1943

Decree of February 24, 1943 by Springorum on Jewish Deportation Trains to Auschwitz
Contemporary Source

1943-02-24 / Report on Jewish Deportation Train to Auschwitz, February 1943: “several Jewish corpses were found along the railway”

A decree dated February 24, 1943 issued by Walter Springorum, President of the Government District of Kattowitz, reports a incident on February 7, 1943, in which a large number of Jewish prisoners escaped from a halted deportation train bound for Auschwitz in Tarnowitz. According to the decree, four escapees were recaptured, while one Jewish woman was shot and another was run over. Springorum also noted that between January 18 and 20, 1943, “several Jewish corpses were found along the railway”, apparently thrown from moving trains. He was concerned about “politically undesirable unrest among the population” that may be caused by such deportation transports.

Odilo Globocnik’s October 1943 Personnel Report - 92 menassigned "from the Führer’s Chancellery for the execution of Aktion Reinhard"
Contemporary Source

1943-10-27 Odilo Globocnik’s October 1943 Personnel Report – 92 men assigned “from the Führer’s Chancellery for the execution of Aktion Reinhard”

Copy of a letter dated October 27, 1943, from SS-Gruppenführer Odilo Globocnik to SS-Gruppenführer von Herff of the SS Personnel Office on the personnel assigned to his office during his tenure as SS and Police Leader in Lublin. Globocnik reports a total staff of 405 men, including 92 personnel assigned “from the Führer’s Chancellery for the execution of Aktion Reinhard” – a reference to the Nazi operation responsible for the mass murder of Jews in occupied Poland through the extermination camps at Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka. The letter further notes that “Einsatz Reinhardt has been completely discontinued”.

Memo of 17 February 1943
Contemporary Source

1943-02-17 A Memo on Missing Equipment for Auschwitz’s Crematorium 2 “Gas Cellar” (Gaskeller)

Memo on a telephone call on 17 February 1943 between Topf engineers Karl Schultze and Fritz Sander, in which Sander noted that the “ventilation blower No. 450 for the gas cellar” (Gaskeller) of the crematorium 2 in Auschwitz- Birkenau could not be located. Schultze requested that the blower should be produced on an expedited basis and dispatched, as it “is urgently required” in Auschwitz.

Memo dated April 5, 1943
Contemporary Source

1943-04-05 Nazi Foreign Office Official Acknowledges Mass Shootings of Jews in Riga

The memo dated April 5, 1943, from Adolf Windecker (Representative of the Foreign Office to the Reich Commissioner for the Eastern Territories) discusses the “treatment of Jews of foreign nationality in the Eastern Territories.” It specifies that all Jews confined to ghettos cannot be deported to other countries due to “significant security police concerns.” Windecker acknowledges the large-scale killings in Riga noting that “many thousands of the local and Reich German Jews in the Riga area have been shot over time.” As a result, he questions the feasibility of using any Jews for exchange purposes, as he fears that doing so would “be exploited abroad as evidence of the executions carried out here.”

Intercepted Telegram of January 11,1943 by Herman Höfle
Contemporary Source

1943-01-11 The Höfle Telegram: A Report On The Death Toll of Operation Reinhard

On 11 January 1943, SS-Sturmbannführer Hermann Höfle, coordinator of Operation Reinhard(t), sent top-secret telegrams on its death toll to SS officials Adolf Eichmann at the RSHA in Berlin and Franz Heim at the Security Police in Kraków. These messages – intercepted by the British – provide precise data on the mass deportations – totaling 1,274,166 Jewish victims – to the extermination camps at Belzec (B), Sobibor (S), Treblinka (T), and the Majdanek / Lublin (L) concentration camp by the end of 1942.

Report of June 22, 1943 on Unfit Jews, Exhumation and Cremation at Kulmhof (Chełmno)
Contemporary Source

1943-06-22 Nazi Secret Service Classified Report: Unfit Jews, Exhumation and Cremation at Kulmhof (Chełmno)

On June 22, 1943, the Forschungsstelle A Litzmannstadt – a local intelligence branch under Hermann Göring’s Secret Service – issued a classified report on the dissolution of the Kulmhof (Chełmno) extermination camp by April 1, 1942. The camp served a destination for “Jews unfit for labor from the Warthegau, especially from the Litzmannstadt Ghetto”. The document further notes that”the police guards there were ordered to exhume the Jews buried in a small forest near Kulmhof and to burn them in specially constructed ovens”.

Order of September 22, 1943 by Himmler on Aktion Reinhard accounting
Contemporary Source

1943-09-22 Directive By Himmler on the Accounting of the “Reinhard 1” Account

On September 22, 1943, the Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler issued a directive on the accounting of the “Reinhard 1” account due to the transfer of SS-Gruppenführer Odilo Globocnik to Trieste / Italy. Himmler ordered that Globocnik, who was responsible for the Operation Reimhardt in the General Gouvernement, oversee the Reinhard 1 account until December 31, 1943, at which point it would be handed over to a representative of SS-Obergruppenführer Oswald Pohl, head of the SS-WVHA.

Report of May 14, 1943 on Nazi Fears of Vatican Leak
Contemporary Source

1943-05-14 Nazi Fears of a Vatican Leak: Schellenberg Reports British Plans to Publicize Atrocities in Poland

In May 1943, Walter Schellenberg, head of RSHA Office VI (Ausland – SD-Ausland), informed the German Foreign Office of Britain’s plan to publish a “White Paper on the alleged German atrocities against Jews and Catholics in Poland.” The Nazis feared that the Vatican might supply the British with supporting evidence that leaked “during a visit by an Italian group to Russia, material relating to this matter could have made its way to Italy”.

Memo of May 17, 1943
Contemporary Source

1943-05-15 Opera and Gas-Chamber: Italian Fascist Delegation’s Visit to Nazi-Occupied Minsk

Between 20 and 29 September 1942, an Italian delegation led by Fascist Party secretary Aldo Vidussoni traveled from Milan through Litzmannstadt, Brest-Litowsk, Minsk, and Kharkov, reaching Millerovo near Rostov. Vidussoni’s account, recorded in Mussolini’s Secretariat documents, notes that “in Minsk, at the Opera Theater, we saw the belongings of thousands and thousands of murdered Jews piled up” and that “what struck the Italians the most was the method of killing”. In mid-May 1943, the German Foreign Office learnt about the incident from a report that Wilhelm Kube, the Generalkommissar for Belarus, had shown the Italian fascist delegation in Minsk “a gas chamber where the killing of Jews was supposedly carried out.” At the time, in September 1942, homicidal gas vans were actively operating near Minsk.

Letter from April 16, 1942
Contemporary Source

1943-04-16 A Missing Drive Belt Unveils Łódź Ghetto Administration’s Complicity in Chełmno Operations

On April 16, 1943, Hans Biebow, head of the Nazi’s Łódź (Litzmannstadt) Ghetto Administration, penned a letter to Friedrich Ribbe regarding the retrieval of a “transmission belt” promised by Sonderkommando Kulmhof. His letter contained a revealing remark that inadvertently exposed the Ghetto Administration’s complicity in the Chełmno extermination process: “The Gestapo has us to thank that the operation out there in K[ulmhof] ran smoothly.” Biebow urged Ribbe to discuss the issue with Alfons Rosse, the deputy head of the Gestapo in Litzmannstadt. Ribbe’s inquiry revealed that the transmission belt is no longer available, as it has been taken by SS-Standartenführer Paul Blobel, the commander of Aktion 1005.

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