45. Can a crematory oven be operated 100% of the time?
This reply is a comprehensive one, covering Q&A numbers
42, 43, and
44 as well.
Start by looking at a
photograph
of the furnaces in Krema II, to get some idea of scale. They were very large. Keep in mind that
the Zündelsite characterizes
these massive crematoria buildings as "chicken sheds."
There were five Krema in Auschwitz. Krema II and III had five huge
furnaces, each of which had a "triple-muffle" that could burn
three bodies simultaneously. They were designed to burn efficiently and
quickly, especially when burning many bodies in a row (see Gutman et al.,
Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp, 1994, pp. 185-186).
Although the furnaces were designed with three muffles, two to three
bodies could almost always be placed in each muffle. Remember that many
children were present, and that the victims were often inmates who had
been at Auschwitz for months and who were malnourished in the extreme.
The Nazis took 70 to 100 kg of animal remains as a "unit" that
could be incinerated in one muffle; whether that was one large person
or three small ones was irrelevant, technically speaking. Höss
testified that the Sonderkommando would alternate between putting three
and two bodies in each muffle. (See Gutman et al., op. cit., pp.
236, 166, 180n55.)
Contrary to what the IHR claims in
question 42,
the furnaces would consume the bodies in anywhere from half an hour to
45 minutes maximum. This is not only verified by eyewitnesses, but by
numerous Nazi memos concerning a variety of incineration jobs.
Here is the arithmetic for a single Krematorium, number II:
Five furnaces, each with three muffles, each muffle capable of
holding two to three corpses simultaneously (call it two) and burning
them in half an hour, could reduce 1440 bodies to ash in twenty-four
working hours. 5 times 3 times 2, divided by one-half, times 24,
equals 1440.
A captured memo dated June 28, 1943, sent to SS General Kammler in
Berlin, cites the number of bodies that can be disposed of in one day,
at Auschwitz-Birkenau, as 4,756. This is apparently based on a
24-hour working day using the above figures, as it cites the capacity
of Krema II as 1440. See a
photograph
of the document, or
Pressac,
Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers,
1989, p. 247. There is argument among historians and technical experts
as to whether this represents a theoretical maximum that was never
reached in reality except with the aid of additional cremation done in
burning pits, or a figure that was reached and possibly exceeded during
the worst of the extermination action. Nevertheless, it is clear that
Lagace's claim of 184 bodies daily (Lenski, Robert, The Holocaust
on Trial, 1990, p. 252) is not even within an order of magnitude
of being correct.