Auschwitz Protocols

The Auschwitz Protocols, also known as the Auschwitz Reports, is a collection of three eyewitness reports from 1943–44 about the mass murder that was taking place inside the Auschwitz concentration camp in German-occupied Poland during the Second World War.[1]

Description

The reports were compiled by prisoners who had escaped from the camp and presented in their order of importance from the Western Allies' perspective, rather than in chronological order.[2] The escapees who authored the reports were Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler (the Vrba-Wetzler report), Arnost Rosin and Czesław Mordowicz (the Rosin-Mordowicz report), and Jerzy Tabeau (the "Polish Major's report").[2] The full reports were first published in this form by the United States War Refugee Board on 26 November 1944 under the title "German Extermination Camps—Auschwitz and Birkenau."[3] They were submitted in evidence at the Nuremberg Trials, as document number 022-L, and are held in the War Refugee Board archives in the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum in Hyde Park, New York.[3]

It is not known when they were first called the Auschwitz Protocols, but Randolph L. Braham may have been the first to do so. He used that term for the document in The Politics of Genocide: The Holocaust in Hungary (1981).[3]

Component reports

The contents of the Protocols was discussed in detail by The New York Times on 26 November 1944.[5]

See also

References

Citations

  1. Szabó (2011), pp. 85–120
  2. 1 2 Szabó (2011), p. 94
  3. 1 2 3 Conway (2002), pp. 292–293, footnote 3.
  4. 1 2 Szabó (2011), p. 91
  5. 1 2 3 4 Gilbert (1989), p. 305
  6. "The Auschwitz Protocol: The Vrba-Wetzler Report". Holocaust Research Project (Full text, online ed.).
  7. Szabó (2011), p. 90.

Sources

Further reading

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