Part II - Scholarly Avoidance
Mattogno’s Holocaust Handbooks Volume 23 on Chełmno was first published in 2009 (Italian) and in 2011 (English), with a "2nd revised edition" in 2017.
Key scholarly works on the extermination of Jews in the Reichsgau Warthegau include
- Michael Alberti’s Die Verfolgung und Vernichtung der Juden im Reichsgau Warthegau (2006)
- Shmuel Krakowski’s Das Todeslager Chelmno/Kulmhof: Der Beginn der 'Endlösung' (2007)
- Peter Klein’s Die Gettoverwaltung Litzmannstadt 1940-1944 (2009)
- Patrick Montague’s Chelmno and the Holocaust: The History of Hitler’s First Death Camp (2012).
Of these four major studies, Mattogno
references only Krakowski's work, which is arguably the least
comprehensive of the group, rather than engaging with the strongest and
most recent scholarship. Furthermore, Mattogno appears unaware of Łucja
Pawlicka-Nowak’s Chełmno Witnesses Speak (2004), a critical source
collection. As a result, his work was already outdated at the time of
its first publication and even more obsolete by the time of the revised
edition.
This omission is not merely a matter of quantity, but it has a significant qualitative impact. Montague's research, for instance, offers more thoroughly sourced and detailed synthesis of Chełmno's history than Krakowski's book. Alberti and Klein, meanwhile, provide nuanced analyses of Nazi policies connected to Chełmno and leverage official Nazi documents effectively.
On pages 23 to 29, Mattogno touches Nazi policy with tons of full quotes - he seems to take the view that the extermination of Jews in the Warthegau would have required an overarching, pre-existing plan to kill all European Jews. Mattogno appears oblivious to the regional and situational policies and of escalation and shifts over time - and of decades of historical scholarship that examines the evolution and nuances of Nazi policy toward Jews.
In conclusion, Mattogno's approach to literature research and keeping his work up-to-date is nothing short of abysmal. His refusal to engage with the extensive body of scholarship on Chełmno / Nazi policy suggests he might have spent more time avoiding books than actually reading them.
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