Why is Rudolf Reder's September 22, 1944 Soviet interrogation (in
HH #43) so similar to the Treblinka
September 1944 Soviet testimonies?
That Treblinka investigation uses the most material directly from Jankiel Wiernik's book and some of that appears in Reder's interrogation. But also even material echoing Wiernik's unpublished manuscript (which Goldfarb also echoes).
Reder: "After a pit was full, which contained more than 100,000 /one hundred thousand/ corpses..."
Treblinka: "To imagine this enormous mass of murdered and burned people, suffice it to say that the smallest pit contained at least 100,000 corpses."
Reder: "killing of 3 million people."
Wiernik: "approximately 3.5 million corpses."
Soviets: "at least 3.5 million people;" "no less than 3 million people;" "extermination of 3.5 million Jews."
Reder: "They brought people from Poland, France, Belgium, Holland, Denmark, Norway, Czechoslovakia."
Soviets: "they brought hundreds and thousands of Jewish people from cities in Poland, France, Belgium, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, and occupied Russian cities."
Reder: "The corpses were dragged into [already] dug pits measuring 100 x 25 x 15 meters."
Wiernik (manuscript): "The mass grave was 100 meters long, 25 meters wide, and 15 meters deep."
In a later 1945 interview, Reder says Himmler visited Belzec in October 1942.
Soviets: "In October 1942, when I was working in the camp's 2nd Department, Himmler arrived by plane."
And then Reder didn't write his own book? (like Wiernik and Krzepicki)
Kues on CODOH:
The booklet
Belzec was not written by Reder alone, but in collaboration with a certain Nella Rost (whose surname is misspelled as Post by Rubel), who also wrote a foreword (not included in the Rubel translation). Rubel writes that the account was published "under his name but was probably written by [Rost]."
- Kues, "Rudolf Reder’s 'Belzec' A critical reading,"
CODOH
Olga Kartashova in a thesis:
Rudolf Reder (1881–1968) [...] He was the only surviving witness of the Bełżec crimes. He escaped Bełżec and remained in hiding in Lwów until 1944. After the war he stayed in Kraków. He testified before Soviet and Polish investigation commissions. In 1946 Reder collaborated with Nella Rost on the booklet about Bełżec, which appeared under his name, but was probably written by her.
- Kartashova, Olga. “Holocaust History Between Liberation and Sovietization: The Publications of the Central Jewish Historical Commission in Poland 1945-1947,” 48.
I read Nella Rost's introduction to
the book, but she doesn't explicitly state she wrote Reder's account. So I'm not sure why historians think she wrote it in his name.
Nella Rost (aka Nella Rost-Hollander) was a literary scholar and worked with the Central Jewish Historical Commission (CZKH) after the war. The CZKH became the Jewish Historical Institute, which has the Ringelblum Archive materials. Rost took witness statements in Krakow.