![]() FILM ID 3755 - Camera Rolls 5-10 In the new gas chamber perhaps 200 could fit in at a time and 3,000 people could be "done" in two hours. Under Wirth, a new gas chamber was built in September. Lanzmann questions the use of Germans, but Suchomel insists that they were ordered to do so. When Wirth came, he forced Germans and Jewish prisoners to move the piles of corpses to the trenches. Suchomel confirms that the method was carbon monoxide from a truck motor, rather than Zyklon B. Many had to wait in the barracks up to three days without food and only a bucket of water because of gas chambers' lack of capacity. Some even jockeyed for position, not knowing they were going to their deaths. Suchomel describes "the tube" in which 100 men or women were sent to the gas chambers at a time. He says that the Poles were not fond of the Jews but they were also scared. FILM ID 3754 - Camera Rolls 3-4 Wirth reorganized the Germans, and assigned Suchomel to be head of the "Gold Jews." Lanzmann asks if the Poles in the surrounding villages could smell the odor and Suchomel says everyone knew what was going on in the camp. ![]() At this point, there were no "worker Jews," as all the Jews dragging corpses into the trenches were chased into the gas chambers in the evening or shot. A new commandant, Christian Wirth, was able to stop the transports so that the corpses could be buried. Suchomel hid out and drank vodka to adjust to "the inferno." He says that he learned that the corpses stacked at the railroad tracks were from three daily trains carrying 5,000 people, of whom 3,000 fell out dead on arrival, many by suicide. It was the height of the liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto, and during a tour of the camp, he saw the doors of the gas chamber being opened and people falling out "like potatoes." Suchomel and his group were crying "like old women," and Suchomel asked Eberl, the Commandant, to be sent back to Berlin, but Eberl told him he would be sent to the front with the Waffen SS, a sure death. FILM ID 3753 - Camera Rolls 1-2 Lanzmann asks Suchomel to describe his arrival at Treblinka and Suchomel tells of his shock at finding himself with seven other Germans from Berlin in a concentration camp, whereas in Berlin, he had been told he would be going to a resettlement area, supervising tailors and shoemakers. In the outtakes, Suchomel provides further details about the treatment of Jews at the camp, as well as a more ambivalent memory of his experiences than is apparent in the released "SHOAH". This was the first interview Lanzmann filmed with the newly developed hidden camera known as the Paluche, and he paid Suchomel 500 DM. ![]() Lanzmann interviewed Franz Suchomel, who was with the SS at Treblinka, in secret at the Hotel Post in April 1976. He was chief editor of the journal "Les Temps Modernes," which was founded by Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, until his death on July 5, 2018. In 2009, Lanzmann published his memoirs under the title "Le lièvre de Patagonie" (The Patagonian Hare). He began interviewing survivors, historians, witnesses, and perpetrators in 1973 and finished editing the film in 1985. Lanzmann's most renowned work, Shoah, is widely regarded as the seminal film on the subject of the Holocaust. He is the father of Angélique Lanzmann, born in 1950, and Félix Lanzmann (1993-2017). Later, he married Angelika Schrobsdorff, a German-Jewish writer, and then Dominique Petithory in 1995. In 1963 he married French actress Judith Magre. From 1952 to 1959 he lived with Simone de Beauvoir. Lanzmann opposed the French war in Algeria and signed a 1960 antiwar petition. He joined the French resistance at the age of 18 and fought in the Auvergne. His family went into hiding during World War II. He attended the Lycée Blaise-Pascal in Clermont-Ferrand. Claude Lanzmann was born in Paris to a Jewish family that immigrated to France from Eastern Europe.
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