Auschwitz Construction Documents Modifications by Walther Dejaco
"These papers
tell us a great deal. They elucidate the thinking in the Auschwitz
Kommandantur and, to some extent, at SS headquarters. Every decision
Himmler took with regard to Auschwitz, or Hoess took about the camp over
which he reigned, had implications for the physical site. If prisoners
were to be shipped in, barracks were needed; if the deportees' goods were
to be claimed for the Reich, storehouses were required. If masses
of people were to be murdered, incinerators to burn the bodies were essential.
The documents of the Building Office archive retrace the course in reverse,
from the structure back to the decision, the thinking, the idea.
These materials illuminate the possibilities the Germans considered and
the options they chose, their ambition as well as its outcome. And
they reveal the widespread and far-flung complicity of Germans in many
walks of life. As we have said before, Auschwitz was neither a preordained
tragedy nor a natural disaster. The SS leaders themselves did not
anticipate in 1940 what they wrought in 1944. Yet, step by step,
blueprint by blueprint, the architects, at the behest of their bosses,
came to plan and execute the horror we call Auschwitz, and, as we have
seen, they had a lot of help from bureaucrats, technocrats and businessmen.
(Dwork & Van Pelt, between 320-21)
Work Cited
Dwork, Deborah and Robert Jan Van
Pelt. Auschwitz: 1270 to the Present. W.W. Norton & Co., 1996
[ Index ]
Crematorium II (2 of 2)
"Building at Auschwitz both
in the concentration camp and in the town was subject to normal civilian
procedures as well as to the wartime superstructure of special permissions.
Multiple copies of many documents survive with the comments and signatures
of the individual bureaucrats or businessmen to whom they were sent.
The Buildings Office generated a wide paper trail: plans, budgets, letters,
telegrams, contractors' bids, financial negotiations, work site labor reports,
requests for material allocations, and the minutes of meetings held in
the Buildings Office among the architects themselves, with camp officials,
and with high ranking dignitaries from Berlin.
"The designs in plates 14 and
15 are conceptual sketches. The worked-out blueprint (plate 16) is
more complex and informative. It was used to request building materials
and permissions, and was given to the Huta contracting firm, which was
happy to have the business. The plan was changed yet again in December
1942. With a relatively simple drawing (plate 17), Walther Dejaco
transformed the basement design. He drew in an outside staircase
descending from the yard next to the railway spur into a basement entrance
to the crematorium. There he changed one of the two underground morgues
into an undressing room and the other into a gas chamber. He cancelled
the planned corpse chute, which in the earlier plans (plates 14, 15, 16)
had afforded the main access to the basement morgues. Live human
beings descend staircases. Dead bodies are dropped through a chute.
The victims would walk to their death." (Dwork
& Van Pelt, between 320-21)