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Auschwitz Protocols

Extended-protected article
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eyewitness accounts of concentration camp

The German Extermination Camps of Auschwitz and Birkenau - title page, November 1944
Part ofa series on
The Holocaust
Jews on selection ramp atAuschwitz, May 1944

TheAuschwitz Protocols, also known as theAuschwitz Reports, and originally published asThe Extermination Camps of Auschwitz and Birkenau, is a collection of three eyewitness accounts from 1943–1944 about the mass murder that was taking place inside theAuschwitz concentration camp in German-occupied Poland during the Second World War.[1][2] The eyewitness accounts are individually known as theVrba–Wetzler report,Polish Major's report, and Rosin-Mordowicz report.[3]

Description

The reports were compiled by prisoners who had escaped from the camp and presented in their order of importance from the Western Allies' perspective, rather than in chronological order.[3] The escapees who authored the reports wereRudolf Vrba andAlfred Wetzler (theVrba–Wetzler report);Arnošt Rosin andCzesław Mordowicz (the Rosin-Mordowicz report); andJerzy Tabeau (the "Polish Major's report").[3]

The Vrba–Wetzler report was widely disseminated by theBratislava Working Group in April 1944, and with help of the Romanian diplomatFlorian Manoliu, the report or a summary obtained fromMoshe Krausz in Budapest reached—tragically with much delay—George Mantello (Mandl),El Salvador Embassy First Secretary inSwitzerland, via Manoliu who brought it to Mantello.[4] Mantello immediately publicized it despite request fromRudolf Kasztner to keep it confidential.

This triggered large-scale demonstrations in Switzerland, sermons in Swiss churches about the tragic plight of Jews and a Swiss press campaign of about 400 headlines protesting the atrocities against Jews. The unprecedented events in Switzerland and possibly other considerations led to threats of retribution against Hungary's RegentMiklós Horthy byPresident Roosevelt,Winston Churchill and others. This was one of the main factors which convinced Horthy to stop the Hungarian death camp transports.[4]

The full reports were published—with seven months delay—by the United StatesWar Refugee Board on 26 November 1944 under the titleThe Extermination Camps of Auschwitz (Oświęcim) and Birkenau in Upper Silesia.[1][5] They were submitted in evidence at theNuremberg Trials as document number 022-L, and are held in the War Refugee Board archives in theFranklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum inHyde Park, New York.[5]

It is not known when they were first called theAuschwitz Protocols, butRandolph L. Braham may have been the first to do so. He used that term for the document inThe Politics of Genocide: The Holocaust in Hungary (1981).[5]

Component reports

Part ofa series of articles on
The Holocaust
Vrba–Wetzler report
timeline
Main railroad track into Auschwitz
Main railroad track into
Auschwitz II-Birkenau.
Timeline

1942

1943
  • 27 April
  • Witold Pilecki escapes.Witold's report is filed away by theOSS.
  • May
  • Stanislaw Chybinski, a member of the Polish Home Army, escapes and compiles the report "Snapshots of Auschwitz".
  • 19 November
  • Jerzy Tabeau and Roman Cieliczko escape. Their January 1944 report becomes known as the "Polish Major's report".

  • March 1944
    • 19 March
    • Germany invades Hungary.
    • 22 March
    • The Washington Post and theNew York Herald Tribune report the existence of gas chambers and crematoria at Auschwitz.

    April 1944
    • 5 April
    • Siegfried Lederer escapes to warn Jews inTheresienstadt and theRed Cross about the mass murder inside Auschwitz.
    • 7–11 April
    • Vrba and Wetzler escape.
    • 22 / 23 April
    • Vrba and Wetzler arrive inŽilina, Slovakia.
    • 24 April
    • Vrba and Wetzler meet Dr Oscar Neumann of the Bratislava Working Group.
    • 27 April
    • German translation of theVrba–Wetzler report completed.
    • 28 April
    • The first trainload of Hungarian Jews leaves for Auschwitz.
    • c. 28 April
    • Rezső Kasztner of theAid and Rescue Committee obtains the report and gives a copy of the report to Geza Soos, Hungarian Foreign Ministry official; Soos gives it to Joszef Elias; Elias's secretary translates it into Hungarian and prepares six copies for Hungarian officials.

    May 1944
    • 15 May
    • Mass transports begin of Hungary's Jews to Auschwitz, at a rate of 12,000 a day.
    • 27 May
    • Arnost Rosin and Czesław Mordowicz escape Auschwitz.

    June 1944
    • 4 June
    • The New York Times describes the gas chambers and said that Jews were being executed.
    • 6 June
    • Allied invasion of Normandy, France.
    • mid June
    • TheVrba–Wetzler report reaches the British and US governments.
    • 15 June
    • TheBBC World Service reports that 4,000 Jews fromTheresienstadt were killed in gas chambers at Auschwitz during March 1944. Rosin and Mordowicz tell Krasniansky 100,000 Hungarian Jews were killed on arrival between 15 and 27 May, unaware of what was about to happen to them.
    • 16 June
    • TheNew York World Telegram repeats the BBC's information.Allen Dulles, Swiss director of the USOffice of Strategic Services, sends theVrba–Wetzler report to the US State Department.
    • 17 June
    • TheLos Angeles Times repeats the BBC's information.
    • 20 June
    • 'TheWashington Times Herald reports the same, courtesy ofReuters, whileThe New York Times offers further details. InBratislava, Vrba discusses his report with Vatican legate Monsignor Mario Martilotti, who then sends a copy to the Vatican via Switzerland.
    • 25 June
    • The New York Times reports that "new mass executions" recently took place in Auschwitz.
    • 30 June
    • TheKastner train, carrying 1,684 Jews, leaves Hungary for Switzerland viaBergen-Belsen.

    July 1944
    • 1–10 July
    • Several newspapers report that, between April 1942 and April 1944, 1.5 to 1.7 million Jews were killed at Auschwitz (from the Vrba-Wetzler report).
    • 7 July
    • Hungarian regentMiklós Horthy orders a halt to the deportations.
    • 9 July
    • Mass deportations end.

    • TheVrba–Wetzler report (the term "Auschwitz Protocols" is sometimes used to refer to just this report), a 33-page report written around 24 April 1944, after Vrba and Wetzler, two Slovak prisoners, who escaped from Auschwitz 7–11 April 1944.[6] In theProtocols, it was 33 pages long and was called "No 1. The Extermination Camps of Auschwitz (Oswiecim) and Birkenau in Upper Silesia."[7][8]
    • The Rosin-Mordowicz report, a seven-page report from Arnošt Rosin and Czesław Mordowicz, also Slovak prisoners, who escaped from Auschwitz on 27 May 1944.[6] This was presented as an additional chapter "III. Birkenau" to the Vrba–Wetzler report.[7]
    • The "Polish Major's report," written byJerzy Tabeau (or Tabau), who was in Auschwitz under the pseudonym Jerzy Wesołowski, and who escaped with Roman Cieliczko on 19 November 1943. Zoltán Tibori Szabó writes that Tabeau compiled his report between December 1943 and January 1944. It was copied using a stencil machine in Geneva in August 1944, and was distributed by thePolish government-in-exile and Jewish groups.[9] This was presented in theProtocols as the 19-page "No 2. Transport (The Polish Major's Report)."[7]

    The contents of theProtocols was discussed in detail byThe New York Times on 26 November 1944.[7]

    See also

    References

    Citations

    1. ^ab"The Extermination Camps of Auschwitz (Oświęcim) and Birkenau in Upper Silesia". War Refugee Board. 26 November 1944. pp. 1–33.

      Also see"The Auschwitz Protocol: The Vrba–Wetzler Report"(PDF). Vrba–Wetzler Memorial. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 27 July 2018.

    2. ^Tibori Szabó (2011), pp. 85–120
    3. ^abcTibori Szabó (2011), p. 94
    4. ^abDavid Kranzler (2000).The Man Who Stopped the Trains to Auschwitz: George Mantello, El Salvador, and Switzerland's Finest Hour. Syracuse University Press. p. 87.ISBN 978-0-8156-2873-6.
    5. ^abcConway (2002), pp. 292–293, footnote 3.
    6. ^abTibori Szabó (2011), p. 91
    7. ^abcdGilbert (1989), p. 305
    8. ^"The Auschwitz Protocol: The Vrba-Wetzler Report".Holocaust Research Project (Full text, online ed.).
    9. ^Tibori Szabó (2011), p. 90.

    Sources

    • Conway, John S. in (2002). "Appendix I: The Significance of the Vrba–Wetzler Report on Auschwitz-Birkenau".I Escaped from Auschwitz. By Vrba, Rudolf. Barricade Books.
    • Gilbert, Martin (1989). "Part 9: The Question of Bombing Auschwitz".The Nazi Holocaust: The End of the Holocaust. By Marrus, Michael Robert. Walter de Gruyter.
    • Tibori Szabó, Zoltán (2011).Braham, Randolph L.;vanden Heuvel, William (eds.). "The Auschwitz Reports: Who Got Them, and When?".The Auschwitz Reports and the Holocaust in Hungary. Columbia University Press.

    Further reading

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