Lions Led By Donkeys Podcast - Episode 390 - The Auschwitz Sonderkommando Revolt

Episode Date: November 30, 2025

USE CODE DEC25 FOR OUR HOLIDAY SALE. https://www.patreon.com/lionsledbydonkeys A group of people, forced into one of the worst jobs in human history, decide to launch a suicidal revolt to destroy th...e tools of the Holocaust. Sources: Lawerence Langer. Versions of Survival: The Holocaust and the Human Spirit Primo Levi. The Drowned and the Saved. Nathan Cohen. Diaries of the Sonderkommando - Confronting Fate and Reality. Tzipora Hager Halivni. Preparation for Revolt in Auschwitz-Birkenau: Heroes and Martyrs. Filip Muller. Eyewitness Auschwitz: Three Years in the Gas Chambers. Henryk Tauber. Deposition made on May 24, 1945. Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the gas chambers. https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/sonderkommando-uprising-auschwitz-birkenau

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Starting point is 00:01:09 at patreon.com over slash lines led by donkeys, why not give them a gift they'll love? This Christmas, give the gift of history. Hey everyone. Welcome to the Lions led by Donkeys podcast. I'm Joe. With me is Tom and Nate. Guys, listeners, I'm sure you could tell from the title of this episode. We do not have a cold open today. How are you guys doing? I'm okay. I'm in a country that has absolutely no questions to answer about its conduct in the Second World War? I think all three of us can say that.
Starting point is 00:02:06 That if the question comes up, they'll be like, sadly, the documentation is missing. No one will ever know. And that's the end. Like I said to the guys, before we started recording, I hit the gym way too hard on Sunday. And now my ankles feel like they've exploded. And I am walking around the house like Jar Jar Jajar Binks doing a Crip Walk. If it makes you feel any better, Tom, the weather was so nice. On Sunday, I went for a 15-kilometer bike ride.
Starting point is 00:02:28 and it was gorgeous. And unfortunately, I was wearing not particularly thick padding on the seat part of my exercise clothing. So I basically feel as though someone has done like a really precise Dalsim fucking yoga arm stretch just to my ass. And normally you have to go to Berlin for that. Yeah, no joke, right? The Berlin street fighter fissing you like he's throwing a Hadookin. Yeah, the hardest part of like doing the tour to France is doing all the poppers beforehand. I hate having to do the tour of the France on the fucking, uh, a, elliptical bike that Mac invents and it's always sunny. I mean, I've seen it before with footage of Tour de France stuff where like, you know, like the team medics and stuff will cycle up to someone while they're cycling and they can basically spray like anti-irritant spray on their ass from like saddle rash. It's like reverse poppers in a way.
Starting point is 00:03:14 It's like typically you don't apply to your ass. But, you know, is making your asshole tighter? Like gouged and pain. All right. So that's basically the big laugh we get to have at the beginning before we talk about the what the title has already revealed what we're going to talk about today. Yeah, yeah, I have to bring us all down for about the next two hours.
Starting point is 00:03:35 So we unfortunately talk about a lot of horrible shit on the show. It kind of comes with the territory when you cover history and if you cover it well, in my opinion. And to make matters worse, because of my background, we talk about genocides a lot. We're huge fans of the light topics, clearly. And while I'm pretty sure once upon a time, I probably said, something like, we're never going to do a series about the entire history of the Holocaust or the entirety of the native genocides of North America. I think we all know by now not to trust me when I say shit like that. So, you know, maybe one day. But that brings us to our topic today.
Starting point is 00:04:16 The Sondre Commando and the Auschwitz uprising of 1944. But first, the unfortunate context. We have to understand quite a few things at play here. Namely, how. did the Auschwitz-Birkenau complex work, what the Sondra commander was, and how one day they undertook an assured suicide mission to try to bring the killing to an end. Now, this is not an exhaustive history of the Nazi's genocidal campaign against Europe's Jewish, Roma, gay, Jehovah's Witness, and other populations during the events that have come to be known as the Holocaust. But I think you do need to understand how the Nazis' largest death camp actually function to understand the context of this episode.
Starting point is 00:05:00 Have you guys heard of the Auschwitz uprising? It's, they actually made a movie about it with David Arquette of all people. Yeah. I have heard it mentioned, obviously a little more familiar with the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and also the breakout attempt of Sobabel, but I have heard it discussed. I don't really know much about it. I think for my own background, I think, that, like, there's a degree to which I've learned a lot about the Holocaust, but haven't
Starting point is 00:05:31 really chosen to, I don't know, maybe it's a position of privilege here, haven't really chosen to, like, really dig deep into specific aspects, I suppose, other than, like, in books I've read that are, you know, about people involved, having read Thomas Cannelly's Schindler's Ark and things like that, I know a little bit about, for example, the Austrian part of the Nazi, you know, war effort, war machine, but I don't really know that much about it. So I know, I know it happened, but that's it. I weirdly and spiritually pre-figured this episode happening, despite the fact we didn't know we're, I didn't know we were going to do it because I went to see the Lee Miller
Starting point is 00:06:06 exhibition in tape Britain recently. And obviously, Lee Miller, towards the end of the war, went to Europe and, like, photographed, like, a lot of troop movements and stuff and just soul-crushing photographs from, like, inside the camps post-liberation, but also I've been reading, well, I've finished reading, Susan Sontag's photographing the pain of others and like the parts about World War II and the camps is just harrowing. So I am spiritually prepared for this. You accidentally got prepared, uh, which is the worst kind of prepared, arguably. I hate doing work when I don't know, I don't know that I need to do it. For starters, when I say Auschwitz-Birkenau,
Starting point is 00:06:47 it's not a single camp. It is an absolutely massive camp complex. It's kind of hard. It's kind of hard to understand the size of it without, A, seeing parts of it, or be reading in depth about it, but it included 40 different camps, concentration camps, forced labor camps, death camps, and other subcamps, because these are all different. Not every concentration camp was a death camp. However, obviously, the long-term goal was always the same, whether it be through forced work, disease, starvation, or gas chamber. There are three main camps. Auschwitz 1, Auschwitz 2 Berkenau, and Auschwitz 3 Monowitz. Auschwitz one, think of that as your administrative center.
Starting point is 00:07:30 That's where your command structure is. It's paperwork, effectively. Auschwitz 2 Burkinau is the main killing a disposal center. It's the beating heart of the Nazi industrial murder machine. And Auschwitz 3, Monowitz, is a forced labor camp, which was attached to a very large slave-driven factory for IG Farben. Now, they still largely exist today, and back then they were, one of the largest companies in Europe and were the main producers for war material for the Nazis.
Starting point is 00:07:59 This included everything from rubber to gunpowder to Zyclon B, the gas used in the death camp chambers. Everything was IG Farben. We did an episode a while ago about a lot of these companies. It's also not exhaustive. But, yeah, IG Farben plays a big role. Yeah, if you want to learn a little bit more about the failures of denatification in Germany and how these companies still exist, maybe listen to the first episode of the Red Army faction series.
Starting point is 00:08:26 Yeah. For a small flavor of some of the history on this and going forward, Simons, the appliance manufacturer once upon a time, well,
Starting point is 00:08:36 Simons themselves help the Nazis. And they once attempted to patent an oven called the Zyclan. Oh. I mean, obviously Siemens is still around. Yeah. They are still around.
Starting point is 00:08:49 They're a huge consumer and industrial producer now. or Bayer, as we say in America, the drug manufacturer was also involved. Obviously, we know we've talked a little bit about Volkswagen or Volkswagen in America. All these companies obviously, I mean, to be honest with you, there's a, I won't go in an aside here, but there's a significant number of other institutions, organizations, companies, et cetera, that would have done more if the countries that they were in hadn't been invaded and occupied because they were beforehand. That is one thing about World War II, about World War II in Europe, about Nazis that I think
Starting point is 00:09:19 gets swept under the rug, which is kind of politely ignored, which is that a significant. amount of some of the things that we will point out that the industrial and and sort of social economic infrastructure cooperating with the Nazis facilitating the Nazis in Germany and in certain other countries. A lot more countries were willing to do that with Hitler until Hitler invaded. And then obviously there wasn't a reason to anymore because the Nazis took over the country and so on and so forth. A lot of those countries did execute collaborators quite enthusiastically. But the thing is... Someone argued not enthusiastically enough. Right, right, right, right. I mean, quite frankly, yes. I agree with you. I'm not saying,
Starting point is 00:09:52 And I'm saying that, but the camp complex did not start off like this. When the Nazis rocked up into town, just outside of Krakow Poland in 1940, the original buildings were, you know, mostly for a Polish army barracks that was not exactly in the best shape. And a short time later, prisoners began being transported there from other concentration camps that were already established in Germany. The first people brought there were considered career criminals by the Nazis. And in the world of the concentration camp, they wore the green triangle badge.
Starting point is 00:10:24 Because remember, at the beginning, concentration camps were for criminals, as well as political dissidents, opponents, anyone the Nazis really didn't like. But at this period, they would serve a period of time before being released, sometimes. It mostly involved a whole lot of torture, signing a piece of paperwork saying you'd say out of political activities, and then you'd be released. but this was not in general a one-way trip yet. In some cases, if you were a racial minority, forced sterilization was also a condition of being released. Also, yeah. I mean, depending on what your minority was,
Starting point is 00:11:01 what category you fell into, your end point would vary. But in the beginning, this was not always a one-way trip. Of course, concentration camps are always horrible. So death was always frequent, whether it be through disease, you know, starvation on purpose.
Starting point is 00:11:19 purpose. It could have been through outright murder, but they were not death camps yet. In general, it was a very, very high percentage of people who were interned in concentration camps in Germany. I don't need to make this very clear. In Germany, who were German citizens, survived. And if you go outside of Germany, once the war begins and the sort of, you know, Rice Command Ost begins, everything, the sort of purification, in their words, the mass extermination and genocide in central and eastern Europe, you flip that fraction. And a very small percentage survive. Well, it's because in the beginning, the vast majority of the prisoners in the concentration camp were German criminals or political dissidents. Yeah. Once the, let's say,
Starting point is 00:11:57 phases change, your experience may vary. Of course, all of this would change. And the Nazis would have to think of something to do with this population of hardened violent criminals within the camp's walls. And to be clear, throughout all of the history of the Holocaust, these criminals kept being sent to camps. That never stopped. But they also needed to to try to save German money, manpower, and resources. So, the Nazis turned these people into something called Capos. This is a position that was first deployed in Daqau in the 1930s. Capos were prison functionaries, and they augmented the strength of the SS Totem Kempsts
Starting point is 00:12:34 for Bond, the camp guards, for lack of a better term. They tended to be, at the beginning, brutally violent criminals. And they were largely allowed to do whatever they wanted to prisoners in exchange for small privileges around the camp, like access to alcohol, cigarettes, women, better sanitation and quarters, things of that nature. They were put in charge of forced labor groups and given strict quotas to reach. If their groups failed to reach them, there's a very good chance that they were going to lose their status and be put back into the ranks of normal prisoners, which the Nazis knew meant they were probably going to be murdered by their fellow prisoners, or failing that later
Starting point is 00:13:16 in the war, but once the war started and later in the process, they could find themselves in a gas chamber. So, Capos were, let's say, encouraged to make sure their quotas were met. Now, one thing you need to make clear, too, is that the word capo or capo gets used kind of thrown as a slur, typically by Jewish people to other Jewish people who are seen as betraying whatever the cause identified that, you know, is being discussed. Typically, you see this a lot in discourse around Israel and around Zionism, but in general, it's not something that's been unfamiliar since the war. However, it's very important to bear this in mind that what Joe just said, which is that Capos were not explicitly Jewish so much as they were prisoners. And that,
Starting point is 00:14:00 when you think about who the Nazis imprisoned, who the Nazis targeted, who the Nazis sought to exterminate, it could come from any group of prisoners. Obviously, this is a different situation earlier in the war and earlier in the Holocaust versus later on. Yeah, that would change. Obviously, when you think about who, the fact that the largest single group targeted by the Nazis during the Holocaust were Jewish people, it does make sense why that term would be tied to the idea of a sort of like collaborator amongst Jewish prisoners, if that makes sense. But that's not explicitly what it is. I just say that because people have probably heard that word. And if you're not familiar, you may not realize that it actually was a thing that was tied to, it was tied to the prison
Starting point is 00:14:38 system within the Holocaust, within the Nazi camps, not explicitly just Jewish people. Yeah. And Interestingly, nobody knows where the name Capo actually comes from. It's just kind of adopted. Some people think it comes from the French for Caparrel or adopted from mafia ties, but nobody's actually entirely sure. A lot of people don't realize that Gestapo is Haimistz Politzai. It's one of the weird German acronyms where they do like the first syllables of everything. So, you know, sometimes it just is a thing and now no one knows who came from. That's just the word they use. Yeah, like Nate said, Capos were not always Jewish. They had no set ethnic background at all. camp's population, though the Nazis did make a lot of efforts to make sure whoever the
Starting point is 00:15:19 Capos were selected were not one of the majority of the camp, whether it be from their nation of origin or ethnicity. Because, of course, the goal is always to send any kind of resistance or murderous intent or rebellion inward. It was to divide and conquer. So if they could make the population of the camp incredibly pissed off at Capos, good. We're fine with that. Capos, like we said, started off as violent prisoners, career criminals, but as the camp populations begin to blow up, because concentration camp populations, obviously, as the Holocaust switches into Holocaust mode, the camp population balloons and the career criminals, there's just not enough of them to be Capos anymore. Over time, capos could be anyone, and like we said, are not always Jewish, but they were selected for a certain trait, which was the nine. Nazis believed that they would do their job, which authorized them to use violence to make sure their job got done. And sometimes it wasn't just an authorization. It was an expectation that you
Starting point is 00:16:26 would rule through brutality. It's like the figure of the cop, the er cop within each of us, some people have a more pronounced er cop. And the Nazis were like, I think I see something in you. However, this was not a universal thing. Not every capo was a bloodthirsty asshole. A lot of them used their privileges as a way to protect and save fellow prisoners, knowing if they were caught, they were going to die. There were other camp functionaries as well, like doctors and nurses, who were virtually always prisoners force into the rule. And that goes for Capos as well. None of these people are volunteers. Other prisoners with skills that the camps needed were conscripted into service as well, because the Nazi's goal was to make these quote-unquote
Starting point is 00:17:08 self-sustained prisons. The prisoners police themselves. The prisoners did their own repairs, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, because it makes it cheaper for the Nazis to administer. The first crematory at the camps was built at Camp 1 in 1940, though not originally for the disposal of gas chamber victims, as the chambers were not built yet. Bunstad meant to burn the corpses of any prisoner who died in the camp for the countless reason that concentration camp had a very high body count. Correct me if I'm wrong, but in 1940, we are well before the advent of gas chambers. and the, it's more mass shootings by the Einstein's group and mass suffocations or mass
Starting point is 00:17:48 executions with the the exhaust trucks. Yeah, at first comes the Holocaust by bullets in the east as it's known, which is the Einstein's Groupin, the SS, Sondra Commando, more on them later. Yep. All sorts of other stuff like that and mass graves, ditches, riverine. And then the first use of gas was during the T4 action euthanasia program where they just used carbon monoxide gas pumped directly from a car engine. We'll talk more about that in a bit, though. Yeah, and obviously by 1940, they had not yet invaded the Soviet Union. Yeah, yeah, all that's
Starting point is 00:18:21 coming. Camp Deputy Commander Carl Frisch told the first mass transport of prisoners into the camp, quote, there is no way out other than through the chimney. And this is before this is a death camp. That's just because, again, concentration camps are horrible places, even when death was not the ultimate outcome. There is a very good chance you were not going to leave, which again was by design. I cannot stress that enough. Just because that some prisoners got released did not mean the Nazis thought every prisoner was going to be released at this stage. As 1940 turned in 1941, the Holocaust by bullets begins. This is conducted by members of the German army, the Einstein's Gruppen, the order police, and other groups of collaborators. However, this process
Starting point is 00:19:08 had innate problems built right into it from the perspective of the perpetrators. For example, the men doing the killing were having mental breakdowns, turning into alcoholics, and a lot of cases committing suicide, all of which was very bad for Nazi morale. And to Heinrich Himmler, when the chief engineers of the Holocaust, the killing was also, for a lack of a better term, icky. He viewed one mass killing and it made him physically sick when blood splashed on his uniform. He thought the murders were too messy and too damaging. He wanted a more humane way to commit a genocide, and by humane, I mean for the killers. He wanted a mechanical way of death that allowed the person doing the killing to be separate from the act of killing itself. It's the same reason today that when we have
Starting point is 00:19:52 capital punishment, it is rigged up in a way where the person doing the killing is not exactly pulling the trigger, even though they know that the mechanism that they're using is going to end in human death, if that makes sense. It's like kind of distributing it, abstracting it, so that it doesn't, in the same way that, as I understand it, there is at least, there have at least in the past been traditions where firing squads, for example, not every fire has actual live rounds. That's still used today when the firing squad is used. And for our non-American listeners, that is still used in America in some states for capital
Starting point is 00:20:29 punishment, despite the fact anybody who's ever used a gun knows a blank feels differently. But it's all part of the kabuki theater to make killers feel better. Previous to this, the Nazis had to use rudimentary gas chambers, especially part of the T4 euthanasia program and after the initial invasion of Poland. At first, this is done through carbon monoxide poisoning. Quite literally, they just hooked a tube up to a car exhaust and into an enclosed space. Sometimes they use purpose-built killing vans, which is exactly what it sounds like. and they eventually evolved into using pure carbon monoxide gas from a can. However, this did not work as well as they wanted it to.
Starting point is 00:21:11 People survive this quite frequently. Yeah, they would be very, very ill, but they would survive. Yep. Infamously, the Nazis would settle on the cyanide pesticide and disinfectant, Zyclan B. It was cheap, readily available, and easy to use. According to virtually all known accounts, the first use of Zyclon B for murder in the context of the Holocaust, Holocaust was during an experiment done in the basement of Auschwitz, one, in September
Starting point is 00:21:37 1941, at the direction of Frisch, with the first victims being a group of Soviet POWs. There's not a lot of bright spots in this episode, if you even picked up on this, but I'll give someone a little glimmer. Frisch was arrested by the SS for corruption, demoted, and sent to the front line in the east where he died. He was like embezzling from the death camp, and he's actually not the only camp commandant or deputy commander that went down like that sometimes there's something you could nod and understand that yeah this guy kind of got what he deserved eventually yeah it's uh at least i got one of them talking about this and like talking about the evolution from the carbon monoxide trucks because i remember when i was in prague a couple years ago they have part of the
Starting point is 00:22:22 memorial museum they have there is they have like a display with photos of the trucks and it's like It's really grim, but I think the thing that I'd say probably most people struggle with when, like, thinking about this stuff is that like, yeah, it was like, the switch to Zeichlon B was like partially like, oh, a scalability question of like, how can we kill more people more efficiently? But like, when you think about like, oh, we need to do this more efficiently because lining up soldiers to shoot people just isn't efficient enough because it causes them emotional distress. And like just trying to grapple with that thing in your mind is like, so. so hard. It's like, oh, we have to like spare the feelings of the executioners and we need to do this more efficiently to kill more people. Yep. What's weird is that I don't even necessarily know if it was sparing the feelings so much as it was just the fact that there's something incontrovertible about killing other human beings that will damage someone's psyche. And so it's like, it's not, I guess to me it's like, I know what you're saying, Joe, but to me it's just sort of like, right, but they still pulled the trigger. They still did it. Yeah. It's like, yes, it does,
Starting point is 00:23:25 it does take a toll on people. And it did take a toll on that. Eventually, people like you said, became substance addicted, committed suicide. But like, I don't know a ton, and I'll admit that my knowledge of this is just based typically on summary and not in history books and not specifically about this topic, like specifically about the psychological impact of the perpetrators. But to me, it feels like what I know of it, and correct me if I'm wrong here, is that what you're describing is absolutely an observed phenomenon, but instances of insubordination against it are far less common. Well, is a very good book written about that entire subject by Christopher Browning called Ordinary Men that focuses on the order police. And you're correct in that
Starting point is 00:24:03 insubordination was virtually unheard of. To take part in the killings themselves was completely voluntary. They could ask to be switched to another unit without any kind of impact on their career. And overwhelmingly, people did not do this. There's a lot of reasons for this that Browning goes into very, very well. But it boils down to kind of a collective organizational for a lack of a better term, spree to core in a lot of ways because these guys and the order of police were generally not party members.
Starting point is 00:24:35 They were not anyone that you could consider fanatics, hence the title of the book and why it's so scary. But yeah, I mean, you were right. There was not really a lot of insubordination or even a lot of people that refused to do it. There's a lot of people that were
Starting point is 00:24:49 given orders to do something and they did it. And to be completely clear, to further their career. Because the order police was generally made up of people who were not going to get other good state jobs that paid them decently. Most of them were excused for military service. It was like we've talked about in every genocide we've ever covered on the show.
Starting point is 00:25:11 When the main driving forces for every individual act of genocide was furthering themselves and furthering their life conditions, it was not ideology, it wasn't even racism. It was nothing like that. It was quite literally securing their personal. bag. That goes from Rwanda, that goes for Cambodia, that goes for Armenia. And another added little sprinkle on top that is the repercussions if you don't. Obviously, in Cambodia and Rwanda, a lot of people were forced to do this under fear of death. Most, if not all. If you did not directly take part, you were dead. Holocaust was not quite that. But it was the implication of
Starting point is 00:25:52 what if I don't? What if I do lose my career? What if my family does suffer for this? What if? What if it would have? However, as we know from the documents, that was not the case. They did it because they were ordered to do it and because they directly benefited from the act of organized killing. When this goes all the way back to the beginning of the Holocaust, when Jewish businesses were taken away and belongings were taken away and people went along with it because where were those belongings and businesses going? Yeah, right into your hands, you know? So this is not always an ideology thing. And I know a lot of people are not going to want to hear this, but most people who commit genocide are not diehard ideologues. They're people who wanted to improve their lives through an incredibly fucked up process and they were given the means to. I guess, to close this out, the reason I heightened that is because you're correct in the sense that, like, they did this. One of the motivations was to spare the psychological damage that it was causing. But, and it's not a criticism of you. It's just more to when you say, oh, to spare their feelings, to me, it's like that kind of, to pings.
Starting point is 00:26:57 an alarm bell for me because it's like, well, right, but it wasn't as if they were like, oh, you know, I'm morally conflicted about what I'm doing. It's just that seeing and perpetrating mass murder over and over and over again, no matter who you are, breaks you psychologically, even not participating, just witnessing it, does it to you. That's just how the human brain functions. And so they realized that it was going to harm their resources more if they continued. And so they said, like you just described about the gas chamber and many other approaches with capital punishment. It's like, distribute responsibility.
Starting point is 00:27:29 Yeah, that's exactly what is bothered by it. And from here, the Nazis built the camp's first purpose built gas chamber, kind of. They converted a morgue in Auschwitz, one, that could fit around 800 people at a time, which was quickly put to use after the Nazis outlined their final solution and mass deportation programs in 1942. Now, unfortunately, we have to talk about this process and how it worked. Sorry. In general, but not always, the killing process worked like this.
Starting point is 00:27:57 A trainload of Jews would arrive at a camp. From their, SS doctors in charge of selection would select people they considered useful. This could be anything from people who had skills, like musicians and painters or technical workers. And in the context of the medical experiments going on Auschwitz, anyone who fit that parameter. However, this episode is not about Mengele's medical experiments, but that is also part of it. Or in the case of Auschwitz, with the detached force labor contingent, anyone who looked strong enough to work. These people were stripped, their belongings were taken by the SS, their heads were shaved, and they were tattooed with a prisoner number, and they were given a uniform. Then due to
Starting point is 00:28:35 the limitations of the first gas chamber, the Nazis would only select the people they thought were completely useless for whatever they needed. These were the very old, the very young, mothers with young children, the sick, and the injured. They'd be led into the room by the SS, told to undress, belongings were taken from them. They'd have their head shaved. They were informed that they'd be disinfected and given a shower. Some death camps even had fake showerheads installed in the gas chambers to better sell this lie. From there, they'd be locked inside of the gas chamber and Zyclan B pellets would be lit and dumped into the room overhead. This would off gas into cyanide. Normally, this took about 30 minutes and everybody inside would be dead. This group was
Starting point is 00:29:15 never processed into the campus prisoners. The selection process between temporary life, and immediate death took only a few seconds. Their selection was oftentimes uneven and they were given quotas to hit between the two groups, especially once more gas chambers were built. On average, 80% of everyone who arrived at Auschwitz was marked for immediate death, though the death rate for those 20% who made it past this point was still half, meaning at best, 10% give or take of the people who passed through Auschwitz would survive. In order to make this process quicker, and again, not take as many actual SS men, the Nazis created a new camp functionary, the Sonder Commando. But before we move on, we have to make a few things clear. There were Death Camps Sonder
Starting point is 00:30:03 Commandoz. Sonder Commandoz was just a Nazi term for a special task group. This is a specialized group to do any task. Sonder Commandoval was used quite a few times by the Nazis. Yeah, it just literally means special command in German. In the death camp, Jewish men were selected under the threat of death to do a job, they literally did not know what it was until they were confronted with it. There was also the SS Sondra Commando. As the name says, these are uniformed SS men. Absolutely no connection with the death camp Sonder Commandoor at all. I cannot stress enough that these two people have nothing to do with one another. The SS Sonder Commandoval, again, special task group, were set up to conduct mass murder or to facilitate mass deportation towards
Starting point is 00:30:50 the camps. So many of these were made up SS Sonder Commandos throughout the war. There's a very good chance that Nazi High Command did not even know how many there were. These were oftentimes temporary to be given a certain task, at which point they would go back to whatever their normal job was. Again, these are actual members of the SS, not prisoners in the camp, despite the name. So to summarize, what you're saying is that Auschwitz-Slander Commando would be prisoners forced into this role, whereas SS Sondra Commando would be SS members basically detailed to a different task force.
Starting point is 00:31:24 Yeah, the SS Sonder commander weren't even in the camps. They were, you know, for example, expediting the deportation of, say, Hungary's Jewish population. That would be their special task. And then once that was done, they'd go back to their units
Starting point is 00:31:37 or that Sondra Commandoe would be moved somewhere else. Sometimes the death camp Sondra Commandoah were known as work Jews for our Biden Uden, I believe, was the term. But like, yeah, these two things are not related whatsoever. It was just a term that the Nazis used for a lot of different shit. The Nazis loved their own weird special etymology and neologisms. Like, that's one thing to bear in mind. Oh, they loved it.
Starting point is 00:32:04 They had their, they might as well have vinted their own fucking language for various different working groups who fell under other working groups, who fell under this ministry that fell under that ministry. And also, I think just as a quick aside, the fact that commando means something different in the English language sometimes gives people an impression, but like the Nazi high command, but it was, if I'm not mistaken, I believe was Oba Commando. So like literally, the High Command, literally that's it. So it's just barely that that word doesn't necessarily mean the same. It rings differently in English, but like, yeah, the definition is very important here because otherwise you can find yourself thinking you're reeing or learning
Starting point is 00:32:37 about a different group. You could end up going down a road thinking that there is Jewish uniform members of the SS committing the Holocaust, which is not the case. Ooh boy. Yeah. Don't end up there. Now, the death camp Sonder Commando men were selected just like anyone else. They didn't have any special skills other than they simply look strong enough for manual labor. They were led away from everyone else and at least officially they were not to speak to any other prisoners ever again.
Starting point is 00:33:07 They were what the Nazis considered bearers of secrets. They knew the truth. They knew too much. They had to be sequestered, and when they were done with, eliminated. They did not know what their job was until an SS man forced them to open gas chamber doors. Because Sondra commander were broken down into different teams as well, men who worked in the gas chamber, men who worked the crematoria, men who scattered the ashes, men who handled the property. So that would be the first time a lot of these people figured out what the fuck their job was. put on a gas mask, grab a big metal hook, and start dragging the corpses of the gas chamber,
Starting point is 00:33:42 or getting stashed into a crematoria, and then bodies start showing up. Most of the time, the first corpses at the Sondra Commandoz disposed of were the last group of Sonder Commandoz. Jesus Christ, this is because there was an official policy that was not always followed by camp administrators that Sondra Commandoval had a work and therefore a lifespan of three months, at which point they would need to be wiped out and replaced. There's no way to quit or resign or refuse the job. The choice was clear. Do the job or die. And then also do the job and die. Also that. Yeah. The Nazis treated Sondra Commandoe pretty much the same way they treated Capos. They're given better, cleaner quarters, more food, and allowed to drink and smoke. However,
Starting point is 00:34:23 the Sonder Commando lived in virtually isolation from the rest of the camp world, in barracks that were directly attached to the crematoria. As the Holocaust expanded, the camps expanded, and the concentration guard cadre expanded. More and more collaborators were brought in to act as guards. The Nazis saw these foreign collaborators as inherently untrustworthy, and it wasn't actually uncommon for them to be pretty corrupt. So in the case of the Sondra Commandoz, only German SSmen were ever allowed to guard them. It was too risky if one of them broke out.
Starting point is 00:34:55 Now, the Sondra Commandoz's access to better, cleaner quarters, and better food met they survived in camp much larger than your average prisoner. An average Auschwitz prisoner had a lifespan of only a few. weeks beyond selection for countless reasons. If a Sondra commando man could do the job, he would survive almost without fail until the end of his term, only to be sent to a gas chamber, or simply shot. Others were killed due to mental breakdowns after seeing so much horror. They were simply unable to go on with the job. Many men selected for the job didn't even last the day. They saw what the job was and could not do it, and they were executed. However,
Starting point is 00:35:30 this three-month cycle was not always followed, especially in Auschwitz, weirdly enough. Many Sondra Commandoz survived for years, from some were selected in 42 and made it till 44. Some survived the war. We'll get to that point, though. A law that has to with bribes, favors, or simply having some kind of skill the Nazis thought they might need. Though sometimes Sondra Kmandoz survival was a simple matter of the Nazis not wanting to bother to go through the process of getting a new group of men. After all, if the pace of murder slowed down, the Nazis would get in trouble. That being said, the Sondra commended were the first ones to die the second anything went sideways.
Starting point is 00:36:10 Owing to that, they knew the Nazis could not allow them to survive and leave. And if that wasn't enough, the SS made sure to remind them constantly. If the camps ever threatened, you're dead. If the camps ever moved, you're dead. If in, you know, the Soviet army gets close, you're the first one's dead. It was their policy to make sure they didn't survive. That meant even though they survived longer than anyone else, they had absolutely the lowest overall survival rate of anyone. So over the history of Auschwitz, about 2,000 men rotated through to act as Sondra commandos.
Starting point is 00:36:45 Fewer than 20 are known to have survived. Jesus Christ. We know virtually nothing about these men thinks this. Normal camp prisoners knew nothing about them. After all, if you saw them, well, you were not long for this world. But much of what we know about the Sonder Commandoz, comes from the men themselves. Despite the fact that almost all of them were killed, they had a tendency to write memoirs, diaries, notes.
Starting point is 00:37:10 They even kept detailed notes of how many people were killed and when, when deportation trains came in and how many people were on them, and buried it on the campgrounds where they were recovered after liberation. We have most of this in-detail information to think because they scrolled it out on scraps of paper, and buried it literally right next to the crematoria. At first, the crematoria were not used to dispose the thousands of victims that were coming out of the gas chambers.
Starting point is 00:37:37 Rather, Sondra Commandoah were tasked with dragging the bodies out of the gas chamber, loading them onto wagons, wheeling them out to the edge of camp, and burying them in mass graves. For many Sondra Commandoah, this would be the last time they ever saw their family because they were burying them. Though the job of the Sondra Commandoah was about to get much, much worse. As the genocidal campaign against the Nazis ramped up, and more territory was taken, more deportations were ordered, and more people end up being sent to Auschwitz. In order to cope with this new influx of people, purpose-built gas chambers that could fit up to 2,000 people at a time were built in Birkenau. And with them, four crematoria complexes, with one already existing, making for a total of five, each with five furnaces and three kilns.
Starting point is 00:38:23 and when operating at full capacity, which they often were, they could burn 5,000 bodies per day, and they mostly did. The gas chambers and crematory were connected via hoists and tracks, one leading to the other. And remember, the Sondra Commandozs live in barracks is connected to them, meaning they had created an assembly line of genocide. Manning this from beginning to end would be the Sondor Commando. Before the numbers of people, the Nazis were killed, was manageable for their totem cops for bond to handle. Now with thousands being forced into the gas chamber at a time per day, they needed to deploy new methods. The Sondra Commando would now lead the condemned to death into the gas chambers, instructing them what to do the whole way.
Starting point is 00:39:04 Oftentimes they'd say not to worry about the cold because there's hot tea waiting for them on the other side. If they went faster, tea would still be hot when they got to it. The Nazis themselves would do the killing with the gas, and then the Sondra Commandoe would wait about a half hour, don gas mass, and begin to pull the bodies out. pausing at this moment to search each body for any last piece of jewelry someone might be hiding on themselves, or gold teeth in their mouths, which they were forced to pry out. I should point out that failing to do any of this would result in their immediate death,
Starting point is 00:39:32 though some Sondra commandoman stole these valuables and kept them to themselves, later to be used to bribe the guards. The corpses that were then loaded into the crematoria, and when that process was done, another team of Sondra commander would load the ashes up and scatter them in the nearby woodline and river. You might be wondering, How in the fuck could a person do this job? How could they keep calm and lie to people's faces as they're about to be ushered to a fate that only you truly knew? Well, we actually know.
Starting point is 00:40:01 As one Sondra Commando Man put it, he didn't see the point of telling them. He thought it would be cruel because they were all going to die anyway. And to be clear here, the men knew that they were all going in that chamber in the end as well. They knew this fate waited for all of them. And for many of them, at least with the ones of testimonies that we know about, forcing the poor people to panic by telling them would only add to their misery.
Starting point is 00:40:24 One Sandra Commando survivor, Leon Cohen, put it thusly, Are you out of your mind to tell people such a thing? How could I tell people they're about to be murdered? It was impossible to tell this terrible truth to anybody. You have to realize that the system was too sophisticated for us to interfere with in any way. The people were doomed to die and I couldn't do a thing about it, so why tell them? The Nazis' tendency to not follow their own rules regarding the three-month Sandra Commodore lifespan meant that over time, some of the men were able to build up a decent
Starting point is 00:40:54 stockpile of stolen goods to bribe and barter with their guards. And this is how they would eventually make contact with other prisoners. Namely, as 1944 rolled around, the resistance within the camp. We talked about this before. The Polish resistance had been active members of Auschwitz since the very beginning. In fact, there were some of the first people sent there. But alongside the Polish resistance, there's also the Comf Group Auschwitz, made up of anyone who wasn't Polish to staff a different parallel resistance movement.
Starting point is 00:41:24 If you remember back to our Vittold Pellecki series, when the main goals of the resistance was to get word out of what was happening to the outside world. The resistance was less than an underground guerrilla movement, like people like to envision a resistance, and more of like a rumor and news network. Resistance from the outside of the camp would smuggle in current events, and then they would pass them throughout the camp and then they would pass sort of what was happening in the camp out of the resistance outside the wire and they would pass it to the outside world.
Starting point is 00:41:54 Polish resistance members would compile news of the killings and deportations into the camp and smuggle them out for the wider world. In some case, literally breaking out of and back into Auschwitz on multiple occasions to do this. Unfortunately, they're largely ignored, but these men are fucking heroes nonetheless. It made sense that eventually elements of the Polish resistance and the conf group came together. and eventually making contact through the one group of camp functionary that both they and the Sondra Commandoah Commando would have to talk to from time to time, camp medical staff. The first act of resistance the Sondra Commandoah undertook was saving their extra food,
Starting point is 00:42:30 their allotted soap and other small luxuries, wrapping them in bits of shirt, and throwing them over the fence into the women's camp, which is the closest camp to them. This might not sound like much, but the Sondar commando knew if they got caught, they'd be shot. When the main leaders of the resistance within the Sonder Commandovaldo was a Polish Jew, son of a rabbi, and a counterclerc, Zulman Gradoski. He had been sent to Auschwitz in 1942, where virtually his entire family was killed and he was assigned to the Sondra Commando. He knows they died because he burned their bodies.
Starting point is 00:43:00 At first, the Polish resistance did not trust the Sonder Commando. They didn't understand what they were necessarily. They didn't realize what they were going through, what the reality was. they kind of equated them to being Capos at first. And to be fair, several members of the Capo were also in the resistance. So it was kind of like a feeling out moment. On all this makes sense, because think of how unknown the Sondra commander would be to everyone else in camp.
Starting point is 00:43:26 Nobody ever saw them. Nobody ever spoke to them. They were just weird ghosts that flitted through the buildings whenever the chimneys started smoking. But as they passed letters back and forth, it quickly became clear that not only were these men as doomed and hopeless as anyone else in the camp, They were just as desperate to get evidence of the horrors into the hands of people outside. Now, as it is common knowledge now, one of the main sources of information about the Holocaust
Starting point is 00:43:50 are the Nazis themselves, right? They took detailed notes, and in the case of the Holocaust by bullets, they took photographic proof of their crimes. This was for their files and in some cases, men gloating about what they did, but it was evidence nonetheless, right? It's very easy to see that. This is not the case when it came to the death camps. The Nazis still took photos of the camps. There's plenty to see to include really weird ones about like their families chilling out in their gardens and things like that. But they did not take photos of the murder and disposal process. It was strictly banned. And that makes sense. Remember what the Nazi's message at the time was. They weren't killing anyone. People were being resettled elsewhere.
Starting point is 00:44:30 They couldn't publish this. The resistance was desperate to get the truth out and not just testimonials. of those, but real functional details. You know, this saying goes, the devil's in the details, it's hard to disprove what's going on if you have pictures and diagrams and numbers. And it goes without saying that a normal camp inmate would not be able to get anywhere near this stuff. So the resistance began compiling information from the Sonder Commando. Mainly from a man named Philip Mueller. Mueller and other Sonder Commandoz, began to make detailed sketches of the gas chambers and crematoria. They even managed to pass on a label from a can of Zyclon B. From there, they were smuggled back into the hands of the resistance,
Starting point is 00:45:12 who in turn hand them off to two resistance members, Alfred Vetzler and Rudolph Verba, who were then charged with breaking out of Auschwitz and getting the information to the hands of the resistance at large. And this worked. It's known as the Verbo-Wetzler report. It's insanely detailed. And what's interesting is people were questioning it at first,
Starting point is 00:45:31 thinking of some kind of misinformation or a lie. and it's sometimes noted by modern-day Holocaust deniers that the sketches are inaccurate but it's pretty easy for the sketches to be inaccurate when it came to how things function because then the people making them were engineers but they make the mistakes that you would like if you told me to accurately sketch the inside of a building
Starting point is 00:45:54 I don't know how to do an engineering sketch but I can write what it looks like this is the most detailed report about what was happening in Auschwitz to get into the wider world and it needed to be. Rumors and stories have been circulating
Starting point is 00:46:07 for quite some time. The more detailed a piece of information, the harder is to ignore or explain away. And this episode isn't really the place to go into, but there's a lot of arguments
Starting point is 00:46:16 about the report in general, with Verba himself blaming the Jewish World Council for not spreading his report into Hungary fast enough because the mass deportation in Hungary
Starting point is 00:46:27 had not quite started yet, and he believed if more people knew about it, they would resist deportation. Because remember, most people didn't realize what was happening. And he thought if they dispense with it quicker, people would be more informed and resist it more. He accuses them of costing delays, which costs lives. This isn't really the place for that.
Starting point is 00:46:46 There's a lot of details into that. But this is not the only bit of resistance happening within the Sondra Commando. Like I said, they and the resistance wanted photographic evidence. But how the fuck do you get a camera into Auschwitz? Think of how big a camera is in the 40s. I was about to jump in and talk about cameras in the 1940s generally were either
Starting point is 00:47:08 kind of Roli Flex style accordion cameras or like big medium format box cameras. There were a handful of like parallax based range finder cameras but like you're getting either something that folds up kind of like a notebook or you're getting
Starting point is 00:47:24 like a little tiny rangefinder camera that is hard enough to conceal. Yeah. Well there's also the question of some of the keepsake photographs that have appeared in historical record as things traded by Nazi soldiers are collected by Nazi soldiers. There's one in particular. There's a photo that's kind of informally titled The Last Jew in Vinica. And the thing about that is that that photo was reproduced because it was a Nazi soldiers treated this as kind of a keepsake. It was popular among them. But it wasn't
Starting point is 00:47:54 a soldier's personal photograph. It was taken by a photographer, most likely with a camera on a tripod because it was meant to be that kind of an exhibition of what they were doing for themselves. And that was during the Holocaust by bullets. Correct. Which in a lot of times they use those photographs as effectively progress reports for a lack of a better term. Yeah. But I bring it up because the notion of finding, you know, people, there have instances of, for example, stories of people finding photos like this on the bodies of German soldiers, but these were not photos that they had personally taken. They were, it is just as macabre in my mind. These are photos that because of what they depicted were popular as kind of like souvenirs and keepsakes
Starting point is 00:48:32 and thus multiple copies were made and they were sold or traded, which is not that different than how Americans treated photos of lynchings, except that they were actually sold and commercially produced as postcards because America. And so, and just think of like how crazy it is that they were willing to reproduce some of these photos, but how seriously they took no photos of the gas chamber, no photos of the crematory. Yeah. That's how different these two situations are. And that brings us back to the camera. So, a German Lika camera is smuggled into Auschwitz, which would be a rangefinder, correct, Tom? Yeah, it'd be a rangefinder. Also, I don't know if you're going to mention it, Joe, and maybe we'll cover it in a future episode. Ernst Lights
Starting point is 00:49:13 the second was involved in like a freedom train kind of operation to save both Jewish workers for the Lika company and other Jewish people from the Holocaust. A lot of people make a whole thing about Lika supplying cameras to the Nazis. It was like they kind of had to was the thing. Yeah. I mean, same thing could be said for Oscar Schindler. He was still an active
Starting point is 00:49:38 war profiteer who was saving lives. That's really the best you could hope for from those guys. So through a chain of custody, going from the Polish resistance outside the camp to the inside, a German-like-a camera
Starting point is 00:49:54 was smuggled into Auschwitz-Birkenau, namely through a resistance member named Stanislaw Kladenski. And then they were also able to get film as well. This was passed on to the Sondra Commandoz to try to get pictures of the actual killing process of Auschwitz. Operating as a team from within one of the gas chambers, a group of Sondor Commando, Alex Arrera, Alter Faisenberg, and the Drogon brothers Shlomo and Josic were able to get the only known pictures to exist of the Auschwitz gas chambers and crematoria in action. The four pictures, now known as the Sonder Command of Photographs, taken over the course
Starting point is 00:50:37 about 30 minutes to pick the naked woman being led to the chambers and the burning of their bodies afterwards. The pictures are all very blurting out of focus, and this is because you can actually see SS guards in some of them. The man taking the photos from all accounts is a guy named Alex Herrera, who was a Greek-Jewish man slash resistance fighter slash communist. He couldn't actually aim the camera because
Starting point is 00:51:01 that would be too obvious. You can see in some of the photos there is a black border around it because he is literally hiding inside of an unused gas chamber at the time and taking a picture out of one of the venting windows and doing it by just like holding the camera
Starting point is 00:51:17 to his chest real fast. And that's why one of the pictures is straight up like up in the air taking a picture of a tree. He couldn't aim at all. To explain, for anyone curious how cameras at this time worked, the cameras that you see now are SLR cameras or digital SLR cameras, a single lens
Starting point is 00:51:33 reflex which essentially acts like a periscope where you're viewing through the viewfinder, it goes down onto another mirror that's looking directly through the lens, that flips up, takes a photo. At this time, what was essentially you had parallax view where you had to like,
Starting point is 00:51:49 I have some of those cameras, like they're really hard to get in focus, so if you're a Sonder Commando, hiding in an unused gas chamber, trying to capture a photo. It is impossible. It's amazing they actually managed to get four photos that showed anything at all. The film was then taken out of the camera, stuffed into an empty tube of toothpaste and smuggled out of the camp.
Starting point is 00:52:11 They then buried the camera, never to be used again. That brings us to the actual uprising, though. Because amongst the Sondre Commando of Auschwitz and the resistance in the camp at large, it was known that things were changing within the camp. As early as March 1944, the number of deportations going towards Auschwitz was beginning to decrease. Without so many people to murder and dispose of immediately, the Nazis didn't actually need so many Sondra Commando anymore. So, for the first time, in a very long time, at least in the timeline of Auschwitz, because remember all this is only happening in a few years, 200 men from the Auschwitz Sondra
Starting point is 00:52:44 Commandoah were sent to Majdinek and executed. The Sondra Commando and the Polish Resistance came to the conclusion that was only a matter of time before the rest the Sondre Commandoval went with them and a new batch was brought in, meaning all the resistance contacts would be gone, or maybe this was a hint that all of Auschwitz was about to be liquidated. So a plan began to be formed. The Sondra commander were seen as a core in any general revolt by the resistance, both the Polish and the Kompf group. In the context of the prisoners in the death camp, they were healthier, better fed, and stronger. Not to mention, as the plan began to develop, they were the only ones who had a hope of striking out at the
Starting point is 00:53:21 tools of murder, the gas chamber and the crematoria. They knew that any breakout that they attempted or any uprising they tried to launch was not going to be 100% successful. They hope that some people might be able to get out, but at minimum, they hope to disable the camp's purpose. So as the other resistance members planned their part of the uprising. The Sondra Commando plan theirs, with the aim of launching them to overwhelm the camp guards, steal guns, use those guns to break into the armory where they could take even more guns and just kind of distributed them amongst prisoners as they went. Kill as many SS as possible, blow up the crematoria, and if they were still alive, try to get out. But it should be clear here, they pretty much all expected to die.
Starting point is 00:54:03 They knew in the event of any camp uprising, the SS would kill them first. According to the original plans, all of this was meant to be launched in July of 1944 to aid the ongoing Soviet operation bagration. We aren't entirely sure how the Sondra Command of Resistance got in contact with the women prisoners who worked in the munitions factory, but we do know that they did. The women working with gunpowder would sneak away tiny amounts, and I literally mean tiny, only like a teaspoon per day, hidden within bits of cloth and then concealed on their bodies. From there, they would smuggle it to another woman, the ringleader of the women's camp resistance, Rosa Rabata, who worked in the effect and logger, which is the office were all Jewish property.
Starting point is 00:54:45 was sorted that was stolen from the dead. Now, normally people like the Sondra Commando and Rosa would never be allowed to interact. The Sondra Commandoandoe commando did handle property taken from the victims of the gas chamber, but they were sealed into a container and given to
Starting point is 00:55:00 an SS man who would carry it to the infectant logger. However, despite the camp administration's best efforts, corruption within the SS guards was rampant. According to the Auschwitz-Burkenau Museum, this corruption was virtually foundational to the relationship between the two men. For example, a Sonder commando man would tell an SS guard,
Starting point is 00:55:20 ah, your uniform looks like it needs to be pressed. Like, your, your, your shit's all fucked up. It was code. He had jewelry or other stolen goods that he had taken from the dead. The SS man would then agree that, you know what, my uniform does need some attention. Meaning, he was down for the deal. He would then hand his jacket to the Sonder Commandoando man who would take it away, out of eyesight, fill its pockets with whatever he had, and then give it back to the SS man, not cleaned or pressed. The man would then inspect his uniform, meaning the stolen goods, and compliment the Sondra Commandoando on his good cleaning job. That meant, yeah, the deal is done. Go do whatever you need. So the Sonder Commando that would then go about this process in order to get into the infectant
Starting point is 00:56:03 logger. From there, they'd get to meet with Rosa. Obviously, the other SS men probably thought the Sonder commander were meeting a girlfriend or their wife or something like that. like that, not smuggling black powder into the Sondra Commando Barracks. And this took a very long time. A teaspoon of black powder at best per day. But over the months, black powder piled up and the Sondra Commander began fashioning it into homemade bombs. This was an incredibly slow process and as they continued to stockpile black powder, the Sonder Commandoval also realized this is gonna be a fight. If we want guns, we're gonna have
Starting point is 00:56:40 to kill these guys. So they began making prison shivs. But then as July got closer, the Polish resistance wanted to postpone the uprising. The reason for this was because Operation Bagration had kind of got bogged down. So now, to them, the uprising would just be a waste without Soviet forces nearby to support them or otherwise distract the Nazi response to a camp revolt. They thought it'd be a suicide mission. Eventually by August, the Polish resistance and by extension the Comf Group came to the conclusion that any uprising was becoming more and more pointless. The Soviets were marching again, and they were getting closer and closer to Auschwitz. So they figured, why bother?
Starting point is 00:57:21 There was no way that they would be successful that would cause a break out of everyone. It would get a lot of them killed. And not to mention those who didn't take part in the uprising would be facing the consequences in the form of horrible reprisals, something that everybody in the camp was familiar with thanks their earlier escapes. So for them, it was safer to just sit back and wait to be liberated by the Soviets. So obviously, since we know how the liberation works out, this is a very bad idea, but to them, it seems like it makes sense. For the Sonder commando, this was simply not an option. They knew even liberation for everyone else meant death for them. There's no way the
Starting point is 00:58:00 Nazis were going to let them live. And even if the Nazis abandoned the camp and fled a Soviet advance, their standing orders to make sure that not a single one of them was alive before the SS banning the camp. Then things began to get worse. First in August, Alex Herrera, the cameraman, was out with a group of Sondra Commando disposing of ashes in a nearby river. And then he attempted to escape. This is not part of any other broadly reaching plan. He simply jumped into the river and tried to go for it. Now, this is sometimes because, you know, the contacts within the resistance kind of led him to believe the Soviets were very close by and they really actually weren't. But either way, we don't know for sure. He could have just saw an opening and gone
Starting point is 00:58:41 for it. He was only out for two days. He was captured, tortured, and executed. A short time later, the copo for the Sonder Commando, a man named Shimon Kaminsky, was grabbed by the SS, tortured, and executed. Kaminsky was not a career criminal, was not a copo volunteer, if any of those ever existed. Like to Sonder Commando, he was forced to do his job under threat of immediate death, and he was a co-conspirator in the uprising. So two co-conspirators tortured and executed, the other resistance members, Sondor Camano, and otherwise, thought that fuck, the SS might be on to us. These guys probably talked, which is not a slight against them. The amount of shit that was done to these guys, anybody's going to talk. This is only supported by another mass killing of Sonder
Starting point is 00:59:25 Commando Men in September, this time another 230. And interestingly enough, the SS took great efforts to conceal these murders from the rest of the Sondra Commando. Something they never bothered to do before. They were led away and gassed by the SS personally. Their bodies were taken away and burned in the crematoria by the SS men themselves, rather than using the Sondra Commandoamondon men, as they had done virtually every other time, a so-called quote, generation of Sondra Commando was wiped out.
Starting point is 00:59:56 But, you know, the SSmen, they weren't exactly super familiar with what to do. So they just left the ashes of the Sondra Commandoando inside the crematoria and the rest of the Sondre Commandoval, when they went to work, realized what happened. They put two and two together, understanding that we're going to be next. Like something is changing. We're all going to be killed. Knowing that their time is coming to an end,
Starting point is 01:00:18 the Sonder Commando men decided amongst themselves to launch the uprising without the help of the rest of the resistance. They didn't have a set date, at least not from what we can tell. Instead, something seemed to force their hand. On October 6th, 1944, a Sondra commando man described only as a Soviet POW-W, got into a fist fight with an SS guard while working crematorium number three. This is something most people probably assume actually happened quite frequently. I mean, after all, look what they're being forced to do.
Starting point is 01:00:47 But despite being doomed men from the start working what might be the worst job in human history, This kind of confrontation was unheard of. SSmen did not carry weapons around the Sondra Commando. They didn't see the point. The Sondra Commandoval did not fight them. When Henrik Talber, one of the other survivors, was asked, why didn't they kill the guards? He said they didn't see the point.
Starting point is 01:01:08 Sure, they could have overpowered a guard and killed them really whenever they wanted to. But it wouldn't do anything to stop the camp or slow down the killing. It'd be pointless. It would just get a whole bunch of people killed in reprisals. Yeah, I mean, like, in the grander scheme, things. It's like, yeah, you can fight back for 15 minutes, but you have a certain death, whether it's after that 15 minutes
Starting point is 01:01:28 or in a week or two weeks or a month afterwards. Yeah, if you're a sounder commando and you're taken amongst yourself to, you know, stab the shit out of an SS guard, good for you. I'm not saying that's a bad thing, but you certainly condemned to everyone else around you to die. A lot of guys who are not in on the stabbing,
Starting point is 01:01:44 which is part of the security. You know, it's part of the conditioning that goes with living in these concentration camps. But something caused an argument between the Sondra Commando and the SS, ending with the SS man to get decked. The SS man retreated, went and grabbed another SS man who had a gun on them, they returned and shot the guy dead. Then the SS men announced to the other guys that all the Soviet POWs getting transferred
Starting point is 01:02:08 tomorrow. And they knew what that meant for them. The others feared that this was just cover, maybe, to move all of them, to get rid of all of the Sondra Commando all at once. But you can see how this is all kind of thrown together, an argument between the Sondra Commando erupts. They need to launch their attack as soon as possible, but they settled for the next day, October 7th. But they needed to create an opportunity for people to escape. The best time for that would be at night. That way, there'd be the cover of darkness when they, you know, run through
Starting point is 01:02:37 the woods. They have better chance of evading SS patrols. But others argued if they did that, well, that would be after the transport of the Soviet POW Sonder Commando. So it was decided that they would have to attack before they left. At around 1 p.m., the SS ordered the Sonder Commando crews of crematoria four and five to gather in the workplaces. Then they began to hold a roll call, anyone who was called to be getting sent to their deaths. Suddenly, in the middle of all of it, the Sondra commando stopped following orders. As the SS stood there yelling at them, confused as to why the men weren't listening to them for the first time seemingly, and ever, the Sondra commander launched themselves to the camp guards, armed with homemade knives,
Starting point is 01:03:14 hammers, wrenches, and fire stokers, while others ran. Now unfortunately for the Sonder Commando, since a little blow up the day before, the SS were now carrying pistols and submachine guns. As the hammer versus submachine gun fight broke out, the men who ran had other jobs to do. Some ran into the barracks, setting their straw mattresses on fire, hoping that the black smoke would be something of a signal for everyone else, because different groups of Sonder Commando can't talk to one another. Several men were shot while trying to run from the burning building, while others in crematory of four stayed inside the burning building as it came down on their heads. But the fire quickly spread to crematoria five at some point and the flames
Starting point is 01:03:53 reached the stores of gunpowder and detonated. Or maybe the men inside had enough time to plant their bombs into the furnaces. We honestly have no idea. Either way, the building came down on their heads on the Sonder Commando inside, who purposely stayed behind, armed with knives and hammers to make sure the SS could not try to put the fire out. The SS called in the Camp Fire Brigade to put out the fire that was consuming the crematoria. The fire brigade was also, So, surprise, surprise, made up of prisoners. And as the fire brigade unrolled their hoses and, you know, they reached out to the barracks that are hooking it up to the water pump, they just stopped working.
Starting point is 01:04:28 They refused to continue, standing there and watching the barracks burn. The fire brigade leader then got in a screaming match with the SS, telling them that they were not going to work. It was only when he was held at gunpoint that he finally did. Though after the fire was put out, the fire brigade was forced to strip naked, lay down on the ground next to the crematoria, and they were extra. executed at random via gunshot to the back of the head. Now, if you couldn't tell how all of this is unfolding in like a piecemeal fashion,
Starting point is 01:04:55 the men of Crematoria 4 and 5 had no communication with the Sondra Commando and the other crematoria. It was only when they heard the gunshots, the screaming, and the smoke, they knew something was kicking off. Then they saw SS reinforcements coming to the area and assume they were coming to kill them. We don't know if that was true, but it probably was. Or they could have been there to contain in them to make sure it didn't spread into that barracks. acting immediately, the Sonder Commando
Starting point is 01:05:19 turned and stabbed their coppo, a guy simply known as Tofer, and shoved him still alive into the crematory of furnace. If you couldn't guess, Tofer was a bit of an asshole. Fucking hell. Yeah. You have to really hate a guy
Starting point is 01:05:35 to put him out like that. So, whatever the reason is, I'm trusting the Sondre Commando on this one. Yeah, to be honest, it's like, look, you know, shove him in the furnace, let God deal with him. Yep. Then the men in crematorias two and three began trying to lure SS men into the building, like calling for help. This might seem weird, but remember, they only have some knives and shit.
Starting point is 01:05:59 They really want their hands on those guns. So they're hoping to lure them into the building to stab the shit out of them and steal their rifles, pistols, and sub-machine guns. But the SS were already sporting a couple hammer-related injuries and were too afraid to fall for the fake calls coming from the crematoriums. The uprising between the two groups wasn't coordinated at all, and the crematoria were separate. And there's no way for them to talk to one another with the ASS around. According to one man, they did try to send like a runner back and forth, but he was shot. According to other accounts, it didn't happen. It's kind of fractured in a lot of ways.
Starting point is 01:06:33 Also, remember, virtually none of these people survive. So it's really hard to piece the story together. How far apart were the crematoria? Not very. Very, very close, actually. But, you know, when you have 100 dudes of submachine guns, that distance might as will be a marathon. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So the Sonder Commando Crematoria 2 and 3 said, well, regardless of whatever is happening and what happens next, they're going to kill us all.
Starting point is 01:06:57 It's time to go. A few men, maybe three, according to some tellings of the story, volunteered to stay behind, plant their homemade explosives, and sit in the crematory guarding them until they went off, while several hundred more would break out, run south, and try to get out of the camp. Their testimony would be evidence that they could bring with them to the outside world. On the way, they would cut as many power lines as they could due to the fact that Auschwitz had electric fences. And they would cut a hole in the adjoining women's camp to try to give them a path to escape. They chose the south of Birkenau because it was the only realistic pathway. There wasn't some massive wrought iron fence like you're probably imagining. Remember, these guys, they had to spread ashes.
Starting point is 01:07:38 They had to dig bodies up. They did put bodies in the ground first and dig them. back up, put them in the agreementoria. They needed access to the outside world, for the lack of a better term. They were under heavy guard, of course, but they had a way out. Instead of this massive big fence, like, it would make sense that it would exist. It was only a couple scattered guard towers made out of wood and smaller fences and things like that. Not to mention the men in those guard towers had orders to shoot anyone who passed by. But not all of the towers were manned all the time, something that the Sondra Commando knew because they were out there pretty
Starting point is 01:08:12 frequently. So as the hundreds of men ran towards the towers, the furnace is exploding behind them, fires kicking off. You hear gunshots and screams and whatever. The lone SS man on duty panicked, dropped his rifle, and ran. I think also as well as worth
Starting point is 01:08:28 mentioning, for those who don't know, like Auschwitz was big. Like, it was a big fucking area. And like... Yeah, it was truly fucking massive. Again, 40 camps. And it's not as simple as like, cutting a hole in a fence, running, climbing through it,
Starting point is 01:08:45 and like running away in the space of five minutes. It's like you have a decent amount of ground to cover to actually get out. There's also the fact that there were lots of interlocking fences. Things were sectioned off from each other. There were gates. Their main camp fence was not like the area. That was not the border, the barrier between most prisoners because they actually were in like the,
Starting point is 01:09:06 there was a penal barracks. There were a bunch of different places where people would be under even further guards. It was sort of like interlocking. layers of stuff to get in and that's not to mention nothing but like dead ground outside of it this entire air is patrolled by s s they know where the nearest villages are if someone gets out they have an idea of where you're going you know from here the sander commando hit in the woods eventually coming across a perimeter patrol of three ssmen jump them beat them to death and stab the shit out of them before running into a nearby village unfortunately like i just
Starting point is 01:09:37 explained in the case of any prison break concentration camp or otherwise the first town is going to be the first place that the responding forces check. So the SS had laid a trap for them. SS soldiers armed with rifles and machine guns waited. We aren't entirely sure of how this chapter of the story plays out precisely, but it's thought that most of the Sonder Commandoz are killed here via gunshot, whether caught in the ambush or executed shortly afterward. While a group managed to get away from this and hide in a grain silo,
Starting point is 01:10:09 which the SS then set on fire, nobody survived. Meanwhile in the camp, a mass execution of the Sonder Commando was underway. They forced to strip naked, they lie face down on the ground, and were executed via a gunshot to the back of the head. By the time they were done, out of the 650 Sonder Commando, who manned the killing machines of Auschwitz, only 105 remained. But their suicidal uprising was shockingly effective. Only a single crematoria, 5, was still functional.
Starting point is 01:10:38 Crematoria 4 was so damaged, it was never put back into service. And the SS launched an investigation of just how this could have happened. They happened to find several of the homemade bombs on the escapees and still others that went unused inside the crematoria. This, of course, led them back to the munitions factory. Several Sondra Commando were kept alive, just long enough to be tortured and get the names of the women who helped them. Rosa Rabata and the others were quickly captured and tortured in an effort to get more names of those involved in the plot. Despite being literally torn apart for weeks, they only names. Sondra commando men, they knew were already dead, which is why any of these men survived at all.
Starting point is 01:11:17 Eventually, they are brought in front of the camp population to be executed via hanging. Rabata, standing in the gallo, screamed, sisters, revenge, before she was killed. The uprising of the Sondra commandos of Auschwitz is not the only one of its kind. When happened at Treblinka, it was arguably more successful as a hundred people were able to get away and stay away. But the story of the Auschwitz uprising is different. Their main goal was to destroy the thing the Nazis forced them to do. They undertook what they knew to be a suicide mission to try to destroy the methods of mass murder. Sondra Commandoz, for a very long time, we're considered collaborators, and they still are to a certain number of people who either
Starting point is 01:11:55 do not understand their history or are simply mistaken. Maybe they got them confused at the SS Sondra Commandoor or something. I don't know. I'm not sure how someone would do that. I think the collaborationist view is an incredibly simplistic one, made by people who could never understand what people are forced to do in some of the darkest portions of history. A lot of this got started because of the testimony of one Dr. Miclos Milesi, who wrote one of the earliest books to touch on them, Auschwitz, a doctor's eyewitness account. In this book, he writes that the Sonder Commando were eating banquets lit with chandeliers and were, quote, fat while everyone else starved.
Starting point is 01:12:30 The thing is, we have pictures of Sondre Commando, and you would never consider any of them people overweight. At best, they looked slightly better than the rest of the camp population, which is still quite bad. Also, the doctor had been helping Joseph Mangeland his experiments, which were taking place in the camp. The doctor was also forced to do these things. That's no doubt. But if you happen to be the guy who helps Joseph Mengel,
Starting point is 01:12:53 it's probably bad form to accuse someone else of being a collaborator. Also, every description that the doctor gives of the crematory or how it worked was inaccurate, bringing into question just how much he saw or what he understood of the Sondre Commando at all. To me, it seems like a classic example of deflection to make himself seem better. This account being very popular at the time of publication
Starting point is 01:13:14 was still used in a lot of histories in Auschwitz, and it benefited from the fact that very few Sondra Commandoz survived the war, and even fewer survived Auschwitz. And the ones who did were not exactly keen to go around telling their stories. How one the very first major English language films showing the Sonder Commando uprising, the Grey Zone, depicts a Sondre Commando played by, again, David Arquette, of all people, beating a fellow prisoner to death, something that is not known to have ever happened. This popular narrative of the Sonder Commandos being irredeemable collaborators has been something that has bothered me for a really long time. Yeah, Sonder Commandoman did have a certain amount of power over their prisoners when they arrived
Starting point is 01:13:52 at the death camps. There's no questioning that. But it's not a power they asked for, tried to obtain, or volunteered for. History, Lawrence Langer, puts it much better than I do. Quote, behavior in the camp cannot be viewed through the same lens that we use to view normal human behavior, since the rules of law and morality and the choices available for human decisions were not permitted in these camps for extermination. He probably best describes what the Sondor Commandovaldo faced as, quote, a choiceless choice. The end. I think the thing with the doctor accusing them of being collaborators is I think, yeah, the way I look at it is like you are chosen to live a finite living death for however long.
Starting point is 01:14:36 you're useful and then you get a bullet in the back of the head and your body burned to ash and it's like what choice do you make it's not like if i work with you i'll survive they knew they were going to die yeah they could just hope maybe that they wouldn't be the one you know um i think it's very easy for people to discredit others when it comes to the lengths that human beings will go to survive. Even if that survival is three months, you know, even if a Sonderc Kmano knew they were going to die in three months, that three months is better than zero months. I think the argument behind the Sondar Commando, the argument with the Koppos is similar to some extent is everyone wants to believe that they would not do these things. If pressed, it's just like
Starting point is 01:15:24 Langer puts it. You cannot view these decisions through the normal lens of morality. Morality did not exist. It's hence the term the gray zone. People do what they need to do in order to survive. And like the Sondor Commando-Cohen put it, he did what he needed to do to survive. He did not kill those people, you know? Yes, he did not tell them they were going to die either. But again, he saw it as a cruelty. They were all going to die no matter what, because that was the reality in the camp. Why would he do that? One Sonder-commando man, Philip Mueller, who we talked about, attempted to kill himself by simply walking into a gas chamber with the crowd one time. He was stopped.
Starting point is 01:16:07 Some people argue if that story ever happened at all, but suicide amongst Osada Kermito was not unheard of for obvious fucking reasons. I think the argument to call him collaborators is very black and white in a place where black and white does exist. Don't get me wrong. And for some people at play, but not them. I feel like in order to be a collaborator, you have to want to do that. You have to have some personal benefit.
Starting point is 01:16:31 You have to want that power to attempt to obtain it. It's, you know, like people who were volunteering for the SS during World War II, who are not from Germany. They're collaborators. I don't care what their political ideology behind it was. This could be the people from the Armenian Legion. This could be people from Russia. This could be people from fucking Austria.
Starting point is 01:16:53 It doesn't matter. You are actually a collaborator. You attempted to use Nazi power to further your own political goals. or personal goals. The Sonder Commandel, men, were forced to do this under pain of death. And with eventual death being certainty. Yeah, it was a choice between death now and death later. Whereas, like you were describing, I mean, for example, what the Germans called,
Starting point is 01:17:11 Hillsvilling, like, Eastern people from Soviet citizens who volunteered to fight with the Vermacht or with the SS, very different situation. I don't know, man. I mean, this is like the quietest I've been on an episode in a really long time, if perhaps ever. And I guess, to me, it just feels like everything you've described is the, the total annihilation of the human spirit. And it's really, really, really affecting, but also it's difficult to take it in and not
Starting point is 01:17:36 just feel this incredible sense of despair. And it was weird because I was, I was thinking while you were talking. And there was a line that came to mind. I don't know if you're familiar with, there's a Soviet fiction author named Vasily Grossman who wrote a book mostly about, in a lot of ways about the Battle of Stalingrad, but in general, about the Soviet war experience called Life and Fate. And there's a line in that book that immediately came to mind. and then I had to go find the wording so I didn't mess it up when reading it.
Starting point is 01:18:01 But I'm just going to read as a very brief quote. Man and fascism cannot coexist. If fascism conquers, man will cease to exist and there will only remain man-like creatures that have undergone an internal transformation. But if man, man who is endowed with reason and kindness should conquer, then fascism must perish. And those who have submitted to it will once again become people. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:20 I feel as though hearing about the impossibility of the choices facing these people, fills me with such incredible despair because at every juncture you think what would you do? What would I do? What could I do? What would anybody do? And it's like you can see how these little brief moments of resistance
Starting point is 01:18:40 might help documented even if these people knew they were going to die might allow some people to escape, might allow some people to survive who would have otherwise starved. And yet at every juncture when you were describing what a day in the life
Starting point is 01:18:55 of the Sonder Commandoe entailed, all I could think of was like I would say kill me I would I would absolutely say I want you to kill me now I will not do this and a lot of people did and that's the thing is that like I can't begrudge anyone amongst this group their decision because I don't think that any of us can comprehend what it was actually like to be facing something so impossible and think of it this way when someone was selected during the selection process which again took a few seconds it's not like they said you're going to be a sounder commando this is your job. They'd say, go over there, follow this man. And your job would start and you would learn what that job is when the door opened and you were standing in front of a pile of human bodies that need to go into that furnace. I mean, you and I have plenty of time spent in situations where we were pulled out of a formation because they needed a detail and you didn't get told what it was. You just got taken. You said you, go there, stand there. And it's hard to describe the, and this is all on purpose, I should point out. When people arrive at the camps, when they were
Starting point is 01:19:55 deported. They had not been fed. They have not gotten water. They have not slept for sometimes days. They are completely confused. They are like discombobulated. They're in shock. And then they're thrust into this. If you are selected, you know, think of what people do when they are in shock. And to get to this point, they've already undergone just a catastrophic amount of trauma mentally that some people just start working. They go into autopilot. They don't really put two and two together, what exactly they're doing. Some people don't and they get killed. Some people refuse and they get killed. Some people who were going to refuse see that happen and they're, fuck, I have to work. You know, it's really hard to understand, you know, what Langer calls this
Starting point is 01:20:40 choiceless choice, you know. It's, I think it's incredibly simplistic and unfair to consider these men collaborationists, especially because we wouldn't know half as much as we do about the process without them. And if they were truly collaborationists, why would they do that? I think as well, there's a like trying to speak about a situation that like you will never find
Starting point is 01:21:06 yourself in with a level of kind of moral profundity is just it's pointless. Like none of us and barely anyone who's like listening will be forced into a situation where it's you get a bullet in your head now or in a day
Starting point is 01:21:22 or two days or a week. or three weeks, it's impossible to, I think, kind of put yourself in that position. You can, yeah, we can all say it's like we would prefer one thing or another, but I think to cast a judgment on the actions of these people who, you know, we're in a situation that is completely impossible to relate to. I think it's impossible. I think it's impossible. I think it's immoral. Genuinely think it's immoral to look at that and say, I'm going to pronounce a judgment. I mean, I'll pronounce judgment. I'll fucking day long on the people who were active participants. Yeah, we do that all the time. Yes, if you have a
Starting point is 01:21:58 fucking conscience, that's what you're supposed to do. But in this situation, these specific circumstances, there really was no choice. There really was no option. It was, you got to choose to some extent, the condensed timeline of when you were going to die. And that's it. At best, that's all you got to choose. If you, I mean, as again, choiceless choice, are you really choosing anything? And if you look at, you know, the grand scope of collaborationists of the Nazi regime, look at the people who actually did collaborate. Most of them, not all, but most, will have some rationale of why they did it.
Starting point is 01:22:33 Whether it be, oh, you know, I'm not a fascist, but, you know, I wanted to save my country from Soviet domination or whatever the fuck it might be, right? Or I'm not a fascist, but, you know, I was really dedicated to self-termination and, you know, whatever the bullshit reason is, they have a reason. Not a single one these Sonder Commandos has that because they didn't have a fucking choice.
Starting point is 01:22:54 The difference from a collaborationist and effectively a victim is having a choice. But this is the thing that I always, when people use Hannah Arendt's like the Bananity of Evil, in my opinion, in the wrong context,
Starting point is 01:23:10 people are like, oh, you know, it's that, you know, these people did these horrible things. And it's like, for the most part, there is very, very petty justifications like you said, Joe, of like small, personal gains. This isn't necessarily
Starting point is 01:23:24 that like, oh, I'm going to survive. I'm going to escape. It's like these small personal gains that people can garner from engaging with an objective evil. That is it. And it's that like ordinary people and ordinary men will do inherently evil and
Starting point is 01:23:40 torturous things to others for what, an extra piece of gold in their pocket or an extra five dollars or whatever. Yeah, I mean, go back to our Rwandan genocide series. Look what some of those people were doing. to steal from their neighbors, you know? People in Germany and conquered states
Starting point is 01:23:57 were doing a lot of the same. But also, I mean, I understand why people would make the argument, why people would ask the question, why did you not tell these people they were about to be killed? And I absolutely understand entirely why the response was, that's an insane thing to even think of it. Yeah, it's cruelty upon cruelty. And not to mention, if they did, they would die too.
Starting point is 01:24:15 And nothing was going to change. Yeah. The scale of what was up against them was such that it wouldn't have made a difference either way. And that feels cynical. I understand the instinctive revulsion to that. That feels cynical. But I guess that judgment or attempted judgment of seeing it as cynical stems from a place of believing there's such a thing as eternal hope. And I feel as though these people confronted a situation where there was no hope. There was no eternal hope. Yeah. Some of them were fortunate and survived. But in general, that didn't, that wasn't a moral
Starting point is 01:24:46 judgment. That wasn't a statement of their actions. That was just chance. That was just the law of average is distribution. And nobody has more right to be the most cynical person and hopeless person on earth than one of these guys. I mean, it goes back to one of the timeless things that was etched into one of the walls of the concentration camp. Like, if God exists, he needs to ask me for forgiveness, you know?
Starting point is 01:25:09 Of course, these guys would think that the entire world is hopeless. I mean, even if they only survived for three months within the camp. again, that was longer than virtually anyone else. And think of all of the other things they saw to make it that far. Of course they would think everything is hopeless. And not only that too, but I think we all have within us kind of animal brain instinct that wants to survive, that wants to live. We don't necessarily always feel that way, but when your life is actually threatened
Starting point is 01:25:40 quite often, even in my least happy periods when I was in something where I thought I might be at risk when I had a quick jump scare where I actually, you know, just dodge something that was going to fall on me when I, had guns pointed at me when I got shot at, you have an urge to survive, you have an urge to live, you want to live, your brain wants to live, your body wants to live. It's just what makes human. And thus, you also, regardless of my own reaction earlier, what I said, you cannot also obligate these people retrospectively to say, you should have just accepted instant death. No one should. Yeah, that's it. That's an insane thing to say. That's also an insane thing to
Starting point is 01:26:12 say. I personally do not think that I could have stared at it in the face and said, I'm willing to do this to do the best that I can to try to help. I would have wanted to die. I think. Many people did from what you said. Many people took that choice. That's the choice I think I would have taken. I do not, I would not in a million years say that the fact that I feel pretty certain of that grants me the right to judge the people who didn't take that because I will never, God willing, never experience anything within the same, within a fraction of the same fucking universe is what these people experienced. And not to mention going off of some of the scraps memoirs, diaries that these guys left behind, a lot of them wanted to die as well. And yeah, I mean, it's a lot.
Starting point is 01:26:50 that the story is is hugely important for people to understand history better. Of course, I'm going to say that. I am the one who decided to study genocides. But I think that these more intricate parts of this major part of history that people, I think, don't understand as completely as maybe they could or should. I think those are very important. Nothing to do with, with current events but like I said that this idea of Sondra Commandoz being collaborationists has bothered me for quite
Starting point is 01:27:23 some time and I just decided to inflict all of you with it so thank you Joe my bad now I hate you as much as I hate that book by Hannah Arendt Eichmann was evil I disagree with Hannah Arend's assessment
Starting point is 01:27:39 of Eichmann I think the thing is is that it's entirely true to say that the people who committed acts like this and who have throughout history were not binary in the sense that they weren't just like they didn't just exist as permanent inflictors of cruelty and violence and evil. They probably loved their children or their parents to some extent. Some of them might be nice to animals. Hitler loved dogs and was a vegetarian. If Hitler was alive today, he would be listening to the Smiths in Depeche Mode because that's one of the lines. He was a sensitive man. Yeah,
Starting point is 01:28:10 I remember the song. Look, what I'm saying is that I understand the argument too about the lack of of an objective ontological binary evil in terms of the individual actors that not every single facet of them was necessarily always that way throughout their lives and not every single one of them was that way even if some of them most certainly were the act itself the collective action the contribution that they made to this larger whole that there is no question what you just described is one of the most horrific things i've ever heard in my life and i have read about this and studied to some extent i have read histories of this but I have never, I have intentionally shied away from getting into the details of what the day to day was like for people as opposed to understanding a lot of, you know, especially growing up in even in some capacity in reform Judaism in America, you hear a lot about survivor stories and the stories of the people that they lost, but I've never heard the Sonder Commandoz story ever. I just didn't seek it out. I'll be perfectly honest. Didn't know anything about it. I didn't assume they were the same as direct collaborators, but I guess sort of assume it was one of those things of like, yeah, that sounds horrible and I chose to not learn about it.
Starting point is 01:29:13 I mean, I don't blame anybody who hasn't done it, like, their personal reading on it. I don't blame anybody who sees the title of this episode and nopes the fuck out for the week. It's just my personal school of history is look evil in the eye and learn about it. And so if you made it almost two hours in, wherever this ends up being after it's been finished, thank you. I hope you, the rest of your day is significantly better. But fellas, that's a podcast episode. before we go, we do have something that might lighten all of this for people who have made
Starting point is 01:29:45 it this far. And that's questions from the Legion. If you'd like to ask us a question to support the show on Patreon, for the entire month of December, it's going to be on sale. You can do that for yourself or give it to someone else. Then you can log into Discord and or Patreon itself and send us a question and we'll answer it. And today's question is, you get to do a live show at any venue in the world. What venue are you picking? The sphere. the sphere. Yes, lines out by donkeys at the sphere,
Starting point is 01:30:16 but it's just like a mad, insane fish eye lens pointing up at us and then we're projected on the sphere. I can't wait to see the bootleg Eva intro broadcast across all of Vegas. No, a serious answer
Starting point is 01:30:32 would be, and it is one of my favorite venues in London and I was there last night, and I love it because it sounds really good there isn't as much seating as I would like but it is electric in Brickson based sounding venue in all of London
Starting point is 01:30:48 I have two I suppose first one is a serious answer literally anywhere in the United States yeah true in a future where we don't have to worry about Tom being detained and my personal answer is
Starting point is 01:31:02 so in Armenia there is a puppet theater now this puppet theater venue is of course built in Soviet times and was used for what the name entails. It's still called the puppet theater. But for some reason, it is the venue where all like death metal bands go to perform in Yoravan. I want us to perform at the puppet theater. My joke answer is Atu Station, which is in the Aleutian Islands. It's so far west that it's in the Eastern Hemisphere. There's a Coast Guard station, population 20, because I know that at least one of our fans and I'm not going to name
Starting point is 01:31:35 you, we'll be there because they're always at all of our live shows. My, my, like, my, I was going to say CBGBs. I was like, no, fuck CBGBs. They made it into a Jean Varvado store. ABC No Rio. Now it's probably closed now too, but ABC No Rio, if you're not familiar, Tom probably knows it. Insane DIY hardcore club in the Lower East Side that managed to stick around a lot longer
Starting point is 01:31:54 than a lot of places, but I'm pretty sure it's closed. I've been back to New York in forever, so I don't know. Yeah, but Nate, honestly, like knowing us and the codery of people that love to come to our live shows, we more than likely will be instead in Maxis, Kansas City. yeah that's true or sticking st vitus in brooklyn is another one too or ip st vitus so vitus is closed no I went to st vitus and saw this horrible doom metal band they were so loud I had to leave after 20 minutes and I had had
Starting point is 01:32:21 hearing protection it was so fucking loud I was like I'm gonna die or alternatively we could do the my favorite recent venue aka the bridge under bridge in hackney underneath I was gonna say that like under the overpass yeah I can't think of anything more on brand that if we did a live show under an overpass in like February with burning barrels everywhere
Starting point is 01:32:46 but fellas I think that is a good place to wrap it up here you all host other shows plug those shows trash chutecher what a hell of the way to dad kill James Bond listen to them they're funny they're not harrowing not like us we're funny too normally
Starting point is 01:33:06 normally. And normally my waveform doesn't look like fucking somebody died and you've got an EKG hooked up to them. They all have free feeds as well as space around. So if you do like them, you can subscribe and get even more. Similar to this theme, I produce a show called Bloodwork, which is about the economy of violence after we were done recording this. I have to go put sound drops of foghorn, leghorn and EDM into an episode about Dick Cheney. Listen to Beneath Skin show about the history of everything told you the history of tattooing. And you can find my photography work on Instagram at Scam Golden G-G-O-L-L-D-E. I am. This is the only show that I host. Like I said, you can support us on Patreon for the entire month of December. It is on sale.
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