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Hirt's murderous and inhuman plan was carried out in a way
which differed but slightly from the suggestion made in his preliminary report.
(NO-085, Pros. Ex. 175.) The proof has shown that it was decided to
preserve the whole skeletons of the victims rather than merely the skulls. On 2
November 1942 Sievers requested Brandt to make the necessary arrangements with
the Reich Security Main Office for providing 150 Jewish inmates from Auschwitz
to carry out this plan. (NO-086, Pros. Ex. 177.) On 6 November Brand
informed Adolf Eichmann, the Chief of Office IV-B-4 (Jewish affairs) of the
Reich Security Main Office to put everything at Hirt's disposal which was
necessary for the completion of the skeleton collection. (NO-089, Pros, Ex.
179.)
From Sievers letter to Eichmann of 21 June 1943, it is apparent that SS
Hauptsturmfuehrer Beger, a collaborator of the Ahnenerbe Society, carried out
the preliminary work for the assembling of the skeleton collection in the
Auschwitz concentration camp on 79 Jews, 30 Jewesses, 2 Poles, and 4 Asiatics.
In this letter, Sievers stated that Beger had to interrupt his work because of
the danger of infectious diseases in the camp. Sievers requested that the
inmates on whom Beger had carried out this work be transferred to the
Natzweiler concentration camp because further activities in Auschwitz were
impossible due to the danger of infection. Special accommodation for the thirty
women was to be provided in the Natzweiler concentration camp "for a
short period". [Emphasis added.] (NO-087, Pros. Ex. 181.)
The statement of the camp commandant of the Natzweiler concentration camp, SS
Hauptsturmfuehrer Josef Kramer, reveals that approximately 80 inmates of the
Auschwitz concentration camp, among them females, were transferred to the
Natzweiler concentration camp and killed there by gas at the request of Hirt in
the beginning of August 1943. A special gas chamber had been built for this
purpose. The corpses of the victims were sent in three shipments to the
Anatomical Institute of Hirt in Strasbourg University. (NO-807, Pros. Ex.
185.) This evidence is corroborated by the testimony of the witness
Henripierre. He testified that in the beginning of August 1943, the principal
autopsy technician of the Anatomical Institute, Bong, received the order from
Hirt to prepare the tanks in the cellar of the Institute for approximately 120
corpses. At intervals of a few days, three shipments of corpses, 30 female, 30
male, and 26 male, arrived by truck from an unknown place. All of these victims
were Jewish. These corpses were preserved in the cellar of the Anatomical
Institute in the tanks prepared by Bong. (Tr. pp. 712-4.) See also the
affidavit of Wagner. (NO-881, Pros. Ex. 280.) As proved by the
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