Whoever he is, Mrozik calls Krzysztof his colleague and he has made other public appearances for the museum.
I posted it on Twitter so hopefully Rudolf will take notice.
I have no doubt Zyklon was used in the room that you are showing.Fred Ziffel wrote: ↑Thu Apr 03, 2025 4:18 am You stated: I don't have a strong basis to assume this was a chamber that used Zyklon.
The other purpose it can serve is to demonstrate that documents that used the term "gas chamber" cannot haphazardly be equated with a homicidal gas chamber.Fred Ziffel wrote: ↑Thu Apr 03, 2025 11:02 pm Booze
I guess we are going to have to agree to disagree. Regardless, the main reason for this issue being in the presentation is because I was emphasizing that Polish building contractors were doing jobs for the Germans and getting paid for it.
Personally I can't see enough in the photos to say that. On page 149 Mattogno describes them like this:
Here he says both chimney and chimneys. I take him to mean that the two shafts do actually connect before exiting the roof as a singular shaft. This would also solve the issue of the work orders referring to both a chimney and two chimneys. But it's confusing enough to read that I could be wrong. Is there a photo of the chimney from outside?Today, the two openings in the room’s ceiling measure approximately 60 cm × 60 cm (eastern opening) and 40 cm × 40 cm (western opening). Both hatches open into a wooden shaft in which a small chimney of wooden slats is installed; it is closed off with a lid, also of wood, on the barrack roof. Measured from the room’s ceiling, the two chimneys are approximately 1.15 m tall.
Really? In the video he said "there are no traces of Zyklon-B" in chamber B2 (II). In the context that he said it, I took that to mean no stains. I guess it's a little more complicated.Fred Ziffel wrote: ↑Thu Apr 03, 2025 11:02 pmhowever, to be precise, it should read "lack of stains in one (smaller) gas chamber" B1 only.