Glossary

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The Number of Victims at the Buna/Monowitz Concentration Camp

Estimates of the number of deaths at I.G. Auschwitz vary considerably. A principal reason for this divergence is the systematic destruction of files that was carried out shortly before the war ended, both by the SS and by employees of I.G. Farben. Thus a historic reconstruction of the number of deaths must rely in large measure on estimates: In addition to the incomplete card index of prisoners that has survived and the “death books” of the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp, data on the number of prisoners murdered in the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp is based mostly on estimates made by former inmates. These estimates range from a minimum of 23,000 to a maximum of 40,000 dead. In the historical research, the estimates range from 10,000 dead, the figure used by the Polish historian Piotr Setkiewicz, to “in total, 30,000 prisoners who died as a direct result of their work for the IG,”[1] as assumed by Bernd C. Wagner.

 

Wagner’s calculations yield “for 1943 a figure of 7,200 and for 1944, 16,800, that is, a total of 24,000” prisoners who perished at the I.G. Auschwitz construction site,[2] which tallies surprisingly closely with the figures given in the witness testimonies of surviving prisoners.[3] Moreover, these figures, Wagner says, also correspond to the contemporary sources on the number of inmates selected from the prisoner infirmary by the SS doctors in the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp for transfer to Birkenau for extermination or, during the initial phase, for transfer to the main camp. The surviving transfer lists of the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp for the period from November 1, 1942, to October 1944 contain a total of about 7,293[4] names or numbers of prisoners who were “transferred” to Birkenau or, in the initial phase, to the Auschwitz main camp. This number does not include the camp selections, to which, according to Wagner’s estimates, “several thousand victims also fell victim.”[5] Further, he says, “the people who died or were murdered directly on the plant grounds also” would have to be added on; in the death book of the concentration camp, the number of these victims would have to be set at “at least 1,647.”[6] Wagner regards the “assumption of a figure of about 23,000 to 25,000 dead” at the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp as confirmed by the records and other documentation that escaped destruction. To that, one would have to add the prisoners who died in the coal mines of I.G. Auschwitz at subcamps: “several thousand additional prisoners,” in Wagner’s estimate.[7]

 

Setkiewicz’s calculations, on the other hand, assume the “transfer” of around 7,200 to 7,300 prisoners from the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp to Auschwitz-Birkenau and to the Auschwitz main camp, of whom no more than 20 percent survived.[8] Another 1,670 dead are, as Setkiewicz emphasizes, documented by the death book of the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp.[9] He estimates at 800 to 1,000 the number of prisoners who were selected in places other than the prisoner infirmary and killed. In addition, there were at least 2,400 prisoners selected in the camp in 1943 and 1944. The figures precisely documented over an extended period of time by the two prisoners Felix Rausch and Stefan Heymann, which were discovered in 1947, hidden in a latrine on the camp grounds, also argue for the lower estimates of Setkiewicz, who assumes that there were at least 10,000 dead at the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp. These secretly recorded statistics, however, document only the selections conducted by the SS in the prisoner infirmary. They did not include selections conducted in the camp in places other than the prisoner infirmary, which remain an instability factor because they are only incompletely documented in other materials that survived. For these reasons, the number calculated by Setkiewicz—10,000 deaths at the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp—is to be regarded as absolutely the lowest conceivable estimate; Wagner’s count can be considered far more probable.

 

At the I.G. Auschwitz plant construction site, many inmates died in accidents at work, but the most common causes of death were emaciation and untreated illnesses. The average length of survival for the prisoners was three to four months at Monowitz.[10] In the coal mines that were operated by Fürstengrube GmbH, an I.G. Farben affiliate, at the Fürstengrube and Janinagrube subcamps, the concentration camp inmates had to do slave labor in even more extreme conditions, and there the average survival time was only four to six weeks.[11] At the Günthergrube mine alone, which also belonged to Fürstengrube GmbH, the mortality rate was somewhat lower because the food supply and hygienic conditions were less catastrophic.

 

More research, using all available sources, is required to gain a more precise picture of the numbers of deaths at the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp and at the three subcamps with coal mines belonging to the I.G. Farben concern (Fürstengrube, Janinagrube, and Günthergrube), which were part of the subcamp system of Auschwitz III.

(SP; transl. KL; based on Florian Schmaltz: Die Totenzahlen des KZ Buna/Monowitz)



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[pdf] Florian Schmaltz_The Death Toll at the Buna/Monowitz Concentration Camp

 

Sources

“Death Book” of the prisoner infirmary at the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp, November 16, 1942, to January 15, 1945. Archiwum Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau, D-AuIII-5/4, excerpts in: NI-15295. Archiv der Stiftung für Sozialgeschichte Bremen, Nuremberg Documents, NI-series.

Berthold Epstein, affidavit, March 3, 1947, NI-5847. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, PDB 75 (e), pp. 168–170.

Erich Orlik, affidavit, June 18, 1947, NI-12385. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, PDB 75 (e), pp. 210–214.

Herbert Ungar, affidavit, May 19, 1948, NI-15299. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, Prosecution Exhibit 2262, reel 035, pp. 1–4.

Transfer lists of the Monowitz prisoner infirmary, NI-14997. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, Prosecution Exhibit 2266, reel 035, pp. 5–318.

Rudolf Vitek, affidavit, March 3, 1947, NI-4830. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, PDB 75 (e), pp. 43–46.

 

Literature

Makowski, Antoni: “Organisation, Entwicklung und Tätigkeit des Häftlings-Krankenbaus in Monowitz (KL Auschwitz III).” In: Hefte von Auschwitz 15 (1975), pp. 113–181.

Setkiewicz, Piotr: Zdziejów obozów IG Farben Werk Auschwitz 1941–1945. Oświęcim: Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau, 2006, pp. 156–158 and p. 163.

Setkiewicz, Piotr: “Mortality among the Prisoners in Auschwitz III-Monowitz.” In: Pro Memoria. Information Bulletin 26 (2007), pp. 61–66.

Wagner, Bernd C.: I.G. Auschwitz. Zwangsarbeit und Vernichtung von Häftlingen des Lagers Monowitz 1941–1945. Munich: Saur, 2000

[1] Bernd C. Wagner: IG Auschwitz. Zwangsarbeit und Vernichtung von Häftlingen des Lagers Monowitz 1941–1945 (Munich: Saur, 2000), S. 282. (Translated by KL)

[2] Wagner: IG Auschwitz, p. 281.

[3] Wagner: IG Auschwitz, p. 281.

[4] Wagner gives the figure of 7,295, which differs slightly from the source he cites, probably owing to a typo. There one finds the figure calculated by Herbert Ungar: 7,293 transfers; see Herbert Ungar, affidavit, May 19, 1948, NI-15299. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, Prosecution Exhibit 2262, reel 035, pp. 1–4, and Transfer lists of the Monowitz prisoner infirmary, NI-14997. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, Prosecution Exhibit 2266, reel 035, pp. 5–318.

[5] Wagner: IG Auschwitz, p. 282, footnote 362; see Transfer lists of the Monowitz prisoner infirmary, NI-14997. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, Prosecution Exhibit 2262, reel 035, pp. 5–318.

[6] Wagner: IG Auschwitz, p. 281, footnote 363. Here, see the “Death Book” of the prisoner infirmary at the Buna/Monowitz concentration camp, November 16, 1942, to January 15, 1945. Archiwum Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau, D-AuIII-5/4, excerpts in: NI-15295. Archiv der Stiftung für Sozialgeschichte Bremen, Nuremberg Documents, NI-series.

[7] Wagner: IG Auschwitz, pp. 281–282.

[8] Piotr Setkiewicz: Zdziejów obozów IG Farben Werk Auschwitz 1941–1945 (Oświęcim: Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau, 2006), pp. 156 and 163. Thus Setkiewicz corrects the estimate of 8,000 transfers supplied by former prisoner Antoni Makowski, lowering it by several hundred, see Antoni Makowski: “Organisation, Entwicklung und Tätigkeit des Häftlings-Krankenbaus in Monowitz (KL Auschwitz III).” In: Hefte von Auschwitz 15 (1975), pp. 113–181.

[9] Setkiewicz: Zdziejów obozów, p. 153.

[10] Compare the statement of Berthold Epstein, who was assigned to work as a male nurse in the prisoner infirmary of Buna/Monowitz: Berthold Epstein, affidavit, March 3, 1947, NI-5847. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, PDB 75 (e), pp. 168–170, here p. 168; as well as Rudolf Vitek, affidavit, March 3, 1947, NI-4830. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, PDB 75 (e), pp. 43–46, here p. 45.

[11] According to the statement of a prisoner-physician assigned to work at the Janinagrube concentration camp: Erich Orlik, affidavit, June 18, 1947, NI-12385. Archive of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Subsequent Nuremberg Trials, Case VI, PDB 75 (e), pp. 210–214, here p. 211.