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Karen Pollock

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Karen Pollock,

Karen Pollock

Opinion

Remembering a warning that defied belief

January 21, 2016 15:05
2 min read

Not long out of University, in 1998, I was asked to represent the Holocaust Educational Trust at the World Jewish Congress' international gathering in Moscow - a rather daunting task at the time! After a long flight, I arrived late in the evening and upon arrival happened to meet a gentleman called Gerhard Riegner. It was only years later that I realised that I had met someone with a fascinating, and important, story to tell.

In July 1942, Himmler, the architect of the Final Solution, travelled to Auschwitz and Lublin to share his and Hitler's decision to exterminate all Jews in Europe immediately. Hoess, the Commandant of Auschwitz, later recalled that, over dinner, Himmler seemed unusually cheerful and chatty. Eduard Schulte, a German industrialist who learned of Himmler's plans from one of the dinner guests, was so alarmed that he forwarded the information to Gerhart Riegner, at that time Secretary of the World Jewish Congress in Geneva.

On August 8 of that year, Gerhard sent what would later be known as the Riegner Telegram, in which he wrote: "Received alarming report stating that, in the Fuehrer's Headquarters, a plan has been discussed, and is under consideration, according to which all Jews in countries occupied or controlled by Germany numbering three and a half to four millions should, after deportation and concentration in the East, be at one blow exterminated, in order to resolve, once and for all the Jewish question in Europe." This telegram was delivered to officials in Washington, New York, and London, with a request for it to also be passed on to Stephen Wise, the President of the World Jewish Congress.

The US State Department, on receiving the telegram, deemed it a ''wild rumour, fuelled by Jewish anxieties'', and chose not to share it with Wise. The Foreign Office didn't forward the telegram for some time, although they did go on to pass it to Wise, who pushed for it to be made public.