#3. Oskar Strawczynskipilgrimofdark wrote: ↑Wed Dec 24, 2025 2:24 pm Someone could almost write an article about "How Many Propagandists Does It Take to Write a Holocaust Eyewitness Account?" discussing the Wiernik/Krzepicki manuscripts.
If a third account shows up with multiple handwriting samples, the article will have to be written. "Two is coincidence, three is a pattern."
These are four pages from one of his several(?) memoirs, this one published in the book Escaping Hell in Treblinka, where his memoirs are included as "Ten Months in Treblinka."
The original is in Yiddish, and the book contains the page scans. I can't find this exact one online, but Yad Vashem has a few other memoirs attributed to him.
A footnote to the page scans says only a couple initial pages of the entire document were handwritten by Strawczynski, with the rest copied by a Hannah Fryszdorf. However, the handwriting on those early pages is different than these two other handwriting samples shown below, so at least three different hands?
Because it's in Yiddish, it reads right-to-left. Handwriting switches at the bottom of page 82 (bottom right page).

edit: the Center for Jewish History has the full scan of the Yiddish document. Document pages 83-85 (handwritten 81-83) are ones to look at for the clear difference in handwriting style.
These aren't very straight scans, just what I could grab quickly from the paperback book.
The biggest difference is in the slanting of characters and how neat one handwriting is compared to the other. On the actual pages, there's a more noticeable difference in lightness of the ink between writers.
One person writes chapter headings as Roman numerals (I, II, III...), the other as Arabic (5, 6, 7...).
The handwriting switches like this several times in the full 165-page document.
Strawczynski doesn't play a huge role in the Treblinka history, but what he lacks in quality he makes up for in sheer quantity of testimonies and memoirs.
He was at the 1944 Soviet "One Year in Treblinka" Book Club, so he has "memories" of the Ringelblum-Wiernik material. I wonder where he got the inspiration to title his book "Ten Months in Treblinka."