Do you know why this document fascinates me? It is because it serves as a documented proof of the extent that documents regarding this economic operation (explicitly written here in an economic context) were destroyed as a general practice.1944-01-05 Letter from Globocnik to Himmler on Operation Reinhard (Aktion Reinhard): “the documents of all other works in this matter have already been destroyed”
Introduction
In a letter dated January 5, 1944, the Higher SS and Police Leader Odilo Globocnik, addressed Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler regarding the economic settlement of Operation Reinhardt (Aktion Reinhard). The letter was submitted in response to Himmler’s order from September 22, 1943, which requested its completion by December 31, 1943. He outlined the two-part structure of the accounting of the “economic part of Operation Reinhardt… a) accounting and delivery of confiscated valuables and b) accounting of values generated from labor”. Globocnik also stressed that “With the entire accounting of Reinhardt, it must also be noted that their documents must be destroyed as soon as possible since the documents of all other works in this matter have already been destroyed.”
Hans, I think it would add a lot of value to your website if you answer each of these questions for each document you upload there:Hans wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 8:16 pm The purpose of this site is to offer high-quality resources on the subject. "High quality" means providing the most relevant sources, the best available photos or scans, and the most reliable references, ideally linked to archives containing the originals. I am open to including materials that Holocaust deniers may claim support their views. Feel free to submit any sources you believe would be valuable additions (though I have huge to-do list already).
Do we have a complete and clear chain-of-custody on this document (i.e. some clear understanding of who exactly had access to it at any point, over time)?
Are there any clear indicators of who has actually written or held this document (e.g. verifiable signatures, distinct handwriting)?
Is the style, format, structure, etc. of this document fully consistent with what is seen among others from the same alleged author or organization/unit?
Does the document actually and necessarily say what exterminationists claim (i.e. unambiguous, clear language, rather than presumption or inference)?
Does the context (time, location, persons involved, etc.) support the exterminationist interpretation, above all others (once all others have been thoroughly considered)?
Are there other documents which could provide important context to this current one which are strangely missing from the record (or which have significant problems, themselves)?
Are the claims in the document verifiable by any other means (prioritizing physical evidence, then related documentation, and so on)?
Thanks Hans, I appreciate your effort to be as comprehensive as possible. I understand you're busy as well, so no pressure and take as long as you need.Hans wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 8:16 pm The purpose of this site is to offer high-quality resources on the subject. "High quality" means providing the most relevant sources, the best available photos or scans, and the most reliable references, ideally linked to archives containing the originals. I am open to including materials that Holocaust deniers may claim support their views. Feel free to submit any sources you believe would be valuable additions (though I have huge to-do list already).
In terms of scope, will you be focusing on wartime German documents? Or will you be doing other stuff like British Foreign Office as well?Hans wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 8:16 pm The purpose of this site is to offer high-quality resources on the subject. "High quality" means providing the most relevant sources, the best available photos or scans, and the most reliable references, ideally linked to archives containing the originals. I am open to including materials that Holocaust deniers may claim support their views. Feel free to submit any sources you believe would be valuable additions (though I have huge to-do list already).
Mattogno’s reference points to a crude Soviet-typed copy, definitely not suitable for presentation. I found another citation to the Thuringian State Main Archive (Thüringische Hauptstaatsarchiv), which may be an original or perhaps a copy of the Soviet version, I sent them an inquiry.Archie wrote: ↑Wed Oct 23, 2024 3:55 am
2) The documents from December 1942 regarding the order to reduce the death rates in the camps. Some of this is in the NMT volumes. But not the first document from Dec 28. Reitlinger cites this as PS-2172 but that isn't published anywhere from what I can tell. Mattogno seems to refer to in HH #22, pg. 56 and gives a reference "AGK, NTN, 94, pp. 142-143" where AGK = Archiwum Głównej Komisji Badania Zbrodni Przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej
That’s already on the to-do list. In my opinion, the images in T1021 are of sufficiently high quality (yes, they’re black and white, but a color photo or scan wouldn’t add much value in this case). The only downside is the absence of a signature on the original, but given the content, it’s a must-have nonetheless.