Stubble wrote: ↑Fri Nov 28, 2025 3:28 pm
Where I'm at with it, is that's 'grave 5'...
I mean, how much clean fill is that?
There's, nothing there.
It was surprising for them to go through and say:
'Grave 1 is not a mass grave'
'Grave 2 is not a mass grave'
Etc.
The biggest problem with the 'Huge Mass Graves' hypothesis is, there are to date, no 'Huge Mass Graves'.
For the record, before seriously investigating the questions posed by Keen, I had just assumed there was some legitimacy to the 'Huge Mass Graves' claim. Imagine my surprise to discover, there's not...
Look at Kola's description of grave 5 some time.
What you are looking at in photographs is NOT how the 'graves' were determined.
There were no invasive excavations permitted other than by drilling. At most, you are seeing diggings
up until the exact point where corpse material starts. The Chief Rabbi of Poland explicitly forbade digging
into graves.
I've reviewed all of Kola's descriptions; I have a spreadsheet which I use to analyze each of his graves there, which also incorporates all of the calculations Mattogno discusses in his work.
Here is the grave no. 5 description:
[EDIT: Fixed, thanks bombsaway:]
Grave no 5. It’s not a very vast grave, located in the north-western part of hectare 18. It was excavated by 7 drills. Horizontally, it's irregular, measuring at least 10 x 12 m, with its depth up to 4.90 m. In its bottom layers the grave is bony, with human remains in wax-fat transformation. In the upper layers – burnt body remains.
https://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot ... camps.html
After closer review, you may indeed be onto something regarding this grave having much less cremains than I would have at first assumed based on the initial Kola report (which I think was done in 2007). A later, 2015 report (Mazurek et al.) once again excavated this same site and shows that Kola may have overstated his findings:
The situation is similar in the case of
mass grave no. 5. It has been reconnoitered only from the eastern side. The range in this direction is slightly smaller from the grave’s range, which was determined with drillings carried out in 2001.
No burnt human bones have been found in the subsurface layers. At a depth of about 2 m a great number of not burnt human bones covered by the clear, almost white sand, has been found. After reaching the level where human bones were found, the works stopped and were documented. Probably it is a skeletal mass grave.
https://codoh.com/library/document/the- ... lementary/
Note that the top 2 meters (!) of soil did
not contain burnt human remains. That's more than 40% of the entire grave volume wiped away by these updated findings. [EDIT: I just noticed that even at 2 meters, Mazurek reports here the bones found were
NOT burnt -- now highlighted in
red above -- further impacting grave volume constraints!] Mazurek reports stopping his excavation the moment these bones were first detected (at 2 meters depth). Earlier, he explains why:
Excavation research covered only boundary area of mass graves and only to the extent specified by the representative of the Chief Rabbi of Poland, Mr. Alex Schwarz; that is to say they were conducted until buried or unburied human remains were encountered in large quantities or in situ [in their original location], i.e. until there were no obvious traces, confirming their grave nature.
In other words, they were
only allowed to dig until they detected corpse remains reflecting "obvious traces" of a grave. What this means, in effect, is they were
forbidden to quantify.
Nonetheless, between the drill samples (which were
permitted to be more invasive) and these supplementary findings of superficial diggings, we can make a reasoned assessment and attempt to quantify a possible range of corpse material within the apparent volume.
With this latest reduction to grave no. 5, I'd lower my Sobibor estimate even further (from ~10-40,000 to ~9-36,000, if charitable in core sample interpretation [EDIT: Likely even less, given NOT burnt remains found in grave 5, further impacting volume constraints]). I do
not believe Mazurek, Kola, and their entire teams are all conspiring liars (there are plenty of sincere 'Holocaust' archaeologists and researchers to go around), and so I think they are mostly honest (even if over-stating or "loose" in interpretation, i.e.
incompetent) in their indication of when/where corpse material has been found -- but what they have inadvertently done is prove "no Holocaust" at these locations. They've now "sealed" the forensic arguments and necessary conclusions.