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Auschwitz Repairs Stir Up
Tough Preservation Debate
ELIZABETH WILLIAMSON and
BOB DAVIS
Staff Reporters of THE WALL
STREET JOURNAL
OSWIECIM, Poland -- By the side of the main railroad
spur at Auschwitz, 14 Polish construction workers repair
the death camp's barbed-wire fences. Concrete fence
posts, cast by prisoners 60 years ago, are crumbling.
For six years, an international preservation committee
debated whether and how to restore them.
The fences ringing Auschwitz frame a dilemma: How best
to memorialize one of history's darkest crimes? Refurbishing
the place protects the Nazis' handiwork. But letting
Auschwitz decay further could erase important evidence
of the mass extermination.
Deteriorating fenceposts at the onetime Nazi death
camp Birkenau, also known as Auschwitz II. The most
wrenching decisions about renovating the death camp
are still to be made. Should two tons of hair, shorn
from dead prisoners and now turning to dust in its display
case, be left on view or buried? Should the thousands
of leather shoes taken from inmates be oiled to lengthen
their life, or left covered with the mud in which they
were found? Should the ruins of four gas chambers and
crematoria remain exposed to the elements or be encased,
like fragile art, to stem further deterioration?
A group of historians, religious leaders and survivors,
grappling with the issues since 1989, is testing an
uneasy compromise. They want to maintain the camp just
as visitors find it today, a ruin that honors the more
than one million people murdered here, 90% of them Jews.
The group is about to begin a new round of debate on
some of the hardest questions, including what to do
with the crematoria. Some historians argue that recreating
parts of the camp would show how genocide was carried
out. Some preservationists counter that letting the
site decay naturally would increase its emotional power.
Survivors pursue a middle ground, saying whatever decision
is made, the camp should be maintained indefinitely
to bear witness when they no longer can.
"We hope to preserve it for after the survivors
are gone," says Kalman Sultanik, an 84-year-old
Holocaust survivor who heads one preservation committee,
formed and funded by several European governments and
the private foundation of cosmetics heir Ronald Lauder.
Auschwitz wasn't built to last. Constructed on swampy
ground screened by forests, the camp housed its prisoners
mostly in old horse stables and wooden shacks built
from materials looted from nearby villages. The Nazis
planned to complete their murderous work expeditiously,
historians figure, and then destroy the evidence.
The first part of Auschwitz was built in 1940 to house
political prisoners and other deportees and is marked
by its iron gate with the cynical phrase "Arbeit
Macht Frei" -- "Work Brings Freedom."
The vast bulk of the murders were conducted at the second,
much larger camp, 1.5 miles away, at Birkenau, known
also as Auschwitz II. That 430-acre site was a vast
killing factory, with nearly 300 barracks and four large
buildings with gas chambers and
crematoria. The remains of red brick chimneys that once
heated prisoner barracks stretch to the horizon.
Before Russian troops liberated Auschwitz in 1945,
Nazi SS troops dynamited the gas chambers and crematoria
in an effort to obliterate evidence of their crimes.
After liberation, local residents looted the camp in
search of building materials and prisoner valuables.
Haphazard Efforts
In 1947, Poland decreed that Auschwitz be preserved
as a museum, and as testimony to Nazi atrocities. But
the communist government, lacking a plan and significant
funding, made only haphazard efforts at preservation.
The entrance was moved to make room for a parking lot.
The sauna, where prisoners were stripped of their belongings,
showered and tattooed with identification numbers, was
outfitted with a handsome new roof that makes the building
look like a modern administrative center, marring its
authenticity. In a corner of Birkenau, brick barracks
were renovated with modern roof tiles and top-grade
masonry. Now conservators let the grass grow high there
to discourage visitors.
Large swaths of the camp complex vanished. Wildlife
chewed wooden buildings, moss weakened mortar, and wind
and rain battered what remained. Conservators managed
to save fewer than one-quarter of the concentration
camp's wooden buildings.
The situation is even worse at many other concentration
camps, which don't get as much attention or funding
as Auschwitz. Treblinka, Belzec and Sobibor in Poland,
Dachau and Bergen Belsen in Germany use memorial markers
or recreated displays because original buildings were
destroyed by the Nazis or
deteriorated over the years, leaving Auschwitz the most
complete example.
In 1989, Mr. Lauder, whose New York-based foundation
supports Jewish educational projects and sites in Eastern
Europe, visited the Auschwitz complex, which attracts
about half a million visitors each year. Shocked at
its condition, he raised funds and set up a committee
to draft a conservation plan. Altogether $12.5 million
has been spent since 1992. Germany has supplied about
$8 million to repair museum buildings, windows, gates
and guard towers, including the $2 million tab for the
fence-post repairs. France, Greece, Russia and Switzerland
are paying for a $3 million conservation laboratory,
set to open next year.
The preservation committee discussed
suggestions from a wide range of experts. Jean-Claude
Pressac, a French historian whose books debunked revisionists'
denials of the mass extermination, favored rebuilding
a crematorium as a "slap in the face" to all
doubters. But the committee was influenced more heavily
by James Young, a University of Massachusetts professor
of Judaic studies, and Tony Frantz, chief conservator
of objects at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art,
who both favored less intervention. "Part of [Auschwitz's]
emotional impact has to do with it being experienced
as an archaeological ruin," Mr. Frantz says. "It's
not an art museum. It's a cemetery."
In its initial report, in 1990, the committee favored
a middle approach, not altering the site, but not allowing
further decay. After urgent repairs were made, some
preservation committee members and the Auschwitz museum
staff turned to the fence posts in 1995. Over the following
six years, the staff examined the best technologies
for repairing concrete. At a 1999 conference
attended by museum staff, some committee members and
Polish government designees, the group worked out a
new compromise. The fences that were still needed for
security would be rebuilt to look as they did in the
1940s, but the rest would be preserved as they were
found.
Some issues remain so emotionally wrenching -- and
so technically
daunting -- that they have been put off limits so far.
Until the early 1970s, museum workers used to dust the
two tons of prisoners' hair on display in a former Auschwitz
barracks by lowering the hair onto a net and shaking
it. Now, the hair is so fragile it can't be moved. Instead,
it has deteriorated, its color fading into wiry black
and gray nests.
Mr. Young says what's left must be kept as long as
possible as "evidence of the sheer numbers"
killed. But Jerzy Wroblewski, director of the Auschwitz
museum, would prefer to bury the hair, out of respect
for the families of the dead, and because he isn't sure
what else could be done. "If it were one curl,
we could create a special [preservation] chamber,"
he says. "But it's impossible to do with the quantity
we have."
Similarly, the conservators are stymied by the thousands
of mud-caked shoes once worn by prisoners. For years,
they used a large tumbling machine to apply a layer
of oil to the shoes and keep them from cracking. But
the last time that was tried the stitching in many of
them fell apart. The camp then asked German students
to do the work by hand, but stopped the program when
the work seemed futile.
Now, a different problem looms: bugs that feast on
the leather. Another concentration camp in Poland, Majdanek,
is experimenting with using radiation to kill the insects.
On a recent visit to Auschwitz, the shoes sat in a glass
case, a moth hovering over them.
Work continues on the fences,
at the side of the railroad spur in Auschwitz II. Sixty
years ago at the spot, SS troops would sort newly arrived
prisoners into two groups -- some headed for the sauna
to be readied for work, but most to be gassed. Now,
rows of decaying posts, each reinforced with four steel
rods which frequently protrude from the concrete, line
the rusted tracks and the rough gravel road beyond.
When water seeps into the concrete posts, the steel
rods corrode and expand, putting pressure on the concrete
and causing the posts eventually to burst open.
The work is taxing in ways the crew hadn't imagined.
They labor in silence between the prisoners' barracks
and the crematoria, wit h only the sound of the wind
competing with the tapping of their chisels. "Whichever
direction I look, I feel a burden," says Stanislaw
Papiez, the 51-year-old construction chief. "There
is no way you can look and find peace."
The 3,600 arching fence posts, which were once joined
by electrified barbed wire, figure prominently in prisoner
memoirs as symbols of captivity and hopelessness. Some
desperate inmates threw themselves against the wire
to commit suicide. Today, aging survivors sometimes
ask Auschwitz for rusted bits of barbed wire, which
are cut from the only surviving coil.
The fences still offer glimpses of the prisoners' lives.
Segments are marked by production dates and by prisoners'
identific ation numbers scratched into the concrete.
Spoons, forks and even a tiny metal lamb, probably a
toy, have been unearthed near the base of some poles.
"Even at the bottom of a post you find pain and
suffering," says Witold Smrek, Auschwitz's chief
preservation engineer, whose grandfather was deported
to Auschwitz and
perished in another death camp.
The fences near the railroad spur are still used for
security, though the barbed wire has been replaced and
the electricity turned off. They require extensive work
to restore them to their original look and strength,
down to the cheap-grade concrete, studded with pebbles.
Somber Workplace
It is a somber workplace. Konior Sp.j., a construction
firm from nearby Katowice, manages the work and forbids
the crew to play radios or talk with tourists. Out of
respect for the setting, there is little banter, and
the workers wear uniforms of white canvas coveralls.
Along with many of the crew, Grzegorz Fajferek, a tall
blond worker, comes from Oswiecim, the town outside
Auschwitz's gates. (The Nazis Germanized Oswiecim's
name to Auschwitz.) His grandmother once worked nearby,
as a domestic servant in a Nazi officer's house.
Mr. Fajferek has chiseled one post, carefully loosening
slabs of the
original concrete that would have later fallen off and
laying them to the side. He has sprayed the concrete
with a chemical that prevents further crumbling and
coated the steel rods, sandblasted free of rust, with
anticorrosion paint.
Now, he is ready to reassemble the pole, like a jigsaw
puzzle. He mixes mortar with the right size of pebbles
to match the original, and scores a concrete slab with
an electric saw so it will adhere better to the post.
After reattaching each concrete part, he will fasten
it with a clamp to dry for three days. Refurbishing
a fence post can take a month. "The most difficult
thing is to get the look right," says Mr. Fajferek.
Fence posts in the interior of the camp are sandblasted
free of rust and coated with anticorrosion paint, but
then get another treatment that mimics the original
rusted look. They still look like ruins, but ones that
should be able to withstand another 50 years of weather
erosion.
During breaks, the crew sometimes tries to imagine
how starving prisoners managed to build the fence they're
repairing, whose posts are spaced and aligned precisely.
It's summer now. How could the prisoners have worked
through frigid Polish winters protected only by a prison
uniform? Each of the 12-foot posts weighs about 650
pounds and must be buried a yard deep into the soil.
It takes four brawny workers now to lift one concrete
post. How many prisoners did the lifting? "It must
have been eight," says Mr. Papiez, the construction
boss. Then he reconsiders. "The prisoners were
underfed, weak. It must have been more than eight."
He thinks of his own relatives who, though Catholic,
suffered too at the hands of the Nazis, as did many
Polish Catholics. "My grandparents died here,"
he says, wiping away tears. They were deported from
nearby villages and never heard from again.
A few hundred yards away from the fence post restoration
are the remains of two crematoria. In the 1960s, the
Polish government erected steel braces to keep the massive
concrete roof from collapsing entirely onto the remains
of the gas chambers and ovens that the Nazis had dynamited.
But a wall liningthe entrance to the gas chamber collapsed
within the last decade. Big chunks
of a crematorium roof dangle a foot above the ground,
held by reinforcing steel rods which will soon snap.
Museum staff spray the ruins with
herbicides to prevent lichens from weakening the concrete.
They drain the site after heavy rain. But nothing more
is done to keep the ruins from deteriorating, because
of the lack of consensus over how to preserve them.
Next month, a group of Polish government preservation
engineers will meet at Auschwitz to assess the crematoria.
The following June, a committee of preservationists,
survivors and religious leaders will gather at the death
camp in hopes of finally agreeing to a plan. Among the
possibilities: rebuilding one of the four Birkenau crematoria
to its 1940s state while leaving the rest as they are,
constructing a walkway or an entire building around
the site, building a chimney-shaped memorial with photos
of those
murdered, or simply letting the place decay further.
Standing on the edge of the crematorium,
Mr. Smrek, the camp's 47-year-old conservation chief,
is overwhelmed by the scale of any reconstruction. The
concrete slabs weigh tons. How could they be lifted,
coated with chemicals and mortared together, without
breaking further? Should the refurbished parts be slid
back into place upon piles of bricks and the broken
remains of crematorium ovens? The thought of construction
cranes wrecking the stillness and solemnity of Auschwitz
is unsettling enough. Erecting a building to protect
the site, however well intentioned, would permanently
alter the landscape. "It doesn't fit," he
says. He isn't sure what would.
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