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suggest that the first deportation trains went straight to Sobibor after 3 June, or that the passengers of those trains were brought to Sobibor after a stopover lasting only a few
days.
45. Hans Safrian, Die Eichmann-Männer (Vienna, 1993), 179.
46. Two transports from the old Reicht, nine from Vienna, six from Theresienstadt; one
transport from Theresienstadt only got as far as Baranowicze (a large ‘ghetto action’
was taking place in Minsk), where the deportees were shot immediately after their
arrival on 31 July 1942. Details in Longerich, Politik, 48 ff., assembled from the docu-
ments of the International Tracing Service (YV, JM 10.73), from the files of the main
railway station administration [Mitte] in Minsk (StA Minsk, 378-1-784) and the find-
ings of the Heuser trial (Judgement LG Koblenz, 21 May 1963, published in Justiz xix,
no. 552); Gottwaldt and Schulle, Judendeportationen, 237 ff.; on the transport to Bar-
anowicze (see above): Jakov Tsur, ‘Der verhängnisvolle Weg des Transportes AAy’,
Terezin Studies and Documents 2 (1995), 107–20.
47. On this subject we have the reports of Sonderkommando set up by the Waffen-SS
Battalion z.b.V. See Unsere Ehre heist Treue. Kriegstagebuch des Kommandostabes
Reichsführer SS. Tätigkeitsberichte der 1. and 2. SS-Inf. Brigade, der 1. SS Kav.-Brigade und von der Sonderkommandos der SS (Vienna, 1965), 236 ff
48. Judgement LG Koblenz of 21 May 1963, printed in Justiz xix, no. 552 (Heuser-Verfahren), p. 192.
49. Adler, Verwaltete Mensch, 193 ff. and Moser, ‘Österreich’ in Benz, ed., Dimensionen,
80–1; see also Victor Klemperer, To the Bitter End: The Diaries of Victor Klemperer
1942–45 (London, 1999), 8 July 1942, p. 91.
50. Hartmann, ‘Tschechoslowakei’, in Benz, ed., Dimension, 365–6.
51. On the course of the deportations in detail, Gottwaldt and Schulle, Judendeportationen, 260 ff.
52. Ibid. 337 ff.
53. Ibid. 250 ff.
54. Ibid. 226 ff.
55. Ibid. 393 ff.
Notes to pages 324–327
547
56. W. Boelke, Deutschlands Rüstung im Zweiten Weltkrieg. Hitlers Konferenzen mit Albert
Speer 1942–1944 (Frankfurt a. M., 1969), 189.
57. Fröhlich, Die Tagebücher Teil II, vol. v. Entry for 30 Sept. 1942, p. 606.
58. BAB, R 22/5029, Report of the Justice Minister, 18 Sept. 1942; also IMT xxvi. 654 PS.
59. ND NO 5522.
60. On this subject, and on the implementation of the deportations see Ladislav Lipscher, Die Juden im slowakischen Staat 1939–1945 (Munich, 1980), 99 ff.; Raul Hilberg, The
Destruction of the European Jews (New Haven, 2003), ii. 766 ff.; Christopher Browning,
The Find Solution and the German Foreign Office: A Study of Referat D III of Abteilung
Deutschland 1940–43 (New York and London, 1978), 94 ff.; Yehoshua Büchler, ‘The
Deportation of Slovakian Jews to the Lublin District of Poland in 1942’, HGS 6 (1991)
151–66.
61. Dienstkalender, ed. Witte et al., 20 Oct. 1941, p. 241. The editors quote from a declaration by the Slovakian Interior minister, Mach, on 26 Mar. 1942 to the Slovakian State
Council, from which the German offer comes.
62. Lipscher, Juden, 31 ff.
63. Ibid. 102 ff.
64. Büchler, ‘Deportation’, 152.
65. Ibid. 153.
66. PAA, Büro StSekr, Bd. 2, published in ADAP, E II, 161–2.
67. See p. 328.
68. Büchler, ‘Deportation’, 153, 166; and Danuta Czech, ed., Kalendarium der Ereignisse im Konzentrationslager Auschwitz-Birkenau 1939–1945 (Reinbek b. Hamburg, 1989).
69. Büchler, ‘Deportation’, 160.
70. Ibid. 166.
71. Czech, Kalendarium.
72. Cf. Lipscher, Juden, 129 ff.; on interventions by the Church, see Livia Rothkirchen,
‘Vatican Policy and the “Jewish Problem” in Independent Slovakia (1939–1945)’, YVS 6
(1967), 27–53.
73. Livia Rothkirchen, ‘The Dual Role of the “Jewish Center” in Slovakia’, in Yisrael
Gutman and Cynthia J. Haft, eds, Patterns of Jewish Leadership in Nazi Europe, 1933–
1945. Proceedings of the Third Yad Vashem International Historical Conference, Jerusa-
lem, April 4–7, 1977 (Jerusalem, 1979), 219–27; Yahuda Bauer, Freikauf von Juden?
(Frankfurt a. M., 1996).
74. Lipscher, Juden, 114–15.
75. According to Büchler, ‘Deportation’, 8, transports went to the district of Lublin and 19
to Auschwitz.
76. Serge Klarsfeld, Vichy-Auschwitz. Die Zusammenarbeit der deutschen und franzö-
sischen Behörden bei der ‘Endlösung der Judenfrage’ in Frankreich (Nördlingen, 1989),
34 ff.; Ulrich Herbert, ‘Die deutsche Militärverwaltung in Paris und die Deportation der
französischen Juden’, in Christian Jansen et al., eds, Von der Aufgabe der Freiheit.
Politische Verantwortung und bürgerliche Gesellschaft im 19. u. 20. Jahrhundert (Frank-
furt a. M., 1995), 439; details of the start of the ‘Final Solution’ in France are examined in the article by Ahlrich Meyer, ‘Der Beginn der “Endlösung” in Frankreich—offene
Fragen’, Sozialgeschichte 18 (2003), 35–82.
548
Notes to pages 327–331
77. Klarsfeld, Vichy, 43.
78. 1216-RF, Minute by Dannecker, 10 Mar. 1943 published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 374–5.
79. Note by Zeitschel, 11 Mar. 1942 published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 375.
80. Klarsfeld, Vichy, 376–7.
81. CDJC, XXVb-29, published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 375–6.
82. R. B. Birn, Die Höhere SS- und Polizeiführer. Himmlers Vertreter im Reich und in den
besetzten Gebieten (Düsseldorf, 1986), 446–7.
83. Herbert, ‘Militärverwaltung’, 440.
84. CDJC, XXVb-29, published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 379.
85. This is according to the report of Walter Bargatzky, working as a lawyer in the military administration, Hotel Majestic; Walter Bargatzky, Hotel Majestic (Freiburg, 1987), 103, on the basis of information from an auricular witness; cf. Herbert, ‘Militärverwaltung’, 448.
86. Bargatzky, Hotel Majestic, 94. See also identical information from the former chief
judge attached to the military commander, 29 Oct. 1949, quoted from Hans
Luther, Der französische Widerstand gegen die deutsche Besatzungsmacht und
seine Bekämpfung (Tübingen, 1957), 214. See Ulrich Herbert, Best. Biographische
Studien über Radikalismus, Weltanschauung und Vernunft 1903–1989 (Bonn, 1996),
320.
87. 1217-RF, note from Dannecker, 15 June 1942; published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 379–80; see also ibid. 66–7.
88. Moreshet-Archive, Givat Haviva, Israel (copy from Prague city Archive); already
published in Tragédia slovenských Židov. Fotografie a Dokumenty (Bratisalava, 1949)
and quoted in in Gerald Reitlinger, The Final Solution: The Attempt to Exterminate the
Jews of Europe, 1939–1945 (New York, 1961).
89. CDJC, XXVb-38, note concerning telephone conversation with Novak, 18 June 1942
published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 383.
90. ND NG 183 published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 384–5.
91. 1223-RF, Dannecker note of 1 July 1942 published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 390–1.
92. 1220-RF, in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 388.
93. Cf. Klarsfeld, Vichy, 68 ff. and 90 ff.
94. CDJC, XXVI-40, Hagen note of 4 July 1942 and 1225-RF, Minute by Dannecker, 6 July
1942, published in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 393 ff. and 398–9.
95. CDJC, XLIX-35, Dannecker to Eichmann, July 1942, in Klarsfeld, Vichy, 399–400.
96. APL, Gouverneur Distrikt Lublin, Sygn. 270.
97. Yitzhak Arad, Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: The Operation Reinhard Death Camps
(Bloomington, Ind., 1986), 23
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