Archive/File: people/i/irving.david/libel.suit/transcripts/day008.36
Last-Modified: 2000/07/20
Q. No, no, but these orders all go to the -- they made
furniture and a whole lot of other things. It all goes to
Auschwitz. This is not some order to some centralised air
raid making department in Berlin, is it?
A. This is obviously a company which manufactures air raid
shelter doors.
Q. You do not find anything about air raid shelters in this
document, do you?
A. "Deutsche [German]", [German] is equipment factories.
Q. Yes.
A. It is nothing to do with furniture.
Q. In Auschwitz?
A. In the town of Auschwitz. As Mr Van Pelt will tell you,
Auschwitz was a town.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving, if all these air raid shelter
doors come with a peep hole, why does he have to spell it
out in the letter? I mean, he is saying, "I want a peep
hole in my door". Why does he say that?
. P-136
A. It is the same, you will see, my Lord, when they are
ordering electric motors, they also specify exactly what
the electric motor has to be.
Q. That may be rather different because there are various
kinds of electric motor.
A. Anyway, when you see the photographs of the doors they are
talking about and the doors that are in all the standard
Civil Defence manuals, they are the standard air raid
shelter door.
MR RAMPTON: These doors have been purpose built. He has
already got one, has Bischoff, for Leichenkeller 1 in
crematorium (ii). He says to the people, the manufacturer
in Auschwitz, the manufacturer in Auschwitz: "I want
another exactly the same for Leichenkeller 1 in
crematorium (iii)", does he not?
A. On the face of it, this is a very incriminating and highly
sinister and murderous document, but, of course, it is
lacking one thing, is it not?
Q. What is that?
A. Security classification. There is no secret stamp on it.
If this is connected to the Final Solution and it is
talking about this kind of sinister document, they would
have put a "Secret", even the lowest classification on it.
This is a document of janitorial level which you are
trying to hype up into a smoking gun.
Q. Which is exactly why you might find that it does not have
. P-137
"Geheim" on it, janitorial level.
A. In other words, it is capable of ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: There are two points. One is that it is not
authentic because it is not stamped "Geheim" and the other
is that it is janitorial.
A. I am not saying -- no, my Lord. I am not saying it is not
authentic, my Lord. I am saying the fact that it is given
no security classification, even by an SS officer,
indicates that it is as harmless as it appears to be.
Q. But I would have thought that if it is on a janitorial
level, it might be all the more valuable as a clue to what
is really going on.
A. No, it is ----
Q. What is wrong with that proposition?
A. I think that this is looking for conspiracy theories the
whole time, my Lord. If you are confronted with an
innocent document in which he is ordering an innocent air
raid shelter door, it does not occur to anybody to start
stamping it "Secret", and it does not occur to him that 50
years down the road the Queen's Bench Division is going to
try to make this out into a smoking gun.
MR RAMPTON: These are all carbons, are they not, Mr Irving?
A. Don't fall for that one. Immediately after the top left
where it says "43/KI/Schull", which is the name of the
secretary, there would be another "/" followed by "GEH"
or "G" or "GKDOS" or "GRS", according to what security
. P-138
classification it had. It would be part of the letter
book registration number.
Q. I just want to pursue the air raid shelter dream a little
bit further, if I may, Mr Irving?
A. The air raid shelter?
Q. "Dream" because it is, I have to suggest, complete
fantasy?
A. And this list of documents about air raid shelters is also
a fantasy from the Moscow archives?
Q. The "Deutsche aust" [German - document not provided]
Gazelshaft", etc. ----
A. Yes.
Q. --- in Auschwitz?
A. At Auschwitz.
Q. --- at Auschwitz, well, in Auschwitz -- there was a sort
of settlement there -- was SS operated and inmate staffed,
was it not?
A. I will take your word for it -- probably with slave
labour, yes.
Q. I just want to pursue the air raid shelter a little bit
further. How far away is Leichenkeller 1 or how far away
are crematoria (ii) -- I will start again. Who was going
to go into these air raid shelters of yours? Who were
they for?
A. I have no idea.
Q. For the inmates?
. P-139
A. I have no idea.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Well, you have been asked now?
A. But my answer ----
Q. Would they have built them for the slave labour? That is
really inherent in the question.
MR RAMPTON: Yes. I said "for the inmates".
A. If we are really interested in this subject, I can
inundate the court with paper about the construction of
splinter trenches, concrete roof with reinforced concrete
beams, bunkers for the inmates and everything. There was
a great deal of agitation and work went on providing air
raid shelter for the SS and for the inmates ----
Q. Yes. You have advanced ----
A. --- during these months and years.
Q. --- the air raid shelter theory?
A. Which had, obviously, not occurred to you.
Q. Obviously not occurred? We have known about it for years,
Mr Irving. It just seems so silly we have not bothered to
take it terribly seriously. Perhaps we are wrong. If
this is for the SS, this air raid shelter, it is a
terribly long way from the SS barracks, is it not? They
would all be dead before they ever got there if there was
a bombing raid. Have you thought about that? It is about
two and a half miles?
A. I remember during the war when we got air raid warnings
half an hour, an hour, before the planes arrived.
. P-140
Q. And you went down to the bottom of the garden, just as I
did, and hid in your Andersen shelter, or whatever it was called?
A. We had a Morrison.
Q. We had one of those first and then we got grand and had an
Andersen!
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Well, that is enough reminiscing.
A. Yes, but what I am saying is that when you were deep in
Silesia, you had all the warning from the early warning
system in Holland which is where it was based. You had
all that time to tell you that enemy bombers were coming
overhead heading your way.
MR RAMPTON: But, Mr Irving, you do know, do you not, that they
draw did actually draw up plans for converting the
crematorium at Auschwitz (i) into an air raid shelter for
the SS.
A. Ah, ah, so this kind of thing did happen?
Q. Oh, yes, but that is where the SS ----
A. But you kept it quiet until now?
Q. --- that, Mr Irving, is where the SS barracks was.
A. Yes, well, I did not say this was for the SS.
Q. They could pop out of their living quarters into the air
raid shelter. Do you really see a whole lot of heavily
armed soldiers running two-and-a-half or three miles from
the SS barracks to these cellars at the far end of the
Birkenhau camp? I mean, Mr Irving.
. P-141
A. It was, I think, common sense to take the only two
underground buildings which had reinforced concrete roofs
and which had been very heavily constructed at very great
expensive to the German taxpayer -- far more expensively
built than above ground mortuaries -- and to convert them
for use as air raid shelters when the alarm began at the
end of 1942. You can see this from the construction
files, that they became increasingly concerned about the
risk of air raids. Even if it was not just for the
Kommandant and his private staff and family, it does not
detract from the value of this particular explanation.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: How many people could be accommodated?
A. Well, we are told 2,000 people could get in, according to ----
MR RAMPTON: The document of 28th June 1943 suggests something,
a gassing, sorry, an accommodation per gassing of about
1600 people, sometimes as many as 2,000. Anyway, leave
that on one side. I still want to know how you think it
is even realistic, never mind credible, to expect all
those SS men to run all the way from the barracks at
Auschwitz (i) to the far end of the camp at Birkenhau and
climb into this air raid shelter before they got squashed
by the allied bombs.
A. I did explain to you. I do not know who this privileged
accommodation is being provided for.
Q. Well, they are not going to get 120,000 prisoners into
. P-142
such a space, are they, Mr Irving?
A. No, but the records show that very large numbers of other
air raid protection facilities were being built around the
camp at this time from the most primitive nature, which
was of splitter trenches with primitive shelter over the
top, to the most complicated bunkers.
Q. Those are still there today. You can see little sentry
shelters, one per person.
A. So they made provision for everybody according to their
needs, to each according to his needs and to his status,
no doubt.
Q. Well, my Lord, I have only one more question about air
raid shelters and that is to be found on pages 29 and 30
of the same section of the file, Mr Irving. I am not
going to struggle with this. I know what it says because
I have had it translated for me, but I am afraid I do not
have a translation yet.
A. Which file?
Q. Page 29 of this file.
A. 11th February 1943?
Q. That is the one. I ask you again. No need to read this
out loud. It can be copied into the transcript in due
course. I just ask you to read it to yourself. It is a
page and a half, if that?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You are probably familiar with it, are you not?
. P-143
A. Since yesterday, my Lord. Yes, it was delivered to me
yesterday. I have asked all my colleagues around the
world what the explanation for all this is and nobody has
expressed very great alarm, except that I do draw
attention, if I may, to the reference in the third and
fourth lines to the provision eventually of two final
permanent electric corpse elevators, or lifts, and one
temporary corpse elevator which is to be installed as an
improvisation.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Where is that on the page?
A. Lines 3 and 4 of the first page of the actual letter.
MR RAMPTON: Now, you have read that letter?
A. Yes.
Q. You have seen it. I am sorry it was late coming. We only
got it ourselves, I think, on Saturday?
A. I got this at 10 past 9 yesterday evening.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, I am sorry it is late.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: "Leichenaftuk"(?) is that the word for corpse
lift?
A. Yes, Leichenaftuk. They played quite an important part in
the whole of the argument I shall develop when I come to
get revenge on Professor van Pelt later on.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is not the right way of expressing
yourself.
A. Well, I have had to endure a public flogging now for three weeks.
. P-144
MR RAMPTON: Well, Mr Irving, you brought this action, if I may
call it that.
A. I am very much entitled to, yes.
Q. So you must expect to be flogged publicly. If the blows
have been a little bit painful, I am sorry, but I am going
to go on landing them. Look at the second page of this
letter, will you?
A. Yes.
Q. Am I right that, in effect, the whole of this letter is a
frightful -- I am going to use schoolboy language --
blowing up administered by the people of Auschwitz,
Bischoff, to the supplier because they are behind in their
supplying?
A. That is right, yes.
Q. And he is saying in the last paragraph but one, is he not:
"Unless this stuff turns up quickly", and he is reciting
a telegram he has already sent, "we cannot get this thing
off the ground, the whole installation"?
A. Yes.
Q. The second paragraph from the end. That is right, is it
not, and he uses the word in the previous
paragraph "Dringinschten" which means "most urgent", yes?
A. Yes.
Q. Why the urgency if it is a mere air raid shelter or a
delousing chamber?
A. We are at the height of the typhus emergency, are we not?
. P-145
Home ·
Site Map ·
What's New? ·
Search
Nizkor
© The Nizkor Project, 1991-2012
This site is intended for educational purposes to teach about the Holocaust and
to combat hatred.
Any statements or excerpts found on this site are for educational purposes only.
As part of these educational purposes, Nizkor may
include on this website materials, such as excerpts from the writings of racists and antisemites. Far from approving these writings, Nizkor condemns them and
provides them so that its readers can learn the nature and extent of hate and antisemitic discourse. Nizkor urges the readers of these pages to condemn racist
and hate speech in all of its forms and manifestations.