camp?
I mean, you are insisting a shunting engine brought the entire train to Treblinka Station specifically because you don't like the notion that this train rolled to a stop at this exact loop which contained the Transit Camp. If you didn't care you would have said "yeah I guess you are correct, trains from Warsaw would have taken the Malkinia Loop before coming to the stop at 'Malkinia'". Instead of saying that you opted to switch out the engine of the train even though there's no reason the Main Engine couldn't have brought the train to Treblinka station without stopping at Malkinia station all.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 5:43 pmAfter careful review, I must say I don't know where it was. And I believe the issue is irrelevant. I can concede to it being wherever you want, and it doesn't make your argument stronger, in a relative sense.PrudentRegret wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 3:41 pm It's a very very interesting turn of events that Believers are now trying to say John Ball was right about that being a transit camp. They fear the Transit Camp at the Malkinia Loop.
Bombsaway, do you concur with Nessie that this was the location of the Malkinia Transit Camp?
It's interesting you think I'm afraid of the transit camp being somewhere. I consider myself to be pretty objective about history; if you had convincing evidence refuting the mainstream story in a minor or major way I would be on your side I think. Instead what I see is more akin to the ravings of a madman.
Well, mainstream story says Operation Reinhardt was the code-name for the extermination of the Jews. I've provided convincing evidence otherwise but I doubt you'll concede that. So you're just lying, you are going to defend the mainstream story even when presented compelling evidence contradicting it.I consider myself to be pretty objective about history; if you had convincing evidence refuting the mainstream story in a minor or major way I would be on your side I think.
Dead wrong, I said that not because I don't like something, but because of witness evidence, which I quoted in my justification. I'll give it to you again:PrudentRegret wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 6:11 pm
I mean, you are insisting a shunting engine brought the entire train to Treblinka Station specifically because you don't like the notion that this train rolled to a stop at this exact loop which contained the Transit Camp. If you didn't care you would have said "yeah I guess you are correct, trains from Warsaw would have taken the Malkinia Loop before coming to the stop at 'Malkinia'". Instead of saying that you opted to switch out the engine of the train even though there's no reason the Main Engine couldn't have brought the train to Treblinka station without stopping at Malkinia station all.
At best you've introduced uncertainty. To definitively prove Reinhardt did not encompass a mass killing operation (I think this is what you really mean) you have to show that there was no killing operation, or show documents specifically excluding killing activities.Well, mainstream story says Operation Reinhardt was the code-name for the extermination of the Jews. I've provided convincing evidence otherwise but I doubt you'll concede that. So you're just lying, you are going to defend the mainstream story even when presented compelling evidence contradicting it.
"Within the orthodox narrative there would have been no absolute need for the train to stop at Malkinia for 20-25 minutes. So it could spend this time turning around and getting hooked up to a different locomotive that would take it to Treblinka."PrudentRegret wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 7:29 pm That pretty clearly says that the shunting engine was what divided the train into parts of twenty at Treblinka station. There's nothing there to say the shunting engine brought all 60 wagons to Treblinka station at once.
I didn't think you conceded that the train may have traveled the loop on its way to the Malkinia stop, that has been noted.
Nobody has followed the references here to the putative Malkinia 'transit camp'. The sztetl.org page referencesbombsaway wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 12:32 amThis your supposition.PrudentRegret wrote: ↑Fri Oct 04, 2024 10:59 pm It's not just "mislabeled", nothing about this map indicates the location of "T-II," nothing about the map resembles that camp. It is highly notable that the first ever map of Treblinka, and the one that features in Weirnik's account, places the facilities on the Warsaw-Bialystok line which is right where Malkinia is. And that there is also reference to a "Malkinia transit camp" and the fact that Malkinia-Treblinka seem to be interchangeable in certain documents.
By mislabeled I mean in your view. Weirnick says it's an extermination center, not some other kind of camp.
"In 1941–1942 there was a transit camp in Małkinia for the Jewish population, set up by Germans in the eastern part of the town, along Nurska Street"
https://sztetl.org.pl/en/towns/m/982-ma ... -community
So Werinick, in your speculative history, is not talking about the Malkinia transit camp either, because it wasn't by the railroad. You must be imagining there was some other large camp there, I suggest you start digging along the tracks if you want to prove its existence.
So Rozycki does not advance past the same two pieces of evidence, except an updated confirmation of the 1939-40 situation, which says nothing about 1942.Transit camp for the Jewish population in Małkinia
The first piece of information from which we learn about the existence of the transit camp in Małkinia is the publication by Danuta Czech "Kalendarium chwil w KL Auschwitz"25. There is a record there of the arrival of two transports to the Auschwitz camp from the transit camp in Małkinia... These documents concern December 10 and 12, 1942. The first transport included approximately 2,500
men, women, and children. 524 men were selected from this group and sent to work in the camp. The rest were executed in the gas chambers. The second transport included 2,000 people, of whom only 422 were accepted to the camp, and the rest, as in the case of the first transport, were brutally murdered26.
Małkinia is also mentioned by one of the Auschwitz prisoners who arrived
in one of the aforementioned transports. His memories are not entirely coherent and unambiguous, and the phrase "transition camp for Jews" does not come from the author of the memoirs, but from those who compiled the memoirs.27 However, we would like to point out that Załmen Lewental, who came from Ciechanów, began his last journey on 17 November 1942 and arrived at Auschwitz only on 10 December 1942. Between these extreme dates, he stayed in places that could have been transit camps located in different towns.28 Information about the camp for the Jewish population located in Małkinia Górna is also shared by the native inhabitants of this town and its surroundings. They describe it as a facility organized "in the open air", in the period 1939-1940, along Nurska Street towards the east. Confirmation of this information, as well as obtaining additional information, was made possible by the accounts of people who passed through this informal camp, written in the years 1941-1942.29 In October and November 1939, Jews and Poles escaping from the German occupation often chose Małkinia as the last town on the German side of the border before reaching the territories under the jurisdiction of the Soviet Union. The analysed accounts repeatedly repeat the same pattern of events. After arriving at the site by train, on foot or in carts, the arrivals from various Polish cities, especially from Warsaw, were repeatedly subjected to meticulous inspections by the Germans. They were mainly looking for money, valuables and things of any material value30. In addition to the selfless help offered to the escapees by Poles31, there were also frauds, robberies and extortions committed by Polish citizens of various provenances32. Then, the escapees were directed to a strip of “no man’s land”. Unfortunately, even reaching Małkinia and leaving the General Government did not ensure safety. The border on the Soviet side was closed. It was also impossible to return to German territory. This situation forced the refugees to stay in a strip of "no man's land" for several days33 or weeks34. For some, this place became their grave35, while others managed to penetrate unnoticed to the Soviet side, thanks to hiring a guide. Every now and then, Russian border guards would formally or informally (15 minutes) open a border crossing36, and the storming wave of people would then rush eastwards as quickly as possible, making room for the constantly arriving new refugees. The "Dante's Hell" of that time was located between German and Soviet posts on the demarcation line on the newly established border. Its shape resembled a rectangle, the corners of which were border posts of both Soviet and German soldiers, located on the road to Nur and on the Małkinia-Białystok railway line37. It was fenced from the east and west with a fence and/or trestles with barbed wire. In the winter of 1939, on the strip of "no man's land" about 300-400 meters wide38, in forest thickets, fields, directly on the ground, in dugouts or primitive huts, there were about 2,000 people39. This number was maintained despite the fact that some people gradually managed to get to the Soviet side. It is impossible to give an estimated number of refugees who passed through the informal refugee camp in Małkinia. The main places where the people held there camped were fields located near border crossings and an unspecified clearing in the forest40. Another piece of information about the camp in Małkinia is included in the publication by Lechosław Herz "Puszcza Kamieniecka i Biała"41. We learn from it that during the occupation, the Jewish inhabitants of Brok were sent to a transit camp in Małkinia, where they died of cold and hunger. Unfortunately, the author does not place the described events in a specific time and place. He also does not provide the source on which he based the information in question.
Based on oral and written accounts, we can confirm the existence of a temporary camp in the "no man's land" strip in 1939. Aerial photographs of the area between the railway line and the road to Nur, taken in May 1940, also indirectly indicate the potential location of the camp in question. In our opinion, however, the existence of the above-mentioned camp should not be linked
with a possible transit camp for the Jewish population in Małkinia in 1942. In this case, neither the available documents nor the analysis of aerial photographs confirmed the existence of the camp. However, this does not mean that such a camp did not exist. Therefore, we leave this issue open for further researchers.
TLDR:Based on oral and written accounts, we can confirm the existence of a temporary camp in the "no man's land" strip in 1939. Aerial photographs of the area between the railway line and the road to Nur, taken in May 1940, also indirectly indicate the potential location of the camp in question. In our opinion, however, the existence of the above-mentioned camp should not be linked with a possible transit camp for the Jewish population in Małkinia in 1942. In this case, neither the available documents nor the analysis of aerial photographs confirmed the existence of the camp. However, this does not mean that such a camp did not exist. Therefore, we leave this issue open for further researchers.
In our opinion, however, the existence of the above-mentioned camp should not be linked
with a possible transit camp for the Jewish population in Małkinia in 1942. In this case, neither the available documents nor the analysis of aerial photographs confirmed the existence of the camp. However, this does not mean that such a camp did not exist. Therefore, we leave this issue open for further researchers.
According to my AI they did:
Yes, the authors did examine photographs from 1942 in this study. Specifically, the document mentions:
They analyzed aerial photographs taken by German reconnaissance planes on October 26, 1942. This is mentioned in a footnote discussing the airfield near Ugniewo, which was possibly used for calibrating German bomber sights.
The document includes an image (Image 9) showing an airfield in Biel in 1942, with concentric circles used for calibrating aircraft sights near Ugniewo.
Not sure these were of the Malkinia area though. You have photos of that area from 1942?Regarding the aerial photographs from October 26, 1942:
This is mentioned in footnote 12 of the document.
The footnote states: "Based on the interpretation of aerial photographs taken by German aviation on October 26, 1942. Interpretation by S. Różycki, M. Michalski, photographs in possession of the authors of the 'Supplement'."
This indicates that the authors had access to and analyzed these specific aerial photographs from late 1942.
The photos were used to identify features related to the airfield near Ugniewo.
Concerning Image 9 showing the airfield in Biel:
The image is captioned: "Airfield in Biel in 1942. In the upper left corner, concentric circles used for calibrating aircraft sights. The circles were located near the village of Ugniewo."
This image is specifically dated to 1942, providing visual evidence from that year.
The source is given as "NARA, RG373/GX13130", indicating it's from the National Archives and Records Administration.
The image shows both the airfield and the calibration circles, demonstrating German military activity in the area during 1942.
Yes this is why I said, "Not sure these were of the Malkinia area though. You have photos of that area from 1942?" Maybe you missed that.PrudentRegret wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:24 am Bombsaway, you are such a strong example of the failure mode of midwits with LLMs. You don't even read or digest what the LLM is telling you.
There is one photograph from 1942 pertaining to the "Field airport in Biel in 1942." That does not mean they reviewed 1942 aerial footage of Malkinia Station, and no I am not aware of any that exists.