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The Höfle Telegram[1] (or
Hoefle Telegram) is a document discovered in 2000
among recently declassified World War II
materials from the Public Record Office in Kew, England. The document consists of
two messages, one to SS Obersturmbannführer Adolf Eichmann in
Berlin, and one to SS
Obersturmbannführer Heim, in Cracow, sent by SS Sturmbannführer Hermann Höfle
on January 11 1943. It gave arrivals in the prior fortnight, and
cumulative arrivals, for the camps of Einsatz Reinhardt
(later more commonly called Aktion Reinhard) to
December 31, 1942.
Translation
This is a decoded message, presumably from an Enigma coded
message. A missing "5" is added in the table, and is considered to
be the correct figure, because (1) The number 713555 yields the
correct total of 1274166, and (2) These figures were quoted
verbatim in the Korherr Report, with the exception of
the "71355", which was given as "713555" by Korherr. The British
decoded version would be almost certainly a transcription error.
Since British security clearly did not realise what this telegram
was about (see above), it is unlikely that the mistake would have
been noticed at the time. Note that the interception and decoding
was not 100% accurate, as indicated by "?" and the remarks in
square brackets.
12. OMX de OMQ 1000 89 ? ?
State secret! To the Reich Security Main Office, for the
attention of SS
Obersturmbannführer EICHMANN, BERLIN [gap, rest missed]
13/15. OLQ de OMQ 1005 83 234 250
State secret! To the commander of the Security Police, for the attention
of SS Obersturmbannführer HEIM, CRACOW. Re: 14-day report operation
REINHARD. Reference: radio telegram from there Recorded
arrivals until 31 December 42, L 12761, B 0, S 515, T 10335
totaling 23611. Situation [gap] 31 December 42, L 24733, B 434508,
S 101370, T 71355, totaling 1274166. SS and police leader of Lublin, HÖFLE, Sturmbannführer.
For clarity the figures may be arranged as a table:[2]
Importance of the
document
According to the US National Security
Agency[Dead Link], "It appears the British
analysts who had decrypted the message missed the significance of
this particular message at the time. No doubt this happened because
the message itself contained only the identifying letters for the
extermination camps followed by the numerical totals. The only clue
would have been the reference to Operation Reinhard, the meaning of
which – the plan to eliminate Polish Jewry that was named after the
assassinated SS General Reinhard Heydrich – also probably was
unknown at the time to the codebreakers at Bletchley."
This document is only the second to detail the numbers involved
in the execution of Einsatz Reinhardt (the other is Korherr’s report,
which makes use of the figures in this radio telegram).
Apart from indicating the numbers for 1942, it also indicates
that the camp at Lublin (Majdanek), was part of Odilo
Globocnik's "Einsatz Reinhardt", a fact that historians
previously had not realised.
The discovery of these exact numbers has raised questions as to
where the Jews that were admitted to the respective camps came
from. At this stage it is still speculative.[2]
References
- ^
Public Record Office, Kew, England, HW 16/23, decode GPDD 355a
distributed on January 15, 1943, radio telegrams nos 12 and 13/15,
transmitted on January 11, 1943.
- ^ a
b
Peter Witte and Stephen Tyas, “A New Document on the Deportation
and Murder of Jews during ‘Einsatz Reinhardt’ 1942,” Holocaust and
Genocide Studies 15:3 (2001) pp. 468-486.