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Diary (Cambridge, Mass., 1990), 7 ff.
10. EM 19.
11. On Riga see also EM 15 and ZSt, II 207 AR-Z 7/59, judgement of the District Court in
Hamburg.
12. EM 40. Details on events in Jelgava (Mitau) may be found in Andrew Ezergailis, The
Holocaust in Latvia (Washington, 1996), 156 ff.
13. EM 24; Pohl, Ostgalizien, 60 ff.; Hannes Heer, ‘Einübung in den Holocaust: Lemberg
Juni/Juli 1941’, ZfG 40 (2001), 389–408, sees in this pogrom an ‘enactment’ of something
carefully prepared by the Germans.
14. Pohl, Ostgalizien, 69.
15. Ibid. 64–5. The ‘reason’ for the pogrom was the 15th anniversary (delayed by two
months) of the murder of Ukraine’s former (anti-Semitic) prime minister, Simon
Petljura.
16. EM 24, and Bernd Boll, ‘Zloczow, Juli 1941: Die Wehrmacht und der Beginn des
Holocaust in Galizien’, ZfG 50 (2002), 901–16.
17. EM 14 and EM 19. On Sonderkommando 4b see Ogorreck, Einsatzgruppen, 135 ff.
18. EM 14 from 6 July 1941.
19. Ibid.
20. EM 47.
21. EM 10.
22. Andrzey Zbikowski, ‘Local Anti-Jewish Pogroms in the Occupied Territories of Eastern
Poland, June–July 1941’, in Lucjan Doboszycki and Jeffrey S. Gurock, eds, The Holocaust
in the Soviet Union: Studies and Sources on the Destruction of the Jews in the Nazi
Occupied Territories of the USSR, 1941–1945 (New York and London, 1993), 173–9—
where 35 places are named for eastern Galicia alone. Zbi Aharon Weiss, ‘The Holocaust
and the Ukrainian Victims’, in Michael Berenbaum, ed., A Mosaic of Victims: Non-Jews
Persecuted and Murdered by the Nazis (New York, 1990), 109–15 refers to 58 pogroms in
West Ukraine, including Volhynia. On the number of victims, see Pohl, Ostgalizien, 67.
Bogdan Musial, ‘Konterrevolutionäre Elemente sind zu erschiessen’. Die Brutalisierung
des deutsch-sowjetischen Krieges im Sommer 1941 (Berlin and Munich, 2000), 172, makes
reference to numerous other places in which pogroms occurred.
23. EM 47.
24. EM 81 and EM 112.
Notes to pages 195–197
503
25. Pohl, Ostgalizien, 54 ff.
26. Documented in (amongst others) Jacek Borkowicz et al., eds, Thou Shalt not Kill: Poles on Jedwabne (Warsaw, 2001); Antony Polonsky and Joanna B. Michlic, eds, The
Neighbors Respond: The Controversy over the Jedwabne Massacre in Poland (Princeton
and Oxford, 2004) and the contributions to YVS 30 (2002).
27. Jan T. Gross, Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland
(Princeton and Oxford, 2001).
28. See in particular the contribution by Edmunt Dimitrów in the volume edited by him
with Pawel Machcewicz and Tomasz Szarota, Der Beginn der Vernichtung. Zum Mord
an den Juden in Jedwabne und Umgebung im Sommer 1941. Neue Forschungsergeb-
nisse polnischer Historiker (Osnabrück, 2004); see also Dariusz Stola, ‘Jedwabne:
Revisting the Evidence and Nature of the Crime’, HGS 17 (2003), 139–52; and Radoslaw
J. Ignatiew, ‘Findings of Investigations 1/00/Zn into the Murder of Polish Citizens of
Jewish Origin in the Town of Jedwabne on 10 July 1941’, in Polonsky and Michlic, eds,
The Neighbors Respond, 133–6, and Marek Jan Chodakiewicz, The Massacre in Jed-
wabne July 10, 1941: Before, During, and After (New York, 2005).
29. BAB, R 70/32, published in Peter Klein, ed., Die Einsatzgruppen in der besetzten
Sowjetunion 1941/42. Die Tätigkeits- und Lageberichte des Chefs der Sicherheitspolizei
und des SD (Berlin, 1997), 320–1.
30. On the early executions by Einsatzgruppe A see Hans-Heinrich, Wilhelm, Einsatz-
gruppe A der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD 1941/42 (Frankfurt a. M., 1996) and the
overview by Wolfgang Scheffler in Klein, ed., Die Einsatzgruppen.
31. EM 24; Ezergailis, Holocaust, 272 ff.
32. EM 24.
33. Judgement of the Hamburg District Court of 21 Dec. 1979. ZSt, 207 AR-Z 7/59. On the
Arajas commando, see Ezergailis, Holocaust, 173 ff.; on the murders in the Bikernieki
Forest, ibid. 222 ff.
34. Klee, ed., ‘Schöne Zeiten’, 122 ff.; Max Kaufman, Churbn, Lettland: The Destruction of the Jews of Latvia (Munich, 1947), 305; Margers Vestermanis, ‘Ortskommandantur Libau.
Zwei Monate deutscher Besatzung im Sommer 1941’, in Hannes Heer und Klaus Nau-
mann, eds, Vernichtungskrieg. Verbrechen der Wehrmacht 1941–1945 (Hamburg, 1995),
219-26. On the shootings in Liepa
$ ja (Libau) see also the statements by Werner Schäfer,
naval officer, from 16 July 1959 (ZSt, 207 AR-Z 7/59, Red Files, 8, pp. 1557 ff.), Georg
Rosenstock, leader of the 2nd commando of Police Battalion 13, 2 Nov. 1959 (ibid.) and
Kawelmacher, marine commandant of Liepa
$ ja (207 AR-Z 18/58, pp. 22 ff.).
35. ZSt, II 207 AR 1779/66.
36. The so-called Jäger Report (OS, 500-1-25 and USSR Central Document Office 108).
37. Ibid.
38. OS, 500-1-758, telex from the Gestapo office in Tilsit of 1 July 1941 and EM 14. In the trial of former members of the Tilsit Einsatzkommando, which took place in 1958 in Ulm,
the historian Helmuth Krausnick, employed as an expert witness, took the view that the
commando leader, Böhme, had been told on 23 June by the leader of Einsategruppe A,
Franz Stahlecker, that in this border area all the Jews including women and children
were to be shot. This view formed part of the judgement of the court and this fact
was cited again and again by Krausnick as a confirmation of his thesis in favour of an
504
Notes to pages 197–198
early comprehensive order for the murder of the Jews in the occupied Eastern zones. A
closer analysis of the witness statements, however, and of newly discovered documents
shows that this thesis is not tenable (see Longerich, Politik, 326 ff.). The executions
perpetrated by the Tilsit Commando were not the first steps in carrying out a general
order for the murder of all Jews that had only recently been transmitted to the
commando, as Krausnick assumed, but part of a series of ‘reprisal operations’ originally
initiated by the Wehrmacht.
39. EM 19.
40. EM 26.
41. EM 19 and the judgement of the Ulm District Court of 29 Aug. 1958, (¼ Sagel-Grande,
Justiz und NS-Verbrechen, no. 465); Streim, SWCA 6 (1989), 333 ff.
42. See below, p. 31.
43. Also in EM 26. For Himmler’s journey see also the diary of his personal assistant,
Brandt, for 30 June 1941 (BAB, NS 19/3957).
44. OS, 500-1-25 (also ZSt, Dok. SU 401). See also EM 11.
45. On the first murders committed by Einsatzgruppe B in Belarus, see Gerlach, Kalkulierte Morde, 540 ff., and the overview of Einsatzgruppe B by Gerlach in Klein, ed., Einsatzgruppen, 52–70.
46. EM 50, 12 Aug. 1941. On Sonderkommando 7a see also the judgement of the Essen
District Court of 29 Mar. 1965 (¼ Sagel-Grande, Justiz und NS-Verbrechen, xx, no. 588),
and Ogorreck, Einsatzgruppen, 114 ff.
47. EM 50 and judgement of the Essen District Court of 29
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