Book Announcement
The Cremation Furnaces of Auschwitz
First German and Second English Edition
Authored by Carlo Mattogno and Franco Deana
Carlo Mattogno, Franco Deana, The Cremation Furnaces of Auschwitz: A Technical and Historical Study. 3 Parts, 2nd English and first German edition, Castle Hill Publishers, Uckfield, 2021, 6”×9” paperback. Subtitle Part 1: History and Technology, 498 pages, index, bibliography, glossary, b&w illustrated, ISBN: 978-1-59148-275-8. Subtitle Part 2: Documents, 472 pages, 505 b&w illustrations, ISBN: 978-1-59148-276-5. Subtitle Part 3: Photographs, 233 pages, 364 color and 22 b&w illustrations, ISBN: 978-1-59148-277-2. This is Volume 24 of our prestigious series Holocaust Handbooks. The eBook version is accessible free of charge at www.HolocaustHandbooks.com. The current edition of this work can be purchased as print or eBook from Armreg Ltd. at https://armreg.co.uk.
In 2019, an anonymous German volunteer took on translating this massive technical work. By mid-2020, he was 2/3 done with it when he suddenly disappeared (without ever submitting any of his translation work). After failing to give any feedback by mid-2021, I decided to start from scratch and do it myself. It was ready to go at the end of October 2021, but our attempt to set up a new distribution chain in Europe outside of the UK has delayed our switching this book free, as we hoped to set up this book for the new system. In early December, we switched free the new, 2nd, slightly expanded and corrected English edition of this book that was edited and produced parallel to the German edition, and the German edition followed a couple of weeks later.
Normally I wouldn’t announce a mere second edition with that much fanfare, but this has been a major effort taking many months, nay, years of hard work, albeit mostly for the German edition.
Few objects of utter evil have inspired human imagination more than the ominous gas ovens of Auschwitz. Auschwitz is the epicenter of the Holocaust, the baseline of absolute evil. Here is where millions are said to have been murdered and obliterated in the gas ovens by the Nazis. But that’s where the problem begins, because there was no such things as a “gas oven.” What did exist, though, were cremation furnaces used to turn into ashes the remains of deceased inmates. Survivors claim that thousands of corpses were burned in them every day, and that smoke and flames shot out of the crematory chimneys.
The present study investigates the Auschwitz cremation furnaces from the bottom up. In the first section, the authors summarize the principles of combustion technology and briefly explain the chemical and physical processes of corpse cremations. Next they sketch out the development of modern cremation techniques with emphasis on Germany, and they investigate the results of several scientific cremation experiments conducted over the past 100+ years. Based on this data and on numerous scientific publications on cremations, they establish important benchmark figures, such as how long it takes to cremate a corpse, and how much fuel is needed.
The second section analyzes in depth the activities of the German company Topf & Sons, who manufactured the cremation furnaces at Auschwitz and other Nazi camps. Authors Mattogno and Deana next describe in detail the history and properties of the different types of furnaces installed. They then calculate cremation durations and fuel consumptions for each of the furnaces based on scientific experiments, documented data from actual cremations in similar furnaces, and mathematical calculations. They show that witness statements about gargantuan cremation capacities are wildly exaggerated, and they also prove that it was physically impossible for flames to emerge from the Auschwitz crematory chimneys.
This book ends with an overview of the cremation furnaces installed at other German concentration camps by other companies, and it briefly explains the legal framework within which cremations were conducted in WWII-era Germany both outside and inside its camp system.
Bibliographic information about this document: Inconvenient History, 2021, Vol. 13, No. 4
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