The Riegner telegram was a telegraph message sent on 8 August 1942 from Gerhart Riegner, then Secretary of World Jewish Congress (Geneva), to its New York and London offices.[1] The cable confirmed the alarming reports that had reached the West previously about the German intention to mass murder the European Jews.[2]
Riegner was office manager of the WJC in Geneva. He was indirectly informed about the German plans for the final solution by German industrialist Eduard Schulte.[3] Through his British and American diplomatic channels (Rabbi Stephen Samuel Wise of the American Jewish Congress in New York and Sydney Silverman, a Jewish Member of Parliament and Chairman of the British Section, World Jewish Congress) Riegner sent the following message to his contacts via the British Foreign Office and the State Department in Washington:[4]
Received alarming report stating that, in the Fuehrer's Headquarters, a plan has been discussed, and is under consideration, according to which all Jews in countries occupied or controlled by Germany numbering 3½ to 4 millions should, after deportation and concentration in the East, be at one blow exterminated, in order to resolve, once and for all the Jewish question in Europe. Action is reported to be planned for the autumn. Ways of execution are still being discussed including the use of prussic acid. We transmit this information with all the necessary reservation, as exactitude cannot be confirmed by us. Our informant is reported to have close connexions with the highest German authorities, and his reports are generally reliable. Please inform and consult New York.[5]
However, in England and the United States, Riegner's telegram was met with disbelief. The US State Department considered the telegram "a wild rumor, fueled by Jewish anxieties" while the British Foreign Office didn't forward the telegram for some time. Only on the 28 August 1942 did it find its way to the President of the World Jewish Congress, Rabbi Stephen Wise.[6] On the advice of Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles, Wise decided to not make it public until confirmation had been received from State Department sources.[6] When that happened in November, Wise held a press conference about it but it received little attention until the Bergson Group began to publicise it.[6]
See also
edit- Jäger Report, 1941
- Einsatzgruppen reports, 1941–1942
- Wilhelm Cornides Report, 1942
- Wannsee Conference, 1942
- Raczyński's Note, 1942
- Pilecki's Report, 1943
- Katzmann Report, 1943
- Korherr Report, 1943
- Gerstein Report, 1945
- Vrba-Wetzler Report
- Karski's reports
- Allied knowledge of the atrocities
- Höfle telegram containing German statistics on the 1942 killings
- Special Prosecution Book-Poland, 1937–1939
- Bibliography of the Holocaust § Primary Sources
Notes
edit- ^ Bauer, Yehuda (2001). Rethinking the Holocaust (Yale University Press, New Haven and London) p.219
- ^ Gutman, Israel, ed. (1990). Encyclopedia of the Holocaust. New York: Mamillan Publishing Co. pp. 36, 333. ISBN 978-0028645278.
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ignored (help) - ^ Hilberg, Raul (2003). The Destruction of the European Jews (3rd ed.). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 1201. ISBN 9780300095579. Schulte informed Isidor Koppelmann (business associate), who informed Benjamin Sagalowitz (head of the press agency of the Union of Jewish Communities in Switzerland), who in turn informed Riegner.
- ^ "Riegner Telegram". United States Library of Congress.
- ^ The National Archives, UK copy of the Riegner Telegram (colour copy of document).
- ^ a b c Yehuda Bauer (2012). "The Holocaust, America, and American Jewry" (PDF). Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs. VI (1). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 March 2012.
References
edit- 70 Years Ago: Riegner Telegram alerts world about Nazi Holocaust - World Jewish Congress website
- The National Archives UK copy of the Riegner Telegram
- Günter Schubert: Der Fleck auf Uncle Sams weißer Weste. Amerika und die jüdischen Flüchtlinge 1938–1945., Campus Verlag, Frankfurt/New York
- Heiner Lichtenstein: "Warum Auschwitz nicht bombardiert wurde", Köln 1980
- Walter Laqueur: Was niemand wissen wollte. Die Unterdrückung der Nachricht über Hitlers Endlösung", Frankfurt a. M. 1981
- Gerhard M. Riegner: "Niemals verzweifeln. Sechzig Jahre für das jüdische Volk und die Menschenrechte" Gerlingen 2001
- Portraits Parlés: Interview and portraits of Gerhard M. Riegner by Ariane Laroux, éditions of L'Age d'Homme. (2006)
- Michael Berenaum: "A Promise to Remember" Bulfinch Press 2003