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Institute for Historical Review
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Book Review
The 'Confessions' of Kurt Gerstein
- by Henri Roques, translated from the French by Ronald
Percival. Costa Mesa, California: Institute for Historical Review,
1989, $11.00, [iv +] xv + 318 pages + 11 foldout pages A-K, ISBN
0-939484-27-7.
Reviewed by A. Dibert
Rezeptionsgeschichte, or "history of reception,"
has been a significant concept in German literary studies in recent
decades. This notion can well be extended to other lines of investigation,
including the study of the documents on which political and social
history is based, in conjunction with such approaches as textual
analysis and criticism. In the present instance, the narratives
left by the SS officer Kurt Gerstein after his death in 1945 have
served for almost half a century as the chief evidence for the
existence of "death-camps" at Belzec and Treblinka (and
to a lesser extent Sobibor and Majdanek) in Poland, at which many
millions of Jews are said to have been gassed or otherwise exterminated.
In this French doctoral thesis, Henri Roques examines critically
the Gerstein texts themselves, their internal consistency, their
conformity to what is known from other sources, and the history
of their reception down the decades (of which the story of Roques'
thesis itself forms a part). In so doing, Roques thoroughly demolishes
the credibility of Gerstein's affirmations and hence of the existence
of any extermination programs at these locations.
In a "Foreword" (p. i-xv), the translator Ronald
Percival provides a brief history of the underhanded methods by
which Roques' doctoral degree was revoked after he had passed
his examination, his thesis had been accepted and the degree granted
at the University of Nantes in 1985. Roques' treatment of Gerstein's
"confessions" begins with his Introduction (pp. 1-17),
presenting the reasons for discussing them critically. The core
of the book (pp. 18-168) consists of four chapters. In the first,
"Establishment of the Texts" (pp. 18-119), Roques presents
the six (not five, as previously believed) versions of the texts
in which Gerstein narrates his alleged observations at Belzec
and Treblinka (with mention of Sobibor and Majdanek) in Poland
in 1942. There are four texts in (rather poor) French, to which
Roques gives the numbers T I, T II, T IV and T V, and two in German
(T III and T VI). In this edition, they are all given in English
translation; in the French edition, they are presumably transcribed
from the French originals and translated from those in German.
The translations of these six texts occupy the first half of Chapter I (pp. 19-89). Photostatic reproductions of the original documents are given, for T I though T VI, in an appendix (pp. 210-287), but for the "Additions and Drafts" which occupy the rest of the chapter (pp. 89-119), they are intercalated in the body of the discussion, a procedure followed in later chapters as well. In a highly important section containing eleven comparative tables (A -- K), Roques contrasts and evaluates Gerstein's allegations in texts T I through T VI. These tables are printed on six long fold-out sheets tipped in between pp. 117 and 118, with a photostatic reproduction of a letter from Pastor Martin Niemoller to Frau Gerstein on an unnumbered page (recto preceding 118).
The "Authenticity of the Texts" is Roques' topic
in Chapter II (pp. 121-142). Was Gerstein the author of all six,
or of only some? On the basis of their content, style, and typing,
Roques concludes (p. 137) that the two texts in German (T III
and T VI) were not by Gerstein, but were fabricated after his
death on the basis of various documents left by him. Comparison
of the typewritten versions shows that at least three different
machines must have been used, one with a French keyboard and two
with slightly variant German keyboards. Roques considers the hand-written
texts in French to be authentic.
Chapter III treats "The Veracity of the Texts" (pp.
143-156). Since Gerstein's assertions have been widely accepted
as a major keystone in the evidence for the existence of homicidal
gas-chambers in Nazi concentration camps, Roques observes (p.
143) "Such a keystone should have the quality, accepted by
all, of an historic document" and asks "Do the 'confessions'
of Gerstein have this indisputable quality?" His answer is
strongly negative, based on a summary of the Confessions"
(pp. 144-146) and a statement of the improbabilities and peculiarities
which they contain (pp. 147-153). There are, Roques suggests (pp.
153-156), degrees of improbability, diminished somewhat in the
German texts (T III and T VI), which strengthen the hypothesis
that these were fabricated to lessen their readers' skepticism.
Even these, however, contain sufficient impossibilities to cast
the gravest doubt on Gerstein's entire narrative.
The posthumous reception of the Gerstein story is Roques' topic
in Chapter Four, "Gerstein's 'confessions' and the views
of their readers" (pp. 157-168). Before their publication,
they were accessible only to the Allied military authorities,
who were not sufficiently impressed to use them as evidence at
Nurnberg or in other courts, although not doubting the existence
of the gas-chambers and related phenomena (p. 167).- After they
were published, readers' reactions varied, and Roques divides
those who have discussed them into three groups. Chief among those
who do not doubt" (pp. 158-159), Roques names Pierre Joffroy,
"Gerstein's hagiographer." Of "those who do not
believe" (pp. 159-161), the leader was the late Paul Rassinier,
followed in more recent times by Robert Faurisson. The great majority
of current discussants fall into the category of "those who
believe the essential points" (pp. 162-166), i.e. admit that
some of Gerstein's statements and particularly his statistics
are exaggerated, but consider that he actually saw the events
he describes. Among the last-mentioned group are Léon Poliakov
(whose many alterations of Gerstein's text are notorious) and
such other Holocaust-mongers as Saul Friedländer, Raul Hilberg,
Lucy Dawidowicz, Gerald Reitlinger, et hoc genus omne.
In his "Conclusion" (pp. 169-174), Roques sums up
the manifold "incoherencies, improbabilities, and inconsistencies"
(p.174) which he finds in Gerstein's tales, to emphasise their
total undependability. Ronald Percival supplies an "Afterword:
The Gerstein Story: Questions and Comments" (pp.168-206),
dealing with further aspects of Gerstein's highly unstable, schizoid
personality; his incompetence in technical matters; and his (partly
unlikely) life-history which did not form part of Roques' critical
evaluation of the texts themselves. An interesting suggestion
(pp. 191-194) is that his possession of invoices for Zyklon B
may indicate that Gerstein was engaging in some black-market activity
connected with this pesticide, and that his "confessions"
may have been a mystification aimed at covering up such activities.
The final third of the book contains supplementary material.
In a long "Appendix I: Map and Gerstein Confessions Photocopies" (pp. 207-287), a sketch-map showing the location of various concentration camps (p. 209) is followed by the already mentioned reproductions of Gerstein's six texts (pp. 210-287). A second, much shorter appendix, "Kurt Gerstein: His Life, His Death, His ëConfessions' (pp. 289-294) provides not only a curriculum vitae (pp.
289-291), but also a chronology of the reception of Gerstein's
"Confessions" from 1945 to 1983 (pp. 291-294), with
critical remarks on the way in which they were garbled and misrepresented
by Holocaust-maniacs."
A brief "Bibliography" (pp. 295-298) is followed
by two "Postscripts" dealing with persons whom Gerstein
mentions as having been involved in his trip to Poland and back
and as knowing (at either first or second hand) of the situation
and events he narrates. The first of these (pp. 297-308) deals
with Wilhelm Pfannenstiel, with whom Gerstein travelled to Poland
in 1942, and who was for many years cited as a witness to "authenticate"
Gerstein's account. Roques characterises Pfannenstiel as "a
reticent witness but cooperative as to essentials" (p. 299),
but suggests (pp. 304-308) that, according to correspondence between
Pfannenstiel and Rassinier dating from 1963, the former may have
"grown weary of the role he was asked to play" (p. 304).
The second postscript (pp. 309-315) is entitled "Von Otter,
or the Prudence of a Diplomat." Gerstein claimed that, on
the train returning from Poland, he met a Swedish legation-counsellor,
one Baron von Otter, to whom he recounted the horrors he asserted
he had witnessed, begging von Otter to report this to the Swedish
government. The outcome of the whole matter is still unclear,
because of von Otter's extreme caution in confirming Gerstein's
assertions. A brief, incomplete and not wholly accurate index
of personal names (pp. 316-318) concludes the book, which is reasonably
well printed, with relatively few misprints. Unfortunately, several
pages have not been given numbers, so that in certain sections
the odd numbers are on the left-hand pages and the even on the
right.
Although Roques modestly disclaims (p. 1) that he is "here
concerned with an historical study," he has in fact combined
two types of criticism, the textual and the historical, which
are normally the province of specialists in separate fields. All
writing of history depends on reliable sources, especially accurate
texts. These latter have to be established through careful evaluation
of original writings (manuscript, printed, or typed) and of the
language(s) involved. The transmission of the writings often casts
light on the metamorphoses which the original may have undergone,
and the textual critic's task is to reestablish the latter as
well as possible. If there are multiple versions, they must be
compared, and if (as here) there are too many different versions
to establish a single archetype, the critic must reproduce the
various forms in which the texts occur. Roques has done this with
a high degree of competence, in accordance with the best methods
of textual criticism as established by Lucien Havet and others.
Roques' demonstration of the internal inconsistencies and discrepancies between the six texts and what we know from other sources (especially as shown in Tables A -- K) is in itself a piece of devastating historical criticism. After a careful reading of Roques' work, even without Percival's valuable additions, no-one can grant any credence to Gerstein's stories about millions of Jews being exterminated at Belzec or Treblinka, nor his assertions concerning the mass burnings of corpses; the killing of millions of children at Auschwitz (which he did not see) by means of a pad soaked in prussic acid (!) held under their noses, and the like. To continue believing utterly fantastic stories like these, the "true believers" of the Holocaust faith have to follow the example of those religious fanatics who said credo quia impossibile, "I believe
it because it is impossible." No wonder that the L.I.C.R.A.
(Ligue Internationale Contre le Racisme et l'Anti-Sémitisme)
and other Zionists pressured the French government into illegally
cancelling Roques' degree!
Source: Reprinted from The Journal of Historical
Review, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 223-227.
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