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{{short description|Vehicle used for mass murder, especially during the Holocaust}}
{{short description|Vehicle used for mass murder, especially during the Holocaust}}
[[Image:Chelmno Gas Van.jpg|thumb|300px|Burned-out [[Magirus|Magirus-Deutz]] furniture mover van near [[Chełmno extermination camp]], type used by the Nazis for suffocation, with the exhaust fumes diverted into the sealed rear compartment were the victims were locked in. This particular van had not been modified, as explained by ''Office of the United States Chief Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality'' (1946),<ref name="ww2today.com">{{cite web | url=http://ww2today.com/16th-may-1942-ss-discuss-the-use-of-mobile-gassing-vans | title=SS use of mobile gassing vans | publisher=World War II Today | work=A damaged Magirus-Deutz van found in 1945 in Kolno, Poland | date=2011 | access-date=April 22, 2013 | quote=''Source:'' Office of the United States Chief Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality: ''Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression'' – Washington, U.S Govt. Print. Office, 1946, Vol III, p.&nbsp;418}};</ref> nevertheless, it gives a good idea about the process.]]
[[Image:Chelmno Gas Van.jpg|thumb|300px|Burned-out [[Magirus|Magirus-Deutz]] furniture mover van near [[Chełmno extermination camp]], type used by the Nazis for suffocation, with the exhaust fumes diverted into the sealed rear compartment were the victims were locked in. This particular van had not been modified, as explained by ''Office of the United States Chief Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality'' (1946),<ref name="ww2today.com">{{cite web | url=http://ww2today.com/16th-may-1942-ss-discuss-the-use-of-mobile-gassing-vans | title=SS use of mobile gassing vans | publisher=World War II Today | work=A damaged Magirus-Deutz van found in 1945 in Kolno, Poland | date=2011 | access-date=April 22, 2013 | quote=''Source:'' Office of the United States Chief Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality: ''Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression'' – Washington, U.S Govt. Print. Office, 1946, Vol III, p.&nbsp;418}};</ref> nevertheless, it gives a good idea about the process.]]
A '''gas van''' or '''gas wagon''' ({{lang-ru|душегубка}}, ''dushegubka'', literally "soul killer"; {{lang-de|Gaswagen}}) was a truck reequipped as a mobile [[gas chamber]]. The gas vans were first used by the Soviet [[NKVD]] in 1930s. During [[World War II]] Nazi Germany developed and used gas vans on a large scale as a [[genocide|extermination]] method to murder inmates of asylums, Romani people, Jews, and prisoners in occupied [[German occupation of Byelorussia during World War II|Belarus]], [[Occupation of Poland (1939–1945)|Poland]], [[World War II in Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]], and other areas of the [[Operation Barbarossa|Nazi-occupied USSR]].<ref>{{cite book|ref=harv|last=Bartrop|first=Paul R.|editor1=Paul R. Bartrop |editor2=Michael Dickerman |title=The Holocaust: An Encyclopedia and Document Collection|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=u4I2DwAAQBAJ|volume=1|year=2017|publisher=ABC-CLIO|location=Santa Barbara|isbn=978-1-4408-4084-5|chapter=Gas Vans|p=234–235}}</ref><ref>[http://www.nizkor.org/hweb/camps/chelmno/sonderdruck.html "Gas Wagons: The Holocaust's mobile gas chambers"], an article of [[Nizkor Project]]</ref>
A '''gas van''' or '''gas wagon''' ({{lang-ru|душегубка}}, ''dushegubka'', literally "soul killer"; {{lang-de|Gaswagen}}) was a truck reequipped as a mobile [[gas chamber]]. During [[World War II]] Nazi Germany developed and used gas vans on a large scale as a [[genocide|extermination]] method to murder inmates of asylums, Romani people, Jews, and prisoners in occupied [[German occupation of Byelorussia during World War II|Belarus]], [[Occupation of Poland (1939–1945)|Poland]], [[World War II in Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]], and other areas of the [[Operation Barbarossa|Nazi-occupied USSR]].<ref>{{cite book|ref=harv|last=Bartrop|first=Paul R.|editor1=Paul R. Bartrop |editor2=Michael Dickerman |title=The Holocaust: An Encyclopedia and Document Collection|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=u4I2DwAAQBAJ|volume=1|year=2017|publisher=ABC-CLIO|location=Santa Barbara|isbn=978-1-4408-4084-5|chapter=Gas Vans|p=234–235}}</ref><ref>[http://www.nizkor.org/hweb/camps/chelmno/sonderdruck.html "Gas Wagons: The Holocaust's mobile gas chambers"], an article of [[Nizkor Project]]</ref>

==Soviet Union==
Starting in 1937, [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[NKVD]] officer [[:ru:Берг, Исай Давидович|Isai D. Berg]] reportedly supervised execution of prisoners by gassing them in trucks.<ref name="merridale">Catherine Merridale. ''Night of Stone: Death and Memory in Twentieth-Century Russia.'' [[Penguin Books]], 2002 {{ISBN|0-14-200063-9}} p. 200</ref><ref name=colton>Timothy J. Colton. ''Moscow: Governing the Socialist Metropolis.'' [[Harvard University Press#Related publishers, imprints, and series|Belknap Press]], 1998. {{ISBN|0-674-58749-9}} [https://books.google.com/books?id=lXM2H6tWHskC&pg=PA286&dq=gas+chamber+butovo&ei=bTrHSpm3EJeIyQSl6p32Aw#v=onepage&q=gas%20chamber%20butovo&f=false p. 286], [http://www.kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1265324 Е. Жирнов. «По пути следования к месту исполнения приговоров отравлялись газом». Коммерсантъ Власть, № 44, 2007. ]</ref> Providing testimony of this when he was himself arrested by the NKVD in August 1938,<ref name=Lipkov/> Berg stated that he and a team of secret police officers suffocated batches of prisoners with engine fumes in camouflaged cars while transporting them from the [[Taganka Prison|Taganka]] or [[Butyrka prison|Butyrka]] prisons in Moscow<ref name=novgazet>[https://www.novayagazeta.ru/articles/2010/08/02/2213-chelovek-v-kozhanom-fartuke Н. Петров. «Человек в кожаном фартуке». [[Nikita Petrov]], [[Novaya Gazeta]] (ru:Новая газета, спецвыпуск «Правда ГУЛАГа» от 02.08.2010 № 10 (31))] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100806171843/http://www.novayagazeta.ru/data/2010/gulag10/00.html |date=2010-08-06 }}.</ref> to the [[Mass graves from Soviet mass executions|mass graves]] at the [[Butovo firing range]], where the prisoners were subsequently buried.<ref name=colton /> Examining documents related to Berg, ''[[Kommersant]]'' reported that Berg had led of the administrative and economic department of the [[Moscow Oblast]] NKVD; Berg stated that he acted on orders from the higher NKVD administration.<ref name=kommersant>[https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/1265324 On the way to the place of their execution, the convicts were poisoned with gas (Russian)], by Yevgeniy Zhirnov, [[Kommersant]]</ref><ref name="two-hundred">[[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]] [[Two Hundred Years Together]] (Двести лет вместе), volume=2, Москва, Русский путь, 2002, {{ISBN|5-85887-151-8}}, p. 297 According to [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]], "I. D. Berg was ordered to carry out the orders of the [[NKVD troika]] of the Moscow Oblast, and he was decently carrying out this assignment: he was driving people to the executions by shooting. But, when he arrived at the Moscow Oblast, three troikas were carrying out their sessions simultaneously, the executioners could not cope with the load. They hit upon a solution: to strip the victims naked, tie them up, plug their mouths and throw them into a closed truck which was disguised as a bread van from the outside. During their transportation the fuel gases came into the truck, and when they were delivered to the farthest [execution] ditch the arrestees were already dead."</ref><ref name=novgazet />

FSB officers Alexander Mikhailov and Mikhail Kirillin, and historian Lydia Golovkova, recounted the testimony of one witness at a mass execution site outside Moscow.<ref name=Lipkov>[https://magazines.gorky.media/continent/2005/123/ya-k-vam-travoyu-prorastu.html Александр ЛИПКОВ, "Я к вам травою прорасту…"], Alexander Lipkov, [[Kontinent]], N 123, 2005. "Mikhail Kirillin: The details of everything that happened here, we restored by talking with one person. There were no other survivors who would directly work in the zone. And now he is gone. This is the former commandant of the Moscow administration, who told all the details ...
Lydia Golovkova: He told the following: cars loaded with people moved through the forest, up to 50 people were stuffed into a truck. Muscovites have long called these cars "dushegubka [soul killers]." In the case of Berg, who took part in the executions, of which there is his signature, he was accused as the inventor of these gas vans.
Alexander Mikhailov: According to the driver of such a truck, the gas was used to prevent the possibility of riot in the truck. Naturally, the people who swallowed carbon monoxide have been suppressed, and many of them accepted death as deliverance from the torment.
Lydia Golovkova: The exhaust pipe turned inside the van, and people came already half-conscious. Buses with half-dead people drove up from the side of the forest. There was a tower with a searchlight above the trees, the territory was surrounded by barbed wire, and there was a long wooden hut, where everyone was supposedly brought in for sanitation."</ref> As many as 50 prisoners were loaded into trucks whose exhaust pipes were turned into the trucks, which Muscovites called "soul killers" and which were said to have been invented by Berg. Prisoners were "half dead" when they arrived at the site, where most were subsequently executed.<ref name=Lipkov />

Marek Hałaburda has written that the gas vans were introduced to increase the rate of executions.<ref>Marek Hałaburda, “The Polish Operation”. The genocide of the Polish people in the USSR in the years 1937–1938, Orientalia Christiana Cracoviensia, 2013, v.5, p. 71.</ref> In the book ''KGB: The State Within a State'' [[Yevgenia Albats]] and [[Catherine A. Fitzpatrick]] wrote that: "Owing to the shortage of executioners, Chekists used trucks that were camouflaged as bread vans as mobile death chambers. Yes, the very same machinery made notorious by the Nazis - yes, these trucks were originally a Soviet invention, in use years before the ovens of the Auschwitz were built"<ref name="Albats">[[Yevgenia Albats]] and [[Catherine A. Fitzpatrick]], ''KGB: The State Within a State''. 1995, page 101</ref> According to [[Robert Gellately]], "The Soviets sometimes used a gas van (dushegubka), as in Moscow during the 1930s, but how extensive that was needs further investigation. They used crematoriums to dispose of thousands of bodies, but had no gas chambers."<ref>[[Robert Gellately]], Lenin, Stalin and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe, Knopf, 2007, {{ISBN|140003213X}}, p.460.</ref>

Gas vans were reportedly used also in the cities of [[Omsk]] and [[Ivanovo]] in the Soviet Union. According to high-ranking NKVD officer [[:ru:Шрейдер, Михаил Павлович|Mikhail Schreder]], they were used in the city of [[Ivanovo]] similar to that in Moscow: "When a closed truck arrived at the place of execution, all convicts were dragged out of cars in an unconscious state. On the way, they were almost killed by exhaust fumes redirected through a special tube into the closed cargo compartment of the truck."<ref>[https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/2047681 Хроника событий 1937 года (Chronicle of the events of the year 1937)], by Evgeniy Zhirnov, [[Kommersant]], №42, 22.10.2012, page 10.</ref><ref>Шрейдер М.П. (Shreider M.P) [http://www.urantia-s.com/library/shreider/nkvd НКВД изнутри: Записки чекиста. (NKVD from within. Notes by Chekist )], Moscow: Возвращение, 1995. – p.78, [https://www.sakharov-center.ru/asfcd/auth/?t=book&num=940 full text online]</ref> Soviet dissident [[Petro Grigorenko]] described in his memoirs a story told by his close friend and former prisoner of Gulag Vasil Teslia. He described killings of "[[kulak]]s" in a prison in [[Omsk]]. According to him, more than 27 people were loaded to a truck, which moved away from the prison, but soon returned. "When the doors were opened, black smoke poured out and corpses of people rained down." The corpses were then placed into the basement. Teslia watched such executions during whole week.<ref>Григоренко П.Г. В подполье можно встретить только крыс… ([[Petro Grigorenko]], "In the underground one can meet only rats") — Нью-Йорк, Издательство «Детинец», 1981, page 403, [https://www.sakharov-center.ru/asfcd/auth/?t=page&num=9485 Full text of the book (Russian)]</ref><ref>[http://old.kr-eho.info/index.php?name=News&op=article&sid=8849 Газовые душегубки: сделано в СССР (Gas vans: made in the USSR)] by Dmitry Sokolov, ''Echo of Crimea'', 09.10.2012</ref>


==Nazi Germany==
==Nazi Germany==
Line 31: Line 19:


The gas vans are extensively discussed in some of the interviews in [[Claude Lanzmann]]'s film ''[[Shoah (film)|Shoah]]''.
The gas vans are extensively discussed in some of the interviews in [[Claude Lanzmann]]'s film ''[[Shoah (film)|Shoah]]''.

==Soviet Union==
During the [[Great Purge]] in the [[Soviet Union]], an NKVD officer Isaj D. Berg used a specially adapted airtight van for gassing prisoners to death on an experimental basis.<ref>[[Catherine Merridale]]. ''Night of Stone: Death and Memory in Twentieth-Century Russia.'' [[Penguin Books]], 2002 {{ISBN|0-14-200063-9}} p. 200</ref> The prisoner were gassed on the way to [[Butovo firing range|Butovo]], a phony firing range, where the [[NKVD]] executed its prisoners and buried them.<ref>Timothy J. Colton. ''Moscow: Governing the Socialist Metropolis.'' [[Harvard University Press#Related publishers, imprints, and series|Belknap Press]], 1998, {{ISBN|0-674-58749-9}}, [https://books.google.com/books?id=lXM2H6tWHskC&pg=PA286&dq=gas+chamber+butovo&ei=bTrHSpm3EJeIyQSl6p32Aw#v=onepage&q=gas%20chamber%20butovo&f=false p. 286]</ref> According to testimony given by NKVD officer Nikolai Kharitonov in 1956, Isai Berg had been instrumental in the production of gas vans.<ref name="Kizny236">Tomasz Kizny, Dominique Roynette. ''La grande terreur en URSS 1937–1938''. Lausanne: Éd. Noir sur Blanc, 2013, p. 236.</ref> Berg had become chief of the administrative economic department in Moscow’s NKVD in the summer of 1937.<ref>Alexander Vatlin. ''Agents of Terror: Ordinary Men and Extraordinary Violence in Stalin's Secret Police''. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 2016, {{ISBN|978-0-299-31080-6}}, p. 11.</ref> In October 1937 he was charged with the supervision of the Butovo firing range.<ref name="Kizny236" /> Berg had to prepare Butovo for the mass execution of people from greater Moscow and to ensure that these executions would take place smoothly.<ref>Alexander Vatlin. ''Agents of Terror: Ordinary Men and Extraordinary Violence in Stalin's Secret Police''. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 2016, {{ISBN|978-0-299-31080-6}}, p. 15.</ref> According to testimony given by Fjodor Tschesnokov, a member of Berg’s execution team, in 1956, trucks were used, which were equipped with valves through which the gas could be directed inside the vehicles. The interrogations revealed that the prisoners were stripped naked, tied up, gagged and thrown into the trucks. Their property was stolen.<ref name="Kizny236" /> Berg was arrested on 3 August 1938.<ref>Alexander Vatlin. ''Agents of Terror: Ordinary Men and Extraordinary Violence in Stalin's Secret Police''. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 2016, {{ISBN|978-0-299-31080-6}}, p. 67.</ref> sentenced to death for participating in a "counter-revolutionary conspiracy within the NKVD" and executed on 3 March 1939.<ref name="Kizny236" />

The scale at which these trucks were used is unknown. Author Tomas Kizny assumes that they were in use while Berg oversaw the executions (October 1937 to 4 August 1938). He points to archaeological excavations conducted in 1997. Then 59 corpses were exhumed who most likely had been killed during Berg’s tenure. Only four of these victims had been shot in the head, which leads Kizny to conclude that at least some of them had been gassed.<ref name="Kizny236" />

Journalist [[Yevgenia Albats]] maintains that gas vans were a “Soviet invention”.<ref>Yevgenia Albats: ''KGB: The State Within a State. The secret police and its hold on Russia's past, present and future''. (International Affairs, Vol. 72). London: Tauris, 1995, p. 101.</ref> Kizny names Berg as the “inventor”.<ref name="Kizny236" /> Historians of the Holocaust like [[Henry Friedlander]] argue that the mobile gas chambers were invented in 1940.<ref>[[Henry Friedlander]]. ''The Origins of Nazi Genocide: From Euthanasia to the Final Solution''. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995, {{ISBN|978-0-8078-2208-1}}, p. 139.</ref> Katrin Reichelt names [[Albert Widmann]] and [[Arthur Nebe]] as the two, who together developed the method by which human beings were killed in vans by exhaust fumes. The vans themselves were modified by [[Walter Rauff]], [[Friedrich Pradel]] and [[Harry Wentritt]].<ref>Katrin Reichelt. "Gaswagen". In: ''Handbuch des Antisemitismus. Judenfeindschaft in Geschichte und Gegenwart''. vol. 4, ed. by Wolfgang Benz. Berlin: DeGruyter, p. 143&nbsp;f.</ref> Matthias Beer calls gas vans “a special product of the Third Reich”.<ref>Mathias Beer. "Die Entwicklung der Gaswagen beim Mord an den Juden". In: ''Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte'' (in German). 35 (3): p. 403. English translation at [https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/gas-vans Jewish Virtual Library].</ref> [[Robert Gellately]] points out that during an euthanasia program in occupied Poland the Nazi killers sought a more efficient and secretive killing process and thus "invented the first gas van, which began operations in the Warthegau on January 15, 1940, under Herbert Lange".<ref>Robert Gellately. ''Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe''. New York: Knopf, 2007, p. 367.</ref> He also notes, that "the Soviets sometimes used a gas van (dushegubka), as in Moscow during the 1930s, but how extensive that was needs further investigation. They used crematoriums to dispose of thousands of bodies but had no gas chambers."<ref>Robert Gellately. ''Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe''. New York: Knopf, 2007, p. 460.</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 62: Line 57:
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Friedlander|first=Henry|authorlink=Henry Friedlander|title=The Origins of Nazi Genocide: From Euthanasia to the Final Solution|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gqLDEKVk2nMC|year=1997|publisher=Univ of North Carolina Press|location=Chapel Hill|isbn=978-0-8078-4675-9}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Friedlander|first=Henry|authorlink=Henry Friedlander|title=The Origins of Nazi Genocide: From Euthanasia to the Final Solution|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gqLDEKVk2nMC|year=1997|publisher=Univ of North Carolina Press|location=Chapel Hill|isbn=978-0-8078-4675-9}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Merridale|first=Catherine|authorlink=Catherine Merridale|title=Night of Stone: Death and Memory in Twentieth-Century Russia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m6TWAAAAMAAJ|year=2002|publisher=Penguin|location=New York|isbn=978-0-14-200063-2}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Merridale|first=Catherine|authorlink=Catherine Merridale|title=Night of Stone: Death and Memory in Twentieth-Century Russia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m6TWAAAAMAAJ|year=2002|publisher=Penguin|location=New York|isbn=978-0-14-200063-2}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Vatlin|first=Alexander|editor=Seth Bernstein|title=Agents of Terror: Ordinary Men and Extraordinary Violence in Stalin's Secret Police|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZoARDQAAQBAJ|year=2016|publisher=University of Wisconsin Pres|location=Madison, Wisconsin|isbn=978-0-299-31080-6}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Vatlin|first=Alexander|editor=Seth Bernstein|title=Agents of Terror: Ordinary Men and Extraordinary Violence in Stalin's Secret Police|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZoARDQAAQBAJ|year=2016|publisher=University of Wisconsin Press|location=Madison, Wisconsin|isbn=978-0-299-31080-6}}


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 19:15, 25 December 2019

Burned-out Magirus-Deutz furniture mover van near Chełmno extermination camp, type used by the Nazis for suffocation, with the exhaust fumes diverted into the sealed rear compartment were the victims were locked in. This particular van had not been modified, as explained by Office of the United States Chief Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality (1946),[1] nevertheless, it gives a good idea about the process.

A gas van or gas wagon (Russian: душегубка, dushegubka, literally "soul killer"; German: Gaswagen) was a truck reequipped as a mobile gas chamber. During World War II Nazi Germany developed and used gas vans on a large scale as a extermination method to murder inmates of asylums, Romani people, Jews, and prisoners in occupied Belarus, Poland, Yugoslavia, and other areas of the Nazi-occupied USSR.[2][3]

Nazi Germany

The use of gas vans by the Nazis to murder Jews, mentally ill people, Romani people and prisoners in occupied territories during World War II originated with the Nazi Euthanasia Program in 1939. Ordered to find a suitable method of killing, the Technical Institute for the Detection of Crime ("Kriminaltechnisches Institut der Sicherheitspolizei", abbreviated KTI) of the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA) decided to gas victims with Carbon monoxide.[4] In October 1939 the Nazis started gassing prisoners in Fort VII near Posen. The first victims were Polish and Jewish inmates of asylums for the mentally ill.[5] Witnesses report that since December 1939, mobile gas chambers were used to kill the inmates of asylums in Pomerania, Eastern Prussia and Poland.[6] The vans were built for the Sonderkommando Lange and their use was supposed to speed up the killings. Instead of transporting the victims to the gas chambers, the gas chambers were transported to the victims. They were most likely devised by specialists from the Referat II D of the RSHA. These mobile gas chambers worked under the same principles as the stationary gas chambers: through a rubber hose the driver released pure CO from steel cylinders into the air tight special construction that was shaped like a box and placed on the carrier. The vans resembled moving vans or delivery lorries and they were labelled Kaiser’s Kaffee Geschäft (de) (“Kaiser's Coffee Shop”) for camouflage. They were not called "gas vans" at the time, but “Sonder-Wagen”, “Spezialwagen” (special vans) and “Entlausungswagen” (delousing vans).[7][6] The Lange commando killed patients in numerous hospitals in the Wartheland in 1940. They drove to the hospitals, collected patients, loaded them into the vans and gassed them while they were driving them away.[8] From 21 May to 8 June 1940 the Sonderkommando Lange killed 1558 sick people from Soldau concentration camp alone.[9]

In August 1941, SS chief Heinrich Himmler attended a demonstration of a mass-shooting of Jews in Minsk that was arranged by Arthur Nebe, after which he vomited. Regaining his composure, Himmler decided that alternative methods of killing should be found.[10] He ordered Nebe to explore more "convenient" ways of killing that were less stressful for the killers. Nebe decided to conduct his experiments by murdering Soviet mental patients, first with explosives near Minsk, and then with automobile exhaust at Mogilev.[11] Nebe's experiments led to the utilization of the gas van.[12] This vehicle had already been used in 1940 for the gassing of East Prussian and Pomeranian mental patients in the Soldau concentration camp.[13]

Gas vans were used, particularly at the Chełmno extermination camp, until gas chambers were developed as a more efficient method for killing large numbers of people. Two types of gas vans were in operation, and they were used by the Einsatzgruppen in the East. The Opel-Blitz, which weighed 3.5 tons, and the larger Saurerwagen, which weighed 7 tons.[14] In Belgrade, the gas van was known as "Dušegupka" and in the occupied parts of the USSR similarly as "душегубка" (dushegubka, literally (feminine) soul killer/exterminator). The SS used the euphemisms Sonderwagen, Spezialwagen or S-wagen ("special vehicle") for the vans.[15] The gas vans were specifically designed to direct deadly exhaust fumes via metal pipes into the airtight cargo compartments, where the intended victims had been forcibly stuffed to capacity. In most cases the victims were suffocated and poisoned from carbon monoxide and other toxins in the exhaust as the vans were transporting them to fresh pits or ravines for mass burial.

The use of gas vans had two disadvantages:

  1. It was slow — some victims took twenty minutes to die.
  2. It was not quiet — the drivers could hear the victims' screams, which they found distracting and disturbing.

By June 1942 the main producer of gas vans, Gaubschat Fahrzeugwerke GmbH, had delivered 20 gas vans in two models (for 30–50 and 70–100 individuals) to Einsatzgruppen, out of 30 that were ordered from that company. Not one gas van was extant at the end of the war. The existence of gas vans first came to light in 1943 during the trial of Nazi collaborators who had been involved in the gassing of 6,700 civilians in Krasnodar.[citation needed] The total number of gas van gassings is unknown.[16]

The gas vans are extensively discussed in some of the interviews in Claude Lanzmann's film Shoah.

Soviet Union

During the Great Purge in the Soviet Union, an NKVD officer Isaj D. Berg used a specially adapted airtight van for gassing prisoners to death on an experimental basis.[17] The prisoner were gassed on the way to Butovo, a phony firing range, where the NKVD executed its prisoners and buried them.[18] According to testimony given by NKVD officer Nikolai Kharitonov in 1956, Isai Berg had been instrumental in the production of gas vans.[19] Berg had become chief of the administrative economic department in Moscow’s NKVD in the summer of 1937.[20] In October 1937 he was charged with the supervision of the Butovo firing range.[19] Berg had to prepare Butovo for the mass execution of people from greater Moscow and to ensure that these executions would take place smoothly.[21] According to testimony given by Fjodor Tschesnokov, a member of Berg’s execution team, in 1956, trucks were used, which were equipped with valves through which the gas could be directed inside the vehicles. The interrogations revealed that the prisoners were stripped naked, tied up, gagged and thrown into the trucks. Their property was stolen.[19] Berg was arrested on 3 August 1938.[22] sentenced to death for participating in a "counter-revolutionary conspiracy within the NKVD" and executed on 3 March 1939.[19]

The scale at which these trucks were used is unknown. Author Tomas Kizny assumes that they were in use while Berg oversaw the executions (October 1937 to 4 August 1938). He points to archaeological excavations conducted in 1997. Then 59 corpses were exhumed who most likely had been killed during Berg’s tenure. Only four of these victims had been shot in the head, which leads Kizny to conclude that at least some of them had been gassed.[19]

Journalist Yevgenia Albats maintains that gas vans were a “Soviet invention”.[23] Kizny names Berg as the “inventor”.[19] Historians of the Holocaust like Henry Friedlander argue that the mobile gas chambers were invented in 1940.[24] Katrin Reichelt names Albert Widmann and Arthur Nebe as the two, who together developed the method by which human beings were killed in vans by exhaust fumes. The vans themselves were modified by Walter Rauff, Friedrich Pradel and Harry Wentritt.[25] Matthias Beer calls gas vans “a special product of the Third Reich”.[26] Robert Gellately points out that during an euthanasia program in occupied Poland the Nazi killers sought a more efficient and secretive killing process and thus "invented the first gas van, which began operations in the Warthegau on January 15, 1940, under Herbert Lange".[27] He also notes, that "the Soviets sometimes used a gas van (dushegubka), as in Moscow during the 1930s, but how extensive that was needs further investigation. They used crematoriums to dispose of thousands of bodies but had no gas chambers."[28]

See also

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ "SS use of mobile gassing vans". A damaged Magirus-Deutz van found in 1945 in Kolno, Poland. World War II Today. 2011. Retrieved April 22, 2013. Source: Office of the United States Chief Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality: Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression – Washington, U.S Govt. Print. Office, 1946, Vol III, p. 418;
  2. ^ Bartrop, Paul R. (2017). "Gas Vans". In Paul R. Bartrop; Michael Dickerman (eds.). The Holocaust: An Encyclopedia and Document Collection. Vol. 1. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. p. 234–235. ISBN 978-1-4408-4084-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  3. ^ "Gas Wagons: The Holocaust's mobile gas chambers", an article of Nizkor Project
  4. ^ Beer 1987, p. 405.
  5. ^ Alberti 2006, p. 326-327.
  6. ^ a b Beer 1987, p. 405-406.
  7. ^ Alberti 2006, p. 327-328.
  8. ^ Friedlander 1997, p. 139.
  9. ^ Beer 1987, p. 406.
  10. ^ Longerich, Peter (2012). Heinrich Himmler: A Life, p. 547, ISBN 978-0-19-959232-6.
  11. ^ Lewy, Guenter (2000). The Nazi Persecution of the Gypsies, pp. 204–208, ISBN 0-19-512556-8.
  12. ^ The path to genocide: essays on launching the final solution By Christopher R. Browning
  13. ^ The destruction of the European Jews, Part 804, Volume 1 By Raul Hilberg
  14. ^ Ernst. Klee, Willi Dressen, Volker Riess (1991). "The gas-vans (3. 'A new and better method of killing had to be found')". The Good Old Days: The Holocaust As Seen by Its Perpetrators and Bystanders. Konecky Konecky. p. 69. ISBN 1568521332. Retrieved 2013-05-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Patrick Montague (2012). "The Gas Vans (Appendix I)". Chełmno and the Holocaust: The History of Hitler's First Death Camp. Univ of North Carolina Press. p. Appendix I: The Gas Van. ISBN 0807835277. Retrieved 2018-09-15.
  16. ^ "Gaswagen, from deathcamps.org, in German". 2006. Retrieved 2018-10-06.
  17. ^ Catherine Merridale. Night of Stone: Death and Memory in Twentieth-Century Russia. Penguin Books, 2002 ISBN 0-14-200063-9 p. 200
  18. ^ Timothy J. Colton. Moscow: Governing the Socialist Metropolis. Belknap Press, 1998, ISBN 0-674-58749-9, p. 286
  19. ^ a b c d e f Tomasz Kizny, Dominique Roynette. La grande terreur en URSS 1937–1938. Lausanne: Éd. Noir sur Blanc, 2013, p. 236.
  20. ^ Alexander Vatlin. Agents of Terror: Ordinary Men and Extraordinary Violence in Stalin's Secret Police. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 2016, ISBN 978-0-299-31080-6, p. 11.
  21. ^ Alexander Vatlin. Agents of Terror: Ordinary Men and Extraordinary Violence in Stalin's Secret Police. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 2016, ISBN 978-0-299-31080-6, p. 15.
  22. ^ Alexander Vatlin. Agents of Terror: Ordinary Men and Extraordinary Violence in Stalin's Secret Police. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 2016, ISBN 978-0-299-31080-6, p. 67.
  23. ^ Yevgenia Albats: KGB: The State Within a State. The secret police and its hold on Russia's past, present and future. (International Affairs, Vol. 72). London: Tauris, 1995, p. 101.
  24. ^ Henry Friedlander. The Origins of Nazi Genocide: From Euthanasia to the Final Solution. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995, ISBN 978-0-8078-2208-1, p. 139.
  25. ^ Katrin Reichelt. "Gaswagen". In: Handbuch des Antisemitismus. Judenfeindschaft in Geschichte und Gegenwart. vol. 4, ed. by Wolfgang Benz. Berlin: DeGruyter, p. 143 f.
  26. ^ Mathias Beer. "Die Entwicklung der Gaswagen beim Mord an den Juden". In: Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte (in German). 35 (3): p. 403. English translation at Jewish Virtual Library.
  27. ^ Robert Gellately. Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe. New York: Knopf, 2007, p. 367.
  28. ^ Robert Gellately. Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe. New York: Knopf, 2007, p. 460.

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