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Now that the moves and merges have settled down for a little bit, we should discuss the section ordering (which was an active dispute before the attempted split, which somewhat froze things because it was unsure how the page would end up.) By my reading the Nazi section had been stable in the first position for a while; looking over the history, it seems like the order was repeatedly swapped, often in edits that didn't mention they were doing so, and that it hasn't really been discussed much because the split drowned it out. In any case, I feel that the Nazi usage has far more sustained coverage and is far more central to the topic, and therefore ought to be listed first. The argument that they should be listed in timeline order doesn't make any sense, since none of the sources connect the two aspects in a timeline (in fact, even hinting at that points to dangerous WP:SYNTH concerns, ie. we absolutely cannot imply, even indirectly, that the Nazi usage was inspired or influenced by the Soviet usage in anyway, shape, or form, because we don't have any sources for that.) Additionally, most of the higher-quality coverage of the Soviet usage relates it to the Nazi usage in the sense of deriving notability from it as a point of comparison (ie. the Yevgenia Albats and Catherine A. Fitzpatrick quote makes no sense if we list the Soviet usage first); they clearly take the position of "here's an obscure bit of historical trivia related to the well-known, well-established use of gas vans by the Nazis." That sort of thing only makes sense when listed second. -- Aquillion ( talk) 01:38, 5 December 2019 (UTC)
I am not quite sure what was the reason for removal [1]. These sources are fine per WP:RS. My very best wishes ( talk) 22:29, 17 December 2019 (UTC)
Gas vans were reportedly used also in the cities of Omsk and Ivanovo in the Soviet Union. According to high-ranking NKVD officer Mikhail Schreder, they were used in the city of Ivanovo similar to that in Moscow: "When a closed truck arrived at the place of execution, all convicts were dragged out of cars in an unconscious state. On the way, they were almost killed by exhaust fumes redirected through a special tube into the closed cargo compartment of the truck." [1] [2] Soviet dissident Petro Grigorenko described in his memoirs a story told by his close friend and former prisoner of Gulag Vasil Teslia. He described killings of " kulaks" in a prison in Omsk. According to him, more than 27 people were loaded to a truck, which moved away from the prison, but soon returned. "When the doors were opened, black smoke poured out and corpses of people rained down." The corpses were then placed into the basement. Teslia watched such executions during whole week. [3] [4]
References
The argument that the vans were intended for "incapacitating victims" would be ridiculous if it wasn't about such horrible events. You can't invent interpretation of NKVD intentions. Anyone who intentionally redirects exhaust fumes into a passenger section must be aware this can and will be lethal for people inside. The abundance of sources on the gas van usage by NKVD, both primary and secondary, fully justifies having it documented here on Wikipedia. The argument that NKVD victims were always "executed after thorough identification" on the other hand suggests cherry-picking or ignorance. Bolsheviks used any means available at given moment for mass executions, from chemical weapons used to suppress Tambov Rebellion, dumping 6000 people on an inhabited island and let them die ( Nazino affair), to death marches and chaotic NKVD prisoner massacres when they were fleeing from German offensive. Cloud200 ( talk) 16:04, 25 December 2019 (UTC)
Responding to other arguments raised above:
Cloud200 ( talk) 21:08, 25 December 2019 (UTC)
Although I think the current version is an improvement, the last paragraph needs rewrite. In my opinion, the question of "priority" of invention of a gas van does not belong to the Soviet gas van section. The literature about Nazi gas van is abundant, and the story of its invention is covered in much more details, so Albats is hardly a really good expert in that. In my opinion, the mainstream view of gas van invention should be described in the Nazi gas van section (or in a separate section), and opinia of Albats, who believes that gas vans were invented in the USSR should be mentioned briefly as a minority viewpoint.-- Paul Siebert ( talk) 19:54, 22 December 2019 (UTC)
So, this pathetic place which used to be Wikipedia sees it fit to protect unsourced accusations of genocide performed my people? I am a Soviet person, who may have been Jewish before, but not anymore. As long as creatures like Albats' are. I'd really love to give her a ride in NKVD gas van, except that it should be blatantly obvious to anyone with any background in engineering or chem how this is BS. Only the picture of Magirus gas van is legit, but the description is not. You cannot suffocate a person by excess CO2 by pumping automotive exhaust into constricted volume! This chocks the engine first. Some automotive enthusiasts actually tried to sticking their heads directly into flared out exhaust pipes for a quickened version of gas van. The result is engine choking right away and enthusiast having a whole mouth full of soot. Youtube also used to have videos of rednecks trying to built a little imitation Ausswitz in their chicken shed, to legitimately off chickens for meat, only to find that they don't choke too.
Now, this how it really works. The can shaped device you see in the back of the van is known as
The Nazis converted over a million vehicles to wood gas, because they had mad chemistry skills but very little fuels. The contraption produces synthesis gas, a combustible mixture rich in CO (carbon monoxide)which really is a deadly toxic gas. I wonder if Greta Tunberg, who can totally see the CO2 (which does nothing much), can also see or sniff monoxide? Because regular people don't see or smell anything before they die. Thus, great Greta should teach us see the difference between the two oxides, I reckon?
As you can see, the device doesn't even have an article in Russian. Thus, I nominate to christen it the "Albats' device"? So the good peoples of Russia know the bad Jewish-Russians who've been selling them out. Note that none of this constitutes any kind of Antisemitism, which is an issue related to various Semites hanging out over in Israel/Palestine, which is a place I've got zero interest in. This is between Russian-Jews. Hypothesis: being Jewish does not yet make one expert on gas chambers of Auschwitz? The only true source of expertise on dangerous gases is Greta Thunberg. How dare you! If she were to debate the operational principles of the gas van with Albats' of yours, she'll so crush her Muchandr ( talk) 00:02, 28 March 2021 (UTC)
References
The same claims in this article were discussed in Russian Wikipedia's article Газваген and they were promptly removed because the content doesn't quite pass the smell test, and I strongly recommend editors to remove the similar deceptions re-appearing on the English Wikipedia. The content is tied to a Komsomolskaya Pravda article published in 1992, a time when the Russian media was awash with sensationalist yellow journalism. I've searched Komsomolskaya Pravda to see if it published any articles in the 21st century related to these allegations, but I didn't come across anything at all, indicating that these allegations are not widely accepted or reported, not even by the very same newspaper in the 21st century. There's no reason why the Komsomolskaya Pravda of 1992 ought to supersede the same newspaper's reporting in the last 20 years, a period from which I did not locate a single story related to "Russians built gas vans". It's curious that the same people who decry the use of "Soviet propaganda", "Russian censored sources" for Wikipedia articles gleefully cite Komsomolskaya Pravda, as well as authors citing that source, when it furthers their goal of showing the Russian government in a negative manner.
This is primarily all I located in Komsomolskaya Reporting about gas vans published in the 21st century:
The Germans tested terrible vehicles on Krasnodar residents.
FSB published documents on how the Nazis buried 214 children in Yeysk
This is all I found in Russian scholarly journals related to gas vans:
"The main goals of the leadership of the GUPVI of the NKVD of the USSR were not the killing of prisoners of war by various methods, but their isolation, the creation of satisfactory living conditions for the representatives of the special contingent, the maximum use of the labor of these foreigners in industry, construction and even in agriculture, as well as the full-scale implementation of anti-fascist measures in detention centers disarmed military personnel of the enemy armies. In the Soviet camps, their leadership did not implement racist or nationalist theories; there were no crematoriums, gas chambers, or gas vans. No medical experiments were conducted on prisoners of war. Life in Udmurtia in particular and in Soviet captivity as a whole was not a complete horror or hell for former soldiers and officers of the Wehrmacht and its allied armies, as was often the case in Hitler's "death factories." Bulletin of Tomsk State University - 2017
From the Holocaust Museum entry on gas vans: After the June 1941 German invasion of the Soviet Union and Einsatzgruppe mass shootings of civilians, the Nazis experimented with gas vans for mass killing. Gas vans were hermetically sealed trucks with engine exhaust diverted to the interior compartment. Use of gas vans began after Einsatzgruppe members complained of battle fatigue and mental anguish caused by shooting large numbers of women and children. Gassing also proved to be less costly. Einsatzgruppen gassed hundreds of thousands of people, mostly Jews, Roma (Gypsies), and mentally ill people.
The article cites Robert Gellately in an effort to provide a bit of academic legitimacy to the "Russians built gas vans" allegations. However, Gellately specifically cited the aforementioned Komsomolskaya Pravda article, and I suspect that he did so after he came across the contents from another author, because the footnotes for the section of Gellately's book about Russia almost entirely consists of secondary sources from America/Britain's equivalent of the "La Leyenda Negra" type of historiography for Russia e.g. Richard Pipes and Orlando Figes. In regard to the sections in his book covering Russia, Gellately's source base does not include very many archival documents, primary sources and contemporary newspapers, and that's probably because he's a specialist on German history rather than Russian history.
I located a specific academic Maria Alexandrovna Solovey, identified as "Associate Professor, Department of Russian History" at Donetsk National University, author of more than 20 scientific publications and author of the monograph "Encyclopedia of Delusions: Third Reich", and she finds the allegations to be very much in doubt and even suggests that there's an anti-Semitic atmosphere surrounding the allegations that Isay Berg, who happened to be Jewish, built gas vans.
There is a misconception that the creator of the famous "gas van"... was the head of the administrative and economic department of the NKVD Directorate for the Moscow Region I.D. Berg. They say that it was he who first guessed that the transportation of the machines and their killing could be successfully combined. So to say, two in one bottle....Moreover, the emphasis is usually placed on the surname of the inventor, similar to German, but still not German, - Berg. The Soviet, or rather, expressed in the language of unfortunate nationalists, the "Jew-Bolshevik" trace in the creation of gas van appeared around the beginning the 1990s. In 1993, in the weekly “Arguments and Facts”, the words of Lieutenant Colonel of the Main Directorate of Security of the Russian Federation A. Oligov were published: “Indeed, the head of the administrative department was the father of the gas chamber - a specially equipped van of the Bread type with an exhaust pipe brought up to the body; Office of the NKVD in Moscow and the Moscow Region I. D. Berg. For its intended purpose - to destroy people - the gas chamber was first used in 1936. In 1939, Berg was shot. ” By the way, there is a version that in 1939 Berg was sentenced to death precisely for the invention of the gas van. The accused himself in court denied having been involved in inventing it. Later, when in 1956 the case of the gas van was reviewed, Berg’s involvement in the gas van was also not proved....We dare to suggest that the Soviet Union did not invent the gas vans. First of all, due to the technical backwardness of the Soviet Union. The fact is that building a mobile gas van is much more difficult than just taking an indoor wagon and bringing its exhaust pipe to it...In addition, diesel engines were used in gas vans, and in the Soviet Union, almost all vehicles were powered by gasoline. So do not be mistaken: if someone in the Soviet Union and made a mobile gas chamber in a particular bread van, then there is no reason to consider it as the “working model” of the murderer that is notorious for the whole world. The technical characteristics of a conventional, non-converted bread van with an exhaust pipe connected to the body do not allow us to consider it a mass execution tool. A truly "death machine" was invented and put on stream in the Third Reich.
A brief discussion about Isay Berg: [2]
The cited source is "Jews in the Soviet NKVD, 1936-1938", Mikhail Tumshis, Vadim Zolotarev. Tumshis is cited in this Oxford University Book: On NKVD clans, see, for example...M.Tumshis, VChk: Voina Klanov (Moscow: Eksmo, 2004) Tumshis is described as, "historian, archivist, independent researcher. Former employee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Samara. Research interests: history of Russian state security agencies, history of Russian police and police, history of the USSR. The author of 6 books, about 2 dozen articles. In 2003-2010 employee of the personnel department of the Samara branch of the Saratov Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia." He wrote:
The materials of the archival criminal case against I. D. Berg contain the following evidence: “... Berg was then the head of the task force to enforce the decisions of the three UNKVD MO. With his participation, vehicles were created, the so-called gas van. Those vehicles transported those arrested and sentenced to be shot, and on their way to the place of execution of sentences they were poisoned by gas. Berg admitted that he was organizing the execution of sentences using a motor vehicle (gas van), explaining that he was following the instructions of the leadership of the UNKVD MO and that without them it would be impossible to execute such a large number of executions, to which three of them were sentenced at the same time.
From Berg’s interrogations and from conversations that went on among the employees of the NKVD MO, it was known that the sentencing procedure organized by Berg was harsh: those arrested for execution were stripped naked, tied, gagged and thrown into a car. The property of those arrested under the leadership of Berg was plundered .
Later on, Berg did not confirm these testimonies. In the 1960s during rehabilitation, Berg’s testimonies and testimonies about the "gas van" were quite contradictory. Each of the witnesses provided his mutually exclusive version. So, for example, the executor for the enforcement of sentences Chesnokov said that Berg provided the economic needs of the operational group that carried out the sentences (food and clothing allowance) - that's all. The presence of "gas van" was denied by commandant of the NKVD in the Moscow region A.V. Sadovsky. Thus, the version of the existence of "gas van" was actively discussed both in 1956 and in 1962, but it remained unproven.
Further doubt about the allegations [3]
Witness Viktorov, who worked under Berg’s leadership at the Butovo training ground, testified:
“When executing the sentences, I performed the service of guarding the territory where the executions were carried out...The shooting was carried out by a special group. From this group I remember Shinin , CHESNOKOV and Ilyin...The executor for the enforcement of sentences Chesnokov said that Berg provided the economic needs of the operational group that carried out the sentences (food and clothing allowance) - that's all....To the investigator’s question about the “murders”, Chesnokov replied that he knew about special vehicles for delivering convicts to the place of execution. “These cars were equipped with plugs, with which it was possible to let gas into the body. This was done to ensure safety during the delivery of convicts to the place of execution, i.e. in case of a riot in the car. Whether this means was used to pacify the convicts, I do not know. ”
Chesnokov also did not know what relation Berg had to these cars.
Shinin said: “In the period 1936-1937. I had to work in a special zone where the sentence was carried out. I served as the security chief of this zone. In a number of cases, he himself participated in the execution of sentences. Regarding Berg, I can say that he visited our zone often, I saw him together with Semenov, obviously, he was aware of all the events with us ... What were Berg's responsibilities in our zone, I don’t know ... Sentenced people were often shot in the presence of a doctor and a prosecutor "and ..." as required by law "," there were no other means of extermination.
And about commandant Sadovsky also denied the existence of "gas vans" during his work at the Butovo training ground, that is, from January to the end of October 1937 (so the question of gas chambers, although discussed in 1956 and 1962, remained unproven; witnesses who were interested in this case expressed mutually exclusive versions on this subject.)
Waikapu ( talk) 01:03, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Response: (not intending to keep paragraphs readable) Conclusions of the analysis presented above are worth being mentioned in the article but it does not justify removal of existing information. In a controversial subject with opposing opinions, the role of Wikipedia is to report on the controversy rather than average it or take one side. We should definitely not follow the example of Russian Wikipedia of completely removing any trace of NKVD gas vans which has unfortunately happened. I agree that the existing paragraph should be shorter and reworded to indicate the existing controversy of the subject, but not removed. Once again, responding to specific arguments raised above:
Cloud200 ( talk) 13:00, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Well, in my opinion, this edit is simply a removal of sourced information about crimes by the Soviet secret police (NKVD), without any actual reason. Also note that the text was here for a couple of months. So you guys need a consensus to make these changes. My very best wishes ( talk) 04:05, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Administrator note if the content under contention has been challenged since the beginning of it having been added (sorry, I'm not sure about that, either way), then per
WP:ONUS, it cannot be viewed as longstanding text. That is, the burden for retaining edits for either side actually rests on those wishing to add the material, not those wishing to see it removed. One, therefore, need to gain consensus for inclusion —unless, of course, that consensus existed at some point (again, not sure)— rather than gain the consensus for removal. This should provide a rough guide with respect to how an
RfC question ought to be constructed.
El_C
16:01, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Should content sourced to books by Petro Grigorenko and Mikhail Schreider be included to this page, with explicit attribution to the authors, as something similar to last paragraph in this section? The book by the Soviet dissident Grigorenko ("One can meet only rats in the underground") was the first of many publications which revealed, among many other things, the existence of Soviet gas vans in 1930s. The book was published in 1981 in New York in Russian, translated to English as "Memoirs" and received many positive reviews: [11], [12] [13], [14]. Here is some info about Schredier [15]. My very best wishes ( talk) 18:54, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Let me mention that for the following citation, the spelling of Massachusetts is incorrect.
Colton, Timothy J. (1995). Moscow: Governing the Socialist Metropolis. Cambridge, Massachussetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-58749-6.
Thanks KConWiki ( talk) 18:03, 19 January 2020 (UTC)
Would it be possible to alter the sentence "Instead of transporting the victims to the gas chambers, the gas chambers were transported to the victims." so it doesn't read as prose?
Perhaps changing "were transported to the victims" to "were brought to the victims"? This removes the repetition which reads more as narrative rather than factual writing AnonsysL ( talk) 11:19, 8 April 2024 (UTC)
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Now that the moves and merges have settled down for a little bit, we should discuss the section ordering (which was an active dispute before the attempted split, which somewhat froze things because it was unsure how the page would end up.) By my reading the Nazi section had been stable in the first position for a while; looking over the history, it seems like the order was repeatedly swapped, often in edits that didn't mention they were doing so, and that it hasn't really been discussed much because the split drowned it out. In any case, I feel that the Nazi usage has far more sustained coverage and is far more central to the topic, and therefore ought to be listed first. The argument that they should be listed in timeline order doesn't make any sense, since none of the sources connect the two aspects in a timeline (in fact, even hinting at that points to dangerous WP:SYNTH concerns, ie. we absolutely cannot imply, even indirectly, that the Nazi usage was inspired or influenced by the Soviet usage in anyway, shape, or form, because we don't have any sources for that.) Additionally, most of the higher-quality coverage of the Soviet usage relates it to the Nazi usage in the sense of deriving notability from it as a point of comparison (ie. the Yevgenia Albats and Catherine A. Fitzpatrick quote makes no sense if we list the Soviet usage first); they clearly take the position of "here's an obscure bit of historical trivia related to the well-known, well-established use of gas vans by the Nazis." That sort of thing only makes sense when listed second. -- Aquillion ( talk) 01:38, 5 December 2019 (UTC)
I am not quite sure what was the reason for removal [1]. These sources are fine per WP:RS. My very best wishes ( talk) 22:29, 17 December 2019 (UTC)
Gas vans were reportedly used also in the cities of Omsk and Ivanovo in the Soviet Union. According to high-ranking NKVD officer Mikhail Schreder, they were used in the city of Ivanovo similar to that in Moscow: "When a closed truck arrived at the place of execution, all convicts were dragged out of cars in an unconscious state. On the way, they were almost killed by exhaust fumes redirected through a special tube into the closed cargo compartment of the truck." [1] [2] Soviet dissident Petro Grigorenko described in his memoirs a story told by his close friend and former prisoner of Gulag Vasil Teslia. He described killings of " kulaks" in a prison in Omsk. According to him, more than 27 people were loaded to a truck, which moved away from the prison, but soon returned. "When the doors were opened, black smoke poured out and corpses of people rained down." The corpses were then placed into the basement. Teslia watched such executions during whole week. [3] [4]
References
The argument that the vans were intended for "incapacitating victims" would be ridiculous if it wasn't about such horrible events. You can't invent interpretation of NKVD intentions. Anyone who intentionally redirects exhaust fumes into a passenger section must be aware this can and will be lethal for people inside. The abundance of sources on the gas van usage by NKVD, both primary and secondary, fully justifies having it documented here on Wikipedia. The argument that NKVD victims were always "executed after thorough identification" on the other hand suggests cherry-picking or ignorance. Bolsheviks used any means available at given moment for mass executions, from chemical weapons used to suppress Tambov Rebellion, dumping 6000 people on an inhabited island and let them die ( Nazino affair), to death marches and chaotic NKVD prisoner massacres when they were fleeing from German offensive. Cloud200 ( talk) 16:04, 25 December 2019 (UTC)
Responding to other arguments raised above:
Cloud200 ( talk) 21:08, 25 December 2019 (UTC)
Although I think the current version is an improvement, the last paragraph needs rewrite. In my opinion, the question of "priority" of invention of a gas van does not belong to the Soviet gas van section. The literature about Nazi gas van is abundant, and the story of its invention is covered in much more details, so Albats is hardly a really good expert in that. In my opinion, the mainstream view of gas van invention should be described in the Nazi gas van section (or in a separate section), and opinia of Albats, who believes that gas vans were invented in the USSR should be mentioned briefly as a minority viewpoint.-- Paul Siebert ( talk) 19:54, 22 December 2019 (UTC)
So, this pathetic place which used to be Wikipedia sees it fit to protect unsourced accusations of genocide performed my people? I am a Soviet person, who may have been Jewish before, but not anymore. As long as creatures like Albats' are. I'd really love to give her a ride in NKVD gas van, except that it should be blatantly obvious to anyone with any background in engineering or chem how this is BS. Only the picture of Magirus gas van is legit, but the description is not. You cannot suffocate a person by excess CO2 by pumping automotive exhaust into constricted volume! This chocks the engine first. Some automotive enthusiasts actually tried to sticking their heads directly into flared out exhaust pipes for a quickened version of gas van. The result is engine choking right away and enthusiast having a whole mouth full of soot. Youtube also used to have videos of rednecks trying to built a little imitation Ausswitz in their chicken shed, to legitimately off chickens for meat, only to find that they don't choke too.
Now, this how it really works. The can shaped device you see in the back of the van is known as
The Nazis converted over a million vehicles to wood gas, because they had mad chemistry skills but very little fuels. The contraption produces synthesis gas, a combustible mixture rich in CO (carbon monoxide)which really is a deadly toxic gas. I wonder if Greta Tunberg, who can totally see the CO2 (which does nothing much), can also see or sniff monoxide? Because regular people don't see or smell anything before they die. Thus, great Greta should teach us see the difference between the two oxides, I reckon?
As you can see, the device doesn't even have an article in Russian. Thus, I nominate to christen it the "Albats' device"? So the good peoples of Russia know the bad Jewish-Russians who've been selling them out. Note that none of this constitutes any kind of Antisemitism, which is an issue related to various Semites hanging out over in Israel/Palestine, which is a place I've got zero interest in. This is between Russian-Jews. Hypothesis: being Jewish does not yet make one expert on gas chambers of Auschwitz? The only true source of expertise on dangerous gases is Greta Thunberg. How dare you! If she were to debate the operational principles of the gas van with Albats' of yours, she'll so crush her Muchandr ( talk) 00:02, 28 March 2021 (UTC)
References
The same claims in this article were discussed in Russian Wikipedia's article Газваген and they were promptly removed because the content doesn't quite pass the smell test, and I strongly recommend editors to remove the similar deceptions re-appearing on the English Wikipedia. The content is tied to a Komsomolskaya Pravda article published in 1992, a time when the Russian media was awash with sensationalist yellow journalism. I've searched Komsomolskaya Pravda to see if it published any articles in the 21st century related to these allegations, but I didn't come across anything at all, indicating that these allegations are not widely accepted or reported, not even by the very same newspaper in the 21st century. There's no reason why the Komsomolskaya Pravda of 1992 ought to supersede the same newspaper's reporting in the last 20 years, a period from which I did not locate a single story related to "Russians built gas vans". It's curious that the same people who decry the use of "Soviet propaganda", "Russian censored sources" for Wikipedia articles gleefully cite Komsomolskaya Pravda, as well as authors citing that source, when it furthers their goal of showing the Russian government in a negative manner.
This is primarily all I located in Komsomolskaya Reporting about gas vans published in the 21st century:
The Germans tested terrible vehicles on Krasnodar residents.
FSB published documents on how the Nazis buried 214 children in Yeysk
This is all I found in Russian scholarly journals related to gas vans:
"The main goals of the leadership of the GUPVI of the NKVD of the USSR were not the killing of prisoners of war by various methods, but their isolation, the creation of satisfactory living conditions for the representatives of the special contingent, the maximum use of the labor of these foreigners in industry, construction and even in agriculture, as well as the full-scale implementation of anti-fascist measures in detention centers disarmed military personnel of the enemy armies. In the Soviet camps, their leadership did not implement racist or nationalist theories; there were no crematoriums, gas chambers, or gas vans. No medical experiments were conducted on prisoners of war. Life in Udmurtia in particular and in Soviet captivity as a whole was not a complete horror or hell for former soldiers and officers of the Wehrmacht and its allied armies, as was often the case in Hitler's "death factories." Bulletin of Tomsk State University - 2017
From the Holocaust Museum entry on gas vans: After the June 1941 German invasion of the Soviet Union and Einsatzgruppe mass shootings of civilians, the Nazis experimented with gas vans for mass killing. Gas vans were hermetically sealed trucks with engine exhaust diverted to the interior compartment. Use of gas vans began after Einsatzgruppe members complained of battle fatigue and mental anguish caused by shooting large numbers of women and children. Gassing also proved to be less costly. Einsatzgruppen gassed hundreds of thousands of people, mostly Jews, Roma (Gypsies), and mentally ill people.
The article cites Robert Gellately in an effort to provide a bit of academic legitimacy to the "Russians built gas vans" allegations. However, Gellately specifically cited the aforementioned Komsomolskaya Pravda article, and I suspect that he did so after he came across the contents from another author, because the footnotes for the section of Gellately's book about Russia almost entirely consists of secondary sources from America/Britain's equivalent of the "La Leyenda Negra" type of historiography for Russia e.g. Richard Pipes and Orlando Figes. In regard to the sections in his book covering Russia, Gellately's source base does not include very many archival documents, primary sources and contemporary newspapers, and that's probably because he's a specialist on German history rather than Russian history.
I located a specific academic Maria Alexandrovna Solovey, identified as "Associate Professor, Department of Russian History" at Donetsk National University, author of more than 20 scientific publications and author of the monograph "Encyclopedia of Delusions: Third Reich", and she finds the allegations to be very much in doubt and even suggests that there's an anti-Semitic atmosphere surrounding the allegations that Isay Berg, who happened to be Jewish, built gas vans.
There is a misconception that the creator of the famous "gas van"... was the head of the administrative and economic department of the NKVD Directorate for the Moscow Region I.D. Berg. They say that it was he who first guessed that the transportation of the machines and their killing could be successfully combined. So to say, two in one bottle....Moreover, the emphasis is usually placed on the surname of the inventor, similar to German, but still not German, - Berg. The Soviet, or rather, expressed in the language of unfortunate nationalists, the "Jew-Bolshevik" trace in the creation of gas van appeared around the beginning the 1990s. In 1993, in the weekly “Arguments and Facts”, the words of Lieutenant Colonel of the Main Directorate of Security of the Russian Federation A. Oligov were published: “Indeed, the head of the administrative department was the father of the gas chamber - a specially equipped van of the Bread type with an exhaust pipe brought up to the body; Office of the NKVD in Moscow and the Moscow Region I. D. Berg. For its intended purpose - to destroy people - the gas chamber was first used in 1936. In 1939, Berg was shot. ” By the way, there is a version that in 1939 Berg was sentenced to death precisely for the invention of the gas van. The accused himself in court denied having been involved in inventing it. Later, when in 1956 the case of the gas van was reviewed, Berg’s involvement in the gas van was also not proved....We dare to suggest that the Soviet Union did not invent the gas vans. First of all, due to the technical backwardness of the Soviet Union. The fact is that building a mobile gas van is much more difficult than just taking an indoor wagon and bringing its exhaust pipe to it...In addition, diesel engines were used in gas vans, and in the Soviet Union, almost all vehicles were powered by gasoline. So do not be mistaken: if someone in the Soviet Union and made a mobile gas chamber in a particular bread van, then there is no reason to consider it as the “working model” of the murderer that is notorious for the whole world. The technical characteristics of a conventional, non-converted bread van with an exhaust pipe connected to the body do not allow us to consider it a mass execution tool. A truly "death machine" was invented and put on stream in the Third Reich.
A brief discussion about Isay Berg: [2]
The cited source is "Jews in the Soviet NKVD, 1936-1938", Mikhail Tumshis, Vadim Zolotarev. Tumshis is cited in this Oxford University Book: On NKVD clans, see, for example...M.Tumshis, VChk: Voina Klanov (Moscow: Eksmo, 2004) Tumshis is described as, "historian, archivist, independent researcher. Former employee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Samara. Research interests: history of Russian state security agencies, history of Russian police and police, history of the USSR. The author of 6 books, about 2 dozen articles. In 2003-2010 employee of the personnel department of the Samara branch of the Saratov Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia." He wrote:
The materials of the archival criminal case against I. D. Berg contain the following evidence: “... Berg was then the head of the task force to enforce the decisions of the three UNKVD MO. With his participation, vehicles were created, the so-called gas van. Those vehicles transported those arrested and sentenced to be shot, and on their way to the place of execution of sentences they were poisoned by gas. Berg admitted that he was organizing the execution of sentences using a motor vehicle (gas van), explaining that he was following the instructions of the leadership of the UNKVD MO and that without them it would be impossible to execute such a large number of executions, to which three of them were sentenced at the same time.
From Berg’s interrogations and from conversations that went on among the employees of the NKVD MO, it was known that the sentencing procedure organized by Berg was harsh: those arrested for execution were stripped naked, tied, gagged and thrown into a car. The property of those arrested under the leadership of Berg was plundered .
Later on, Berg did not confirm these testimonies. In the 1960s during rehabilitation, Berg’s testimonies and testimonies about the "gas van" were quite contradictory. Each of the witnesses provided his mutually exclusive version. So, for example, the executor for the enforcement of sentences Chesnokov said that Berg provided the economic needs of the operational group that carried out the sentences (food and clothing allowance) - that's all. The presence of "gas van" was denied by commandant of the NKVD in the Moscow region A.V. Sadovsky. Thus, the version of the existence of "gas van" was actively discussed both in 1956 and in 1962, but it remained unproven.
Further doubt about the allegations [3]
Witness Viktorov, who worked under Berg’s leadership at the Butovo training ground, testified:
“When executing the sentences, I performed the service of guarding the territory where the executions were carried out...The shooting was carried out by a special group. From this group I remember Shinin , CHESNOKOV and Ilyin...The executor for the enforcement of sentences Chesnokov said that Berg provided the economic needs of the operational group that carried out the sentences (food and clothing allowance) - that's all....To the investigator’s question about the “murders”, Chesnokov replied that he knew about special vehicles for delivering convicts to the place of execution. “These cars were equipped with plugs, with which it was possible to let gas into the body. This was done to ensure safety during the delivery of convicts to the place of execution, i.e. in case of a riot in the car. Whether this means was used to pacify the convicts, I do not know. ”
Chesnokov also did not know what relation Berg had to these cars.
Shinin said: “In the period 1936-1937. I had to work in a special zone where the sentence was carried out. I served as the security chief of this zone. In a number of cases, he himself participated in the execution of sentences. Regarding Berg, I can say that he visited our zone often, I saw him together with Semenov, obviously, he was aware of all the events with us ... What were Berg's responsibilities in our zone, I don’t know ... Sentenced people were often shot in the presence of a doctor and a prosecutor "and ..." as required by law "," there were no other means of extermination.
And about commandant Sadovsky also denied the existence of "gas vans" during his work at the Butovo training ground, that is, from January to the end of October 1937 (so the question of gas chambers, although discussed in 1956 and 1962, remained unproven; witnesses who were interested in this case expressed mutually exclusive versions on this subject.)
Waikapu ( talk) 01:03, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Response: (not intending to keep paragraphs readable) Conclusions of the analysis presented above are worth being mentioned in the article but it does not justify removal of existing information. In a controversial subject with opposing opinions, the role of Wikipedia is to report on the controversy rather than average it or take one side. We should definitely not follow the example of Russian Wikipedia of completely removing any trace of NKVD gas vans which has unfortunately happened. I agree that the existing paragraph should be shorter and reworded to indicate the existing controversy of the subject, but not removed. Once again, responding to specific arguments raised above:
Cloud200 ( talk) 13:00, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Well, in my opinion, this edit is simply a removal of sourced information about crimes by the Soviet secret police (NKVD), without any actual reason. Also note that the text was here for a couple of months. So you guys need a consensus to make these changes. My very best wishes ( talk) 04:05, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Administrator note if the content under contention has been challenged since the beginning of it having been added (sorry, I'm not sure about that, either way), then per
WP:ONUS, it cannot be viewed as longstanding text. That is, the burden for retaining edits for either side actually rests on those wishing to add the material, not those wishing to see it removed. One, therefore, need to gain consensus for inclusion —unless, of course, that consensus existed at some point (again, not sure)— rather than gain the consensus for removal. This should provide a rough guide with respect to how an
RfC question ought to be constructed.
El_C
16:01, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Should content sourced to books by Petro Grigorenko and Mikhail Schreider be included to this page, with explicit attribution to the authors, as something similar to last paragraph in this section? The book by the Soviet dissident Grigorenko ("One can meet only rats in the underground") was the first of many publications which revealed, among many other things, the existence of Soviet gas vans in 1930s. The book was published in 1981 in New York in Russian, translated to English as "Memoirs" and received many positive reviews: [11], [12] [13], [14]. Here is some info about Schredier [15]. My very best wishes ( talk) 18:54, 26 December 2019 (UTC)
Let me mention that for the following citation, the spelling of Massachusetts is incorrect.
Colton, Timothy J. (1995). Moscow: Governing the Socialist Metropolis. Cambridge, Massachussetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-58749-6.
Thanks KConWiki ( talk) 18:03, 19 January 2020 (UTC)
Would it be possible to alter the sentence "Instead of transporting the victims to the gas chambers, the gas chambers were transported to the victims." so it doesn't read as prose?
Perhaps changing "were transported to the victims" to "were brought to the victims"? This removes the repetition which reads more as narrative rather than factual writing AnonsysL ( talk) 11:19, 8 April 2024 (UTC)