Quote from dpt:
Franz Stangl, Commandant of Sobibor (March-September, 1942), and Treblinka
(September, 1942 - August, 1943), speaking at the time of his 1970 West German
trial for war crimes:
"Regarding the question of the optimum amount of people gassed in one day,
I can state: according to my estimation a transport of thirty freight cars
with 3,000 people was liquidated in three hours. When the work lasted for
about fourteen hours, 12,000 to 15,000 people were annihilated. There were
many days that the work lasted from the early morning until the evening
. . . I have done nothing to anybody that was not my duty. My conscience is
clear.' "
http://www.auschwitz.dk/sobibor/franzstangl.htm
http://web.archive.org/web/20040817042014/ukar.org/sereny02.html
Stangl's stuff is so blantantly idiotic it appears he's one of those Germans who intentionally put forward super absurdities in order to stigmatize the credibility of the story.
I pulled this from the IHR and it's good stuff.
The latest reminiscences to appear in print are those of Franz Stangl, the former commandant of the camp at Treblinka in Poland who was sentenced to life imprisonment in December 1970. These were published in an article by the London Daily Telegraph Magazine, October 8th, 1971, and were supposed to derive from a series of interviews with Stangl in prison. He died a few days after the interviews were concluded. These alleged reminiscences are certainly the goriest and most bizarre yet published, though one is grateful for a few admissions by the writer of the article, such as that "the evidence presented in the course of his trial did not prove Stangl himself to have committed specific acts of murder" and that the account of Stangl's beginnings in Poland "was in part fabrication." A typical example of this fabrication was the description of Stangl's first visit to Treblinka. As he drew into the railway station there, he is supposed to have seen "thousands of bodies" just strewn around next to the tracks, "hundreds, no, thousands of bodies everywhere, putrefying, decomposing." And "in the station was a train full of Jews, some dead, some still alive ... it looked as if it had been there for days." The account reaches the heights of absurdity when Stangl is alleged to have got out of his car and "stepped kneedeep into money: I didn't know which way to turn, which way to go. I waded in papernotes, currency, precious stones, jewellery and clothes. They were everywhere, strewn all over the square." The scene is completed by "whores from Warsaw weaving drunk, dancing, singing, playing music", who were on the other side of the barbed wire fences. To literally believe this account of sinking "kneedeep" in Jewish bank-notes and precious stones amid thousands of putrefying corpses and lurching, singing prostitutes would require the most phenomenal degree of gullibility, and in any circumstances other than the Six Million legend it would be dismissed as the most outrageous nonsense. The statement which certainly robs the Stangl memoirs of any vestige of authenticity is his alleged reply when asked why he thought the Jews were being exterminated: "They wanted the Jews' money," is the answer. "That racial business was just secondary." The series of interviews are supposed to have ended on a highly dubious note indeed. When asked whether he thought there had been "any conceivable sense in this horror," the former Nazi commandant supposedly replied with enthusiasm: "Yes, I am sure there was. Perhaps the Jews were meant to have this enormous jolt to pull them together; to create a people; to identify themselves with each other." One could scarcely imagine a more perfect answer had it been invented.
When hes was asked during his later trial how many people could be murdered in one day, Franz Stangl, attesting to his days as commandant of Treblinka, answered:
"Regarding the question of the optimum amount of people gassed in one
day, I can state: according to my estimation a transport of thirty
freight cars with 3,000 people was liquidated in three hours. When the
work lasted for about fourteen hours, 12,000 to 15,000 people were
annihilated. There were many days that the work lasted from the early
morning until the evening . ."
We can have it from this same Franz Stangl for when he came to be commandant at Sobibor they exterminated up to 15,000 a day there also.(We can have for Belzec up to 10,000 a day.)
Therefore, with Stangl's testimony alone we have it some 30,000 Jews a day were exterminated at just two camps.
Then we have from Stangl, ala Sereny's book him attesting to the dimensions of the cremation grill "roaster" at Sobibor and up to 3,000 people at a time being cremated on the thing. Putting all the arithmetic together concerning the length and width and height off the ground we would have Stangl attesting to a Holocaust body being cremated with a piece of wood about the size of a carton of cigarettes.
Note that the alleged mass grave at Treblinka of an alleged 900,000 Jews has never been shown to exist, never. Therefore, judeo supremacist Sereny's claims about Stangl are laughable.