NoteSubscribers to
The Barnes Review receive a
10% discount on all book and video purchases placed over the phone. Call us toll-free at 1-877-773-9077 (or ++1-951-587-6936 from abroad) to place your order charged to your Visa, Master, AmEx or Discover Card. If shopping online, please leave a note in the box "Special Instructions or Comments About Your Order" on checkout page 2 (Delivery Information), and we will give you a 10% credit for your next purchase with us. (For security reasons we do not store any information about our subscribers on our server, so this discount service cannot be calculated automatically.)
No subscriber yet?
Click here to subscribe.
Concentration Camp Stutthof and its Function in National Socialist Jewish Policy
$15.00
By Jürgen Graf, Carlo Mattogno
The National Socialist concentration camp of Stutthof, not far from Danzig (West Prussia), has never been the subject of scientific study by western historians. In Poland there exists quite an extensive body of literature on the subject, which must, however, be treated with caution, because it is heavily influenced by Soviet-Communist and Polish-nationalistic ideology. According to this literature, Stutthof became a "makeshift" extermination camp within the framework of the execution of the so-called "Final Solution of the Jewish Question" in 1944.
Jürgen Graf and Carlo Mattogno have subjected this view of Stutthof to critical examination based on Polish literature and documents located in Russian, Polish, and Dutch archives, paying particular attention to mass transports to and from Stutthof in 1944. This research led the authors to very definite conclusions as to the function of the camp, differing dramatically from those expressed in the standard literature: Not only do Graf and Mattogno prove that the Stutthof camp did not serve as a "makeshift" extermination camp: the room claimed to have been used as a homicidal gas chamber was never anything else but a delousing chamber. This book also sheds some light on the question of what happened to prisoners who were sent to Auschwitz but were never registered in that camp: after quite an ordeal, some of them ended up in Stutthof.
The present volume is a milestone of research, which no historian with any claim to seriousness can afford to ignore
Click her to look at this book's Table of Contents and its first chapter.
Holocaust Handbooks, Volume 4, second edition, 130 pp. pb, 6"×9", b/w & color ill., bibl., index
Add to Cart:
This product was added to our catalog on Wednesday 30 June, 2010.
Customers who bought this product also purchased...