
Newsgroups: alt.revisionism
Subject: Holocaust Almanac - I.G. Farben removed 'indicator' from gas
Summary: S.S. orders Degesch (controlled by Farben, Degesch manufactured
Zyklon B) to remove the warning odor added to Zyklon B. Degesch
balks, then complies. The use to which the S.S. was putting the
gas was now clear to those who made it, if they had harboured
doubts before.
Reply-To: kmcvay@nizkor.org
Followup-To: alt.revisionism
Organization: The Nizkor Project, Toronto
Keywords: Degesch,Farben
Archive/File: orgs/german/farben.ig farben.001
Last-modified: 1995/06/21
XRef: holocaust hilberg.02
Borkin discusses the Wannsee Conference, at which the "Final Solution
of the Jewish Question" was adopted, and then notes that the SS
began to increase their purchases of Zyklon B substantially. This
citation was the first I have seen that mentions the indicator
irritant added to the gas under compulsion of law. (Much like the
odor added to propane.)
In the past the S.S. had bought moderate amounts of Zyklon B from
Degesch as a vermin control in its concentration camps. When the
Final Solution added Jews to the S.S. extermination plans, Degesch
profits reflected the new prosperity. I.G.'s dividends on its
Degesch investment for the years 1942, 1943, and 1944 were double
those of 1940 and 1941.
At least one top official of Degesch, Gerhard Peters, the managing
director, definitely knew about the new use of Zyklon B. He had
been specifically informed of the details of the Final Solution by
Kurt Gerstein, the chief disinfection officer of the S.S., who did
the purchasing of Zyklon B.
There was still another episode that gave the officials of Degesch
more than a hint of the dread purpose to which their Zyklon B was
being put by the S.S. When manufactured as a pesticide Zyklon B
contained a special odor, or 'indicator,' to warn human beings of
its lethal presence. The inclusion of such a warning odor was
required by German law. When the S.S. demanded that the new,
large order of Zyklon B omit the 'indicator,' no one familiar with
the workings of the S.S. could have failed to realize the purpose
behind the strange request. The Degesch executives at first were
unwilling to comply. But compassion was not behind their refusal.
What troubled them was the fact that the S.S. request endangered
Degesch's monopoly position. The patent on Zyklon B had long
since expired. However, Degesch retained its monopoly by a patent
on the warning odor. To remove the 'indicator' was bad business,
opening up the possibility of unwelcome competition. The
S.S. made short shrift of this objection and the company removed
the warning odor. Now the doomed would not even know it was
Degesch's Zyklon B. (Borkin, 122-123)
Note that the "special odor" to which Borkin refers was not merely
an offensive odor, but an irritant. When used for delousing, this
served two purposes. The first was to ensure that anyone
accidentally exposed to the gas, even if they did not know what was
happening, would leave the area immediately to relieve the symptoms
of burning eyes and throat.
The second purpose was to increase the respiration of insects and
thus to cause them to die more quickly.
This is clear upon examination of document number NI-9912, commonly
known as the "Degesch manual" for the use of Zyklon. On page one,
the manual states explicitly:
ZYKLON is the absorption of a mixture of prussic acid and an
irritant by a carrier. Wood fibre discs, a reddish brown
granular mass (Diagriess - Dia gravel) or small blue cubes
(Erco) are used as carriers. Apart from serving its purpose as
indicator, this irritant also had the advantage of stimulating
the respiration of insects. Prussic acid and the irritant are
generated through simple evaporation.
If, as the denial set maintains, the S.S. had only wanted Zyklon B
for insect control, they would most certainly not have wished to
remove not only the warning device, but also the chemical that made
the prussic acid more effective. That would have been not only
counterproductive but also quite dangerous.
It also seems clear that the only conceivable reason to remove the
indicator odor would be to disguise the killing agent from the
victims - hydrocyanic acid has only a weak odor described sometimes
as like "bitter almonds," or, as in the Degesch manual, "peculiar,
repulsively sweet." In short, it shows clear intent, thus refuting
yet another denial myth - that there was no organized plan to
exterminate anyone.
Work Cited
Borkin, Joseph. The Crime and Punishment of I.G. Farben. New York:
The Free Press, 1978, and London: Macmillan Publishing Company.
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