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 | | Transported to AL Trzebinia, it was permanently installed in a small brick building, 7.30 m long, 3.15 m wide and 2,50 m high, with a corrugated iron roof from which a chimney projected to a height of 4,80 m [Photos 6 and 7 and Drawing 12]. |
 | | If the furnaces was used, there is no question of talking about its cremation performance, which could be estimated at one corpse a day, for it would never have operated continuously, its role being strictly sanitary, nothing whatever to do with mass extermination. |
 | | Somewhere between 1970 and 1975, the Trzebinia furnace was transported to the Auschwitz museum and installed in the laying out room of Krematorium l, where visitors can see it today and reflect on the fact that either it was never used, or it reduced to ashes a maximum of fifty unfortunate Jewish slave laborers. |
| www.mazal.org /Pressac/Pressac0116.htm (607 words) |
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