From rjg@d31rz0.Stanford.EDU Thu Jun 27 08:09:56 PDT 1996 Article: 46231 of alt.revisionism Path: nizkor.almanac.bc.ca!news.island.net!vertex.tor.hookup.net!hookup!swrinde!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!news.msfc.nasa.gov!newsfeed.internetmci.com!nntp-hub2.barrnet.net!news.PBI.net!news4.agis.net!agis!ns2.mainstreet.net!viper.inow.com!newshub.internex.net!newshub1.internex.net!news.Stanford.EDU!not-for-mail From: rjg@d31rz0.Stanford.EDU (Richard J. Green) Newsgroups: alt.revisionism Subject: Re: 'They don't call Auschwitz the extermination camp for nothing!' Date: 23 Jun 1996 21:04:07 -0700 Organization: Stanford University, CA 94305, USA Lines: 69 Message-ID: <4ql43n$7sk@d31rz0.Stanford.EDU> References:<4qcgnd$e9l@dfw-ixnews10.ix.netcom.com> <4ql3dn$7ml@d31rz0.Stanford.EDU> NNTP-Posting-Host: d31rz0.stanford.edu Vidal-Naquet comments on Kremer's testimony [1]: ... George Wellers has observed that Faurisson made made use of Kremer's confession in 1947 to interpret the notations in his diary for October 18, 1942 as though they referred to only three evacuations, but that he pretended to be unaware that on the same day in 1947 Kremer spoke of the gas chambers at Auschwitz (_Le Monde_, February 21, 1979; _Verite, pp. 332- 334). To which Faurisson retorted that he retained from Kremer's confession only what was credible, and not what was not. Since Kremer had once said that gas chambers were reopened "a moment" after the death of the victims, his statement constitutes, he tells us gravely, "a flagrant physical impossibility" (Verite, p.112). Let us leave aside what, in this interpretation, is to be attributed to pedantry or subjectivity (what is a _moment_?). It comes up against a series of absolutely decisive objections: 1. There is not a single passage in the _Diary_ in which Kremer speaks of typhus in connection with "special actions." 2. One is hard put to understand why typhus outbreaks would necessarily coincide with arrivals form outside the camp. (Was there at the time a typhus epidemic in Holland?) 3. It is hard to understand why an execution, a commonplace occurrence for Kremer, and also everything concerning typhus, should suddenly take on a tragic aspect when connected with a special action. 4. The fact that Auschwitz was the _Lager der Vernichtung_ has no relationship to typhus epidemics. Indeed, Faurisson, who is so concerned with precision when it comes to translation, did not perceive that Kremer in speaking of Typhus did not use the verb _vernichten_. He wrote on October 3: "In Auschwitz whole streets have been stricken down by typhus ( In Auschwitz liegen ganze Strassenzu"ge an Typhus darnieder)." The difference in verbs (darniederliegen instead of vernichten) is significant, and Faurisson allowed himself to be fooled by the translation of the Polish publisher. Finally, a detail which I mention to show how Faurisson reads texts: it is false that Kremer had typhus and that what he called the Auschwitz illness is typhus. The indications in the diary for September 3, 4, and 14, show clearly that the Auschwitz illness is diarrhea with a moderate fever (37.8 degrees C on September 14). Kremer was, in fact, vaccinated against (exanthematic) typhus and typhoid fever. Faurisson's interpretation is thus not admissable, and the explanation- so dear to those revisionists, like Butz, prepared to admit that there was a lot of dying at Auschwitz-of the death rates at Aushwitz by typhus stands condemned along with it. ... [1] Pierre Vidal-Naquet, _Assassins of Memory_, translated by Jeffrey Mehlman, Columbia University Press: New York (1992). pp. 48-50 -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Richard J. Green Dept. of Chemistry rjg@lyman.Stanford.EDU Stanford University http://www-leland.Stanford.EDU/~redcloud Stanford, CA 94305-5080 "Remember the days of yore, "Learn the lessons of the generation that came before you." -Deuteronomy 32:7
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