⚠️ Historical Documentation Notice
Historical Documentation Notice

This document is part of a historical archive and is presented for scholarly research and educational purposes.

The content reflects historical perspectives and should be understood within its historical context.

Documents on Real
HistoryIndex
to the Traditional Enemies of Free
Speech Alphabetical index (text)


Letters to David
Irving on this Website

Albert
Doyle

asks,
, about an “Auschwitz survivor” who seems suspiciously naive

Ever heard of this Auschwitz “survivor” before?

The May 2005 National
Geographic
magazine contains a feature article on famous poisons, one of which is said to be
Zyklon B. It is based on a Polish “eyewiness” from
Auschwitz, the now 89 year old Stefan Polchlopek. No one seems to have heard of him before.

The material in the article is extremely fishy.
He was said to have been sent to Auschwitz, a 26
year old law graduate as an “active member of the resistance.” (I thought they were shot out of hand?) He recounts that he was put to work extending the rail lines right up to the gas chambers in 1943 and when assigned to a clothing gathering detail feared that he was next into the chambers and so “ran back to the barracks.” Sloppy guards I guess.

Lots of other dubious stories; the smell of burned corpses, black smoke pouring out of chimneys; “Everyone knew about the chambers” (except apparently the Polish resistance in London which never mentioned them and Elie
Wiesel
who was in the camp and neglected to mention them in his famous book, and
. . . oh, never mind!); 8,000 a day gassed; and “I remember the showerheads.”

Did anybody ever hear of this guy before?

Albert Doyle

Our dossier
on Auschwitz
BBC News Sixty
years since liberation of Nazis’ Bergen Belsen
concentration camp — Mr Irving seems
somehow to blame, and comments

Free download of David Irving’s books Bookmark the download page to find the latest new free books

© Focal Point 2005 David Irving

Source Information
Original Publication: 2005-05-03
Digital Archive: Focal Point Publications
Accessed: June 3, 2026