AUSCHWITZ—
The Shrinking Numbers
Originally,
it was proclaimed that 4 million of the celebrated "Six Million"
died at this famous wartime internment center.
Then, in the face of growing skepticism, that figure was quietly reduced
by 2.5 million to 1.5 million. (Now 1.1 million)
Now, a final tally by the International Tracing Service of the Red
Cross estimates reliably that the total number of deaths were less
than 140,000—including those who died of old age over a five-year
period in a place comparable in size to a city of a quarter million,
where obituary pages are replete with the names of thousands who have
died during a similar time span!
Others died of wartime conditions, aggravated by the outbreak of typhoid
and Allied bombing, which caused disruption to the delivery of food,
medicine, and other vital supplies.
There were no gassings—or gas-chamber facilities, for that matter.
Less than half of those who died were Jews. Their names are carefully
recorded in the 46-volume death books held in the Soviet archives
and released to the Red Cross in 1989. Besides the person's full name,
these volumes document his or her profession, religion, date and place
of birth, pre-Auschwitz residence, parents' names, time of death,
and cause of death, as determined by a camp physician. Mass murderers
do not keep such meticulous records!
(vancouver.indymedia.org)