Iris wrote:How far down did they have to dig to get to the "ashes"?
I now found an article where they said that it was about 1.5 meters (https://olsztyn.tvp.pl/61266399/w-lesie-bialuckim-odkryto-dwa-masowe-groby-z-prochami-ofiar-kl-soldau):
> "We discovered two mass graves; one was 28 meters long, the other 12 meters. The pits are about 3 meters deep" - said Jankowski, adding that the layer of human ashes started about 1.5 meters under the forest litter.
The article linked above also said that the items they found had low material value:
> Archaeologists found several hundred artifacts in the burial pits in the Białuty forest, incl. buttons, scapulars and crosses, and paper cutters. Prosecutor Jankowski said that these are things of low material value, which is confirmed by the robbing of the corpse before burning it, and in addition, these artifacts are not personalized enough to be able to reach their owners or their families with their help.
However in 2019, the IPN said that the items they found included religious medals and wedding rings (https://gdansk.ipn.gov.pl/pl2/aktualnosci/80334,Odnaleziono-grob-cialopalny-Bialuty-2631-pazdziernika-2019.html). I wonder how come the Nazis didn't remove the wedding rings before they buried the ashes, because the IPN says that the Nazis extracted bone fragments from the ashes and ground them up with a ball mill.
I earlier thought that the place where they did the excavations in 2022 and 2019 may have been about 1 km east-northeast of the memorial site (because on Google Maps, that spot looks somewhat similar to the aerial photos of the excavation site, where you can see that on the opposite side of the road from the excavation site, there's an obtuse angle in the area of the forest that has not been cleared out). But one article about the 2022 dig said that "About one hundred meters from the place where the Institute of National Remembrance conducted its research, there is a monument 'Victims of Hitler's Crimes'." (https://radioolsztyn.pl/w-lesie-odkryto-masowe-groby-z-prochami-wiezniow-niemieckiego-obozu/01646917)
The same article also said that the victims in Białuty were "most probably buried in three mass graves" (even though at the memorial site there's supposed to be five different spots where the victims were buried):
> The research carried out by the Institute of National Remembrance is to specify these numbers. They were mainly prisoners of the German concentration camp in Działdowo. The murdered were most probably buried in three mass graves in an area that covered about 200 hectares of dense forest.
> In 2019, one of the execution sites in the Białuty Forest was started by the Institute of National Remembrance.
Apparently some historians say that only around 1000-3000 people may have died in Soldau, but the IPN is trying to use these phony excavations to establish a higher minimum limit for the death toll at Soldau (https://polskieradio24.pl/39/156/artykul/3001776,ipn-odnalazl-prochy-8-tysiecy-osob-zamordowanych-przez-niemcow-w-obozie-w-dzialdowie):
> Tomasz Jankowski emphasized that the discovery of these two burial pits is extremely important for the knowledge of the scale of German crimes in Działdowo.
> - In the historical space, in the public space, it is assumed that from one thousand to three thousand people died in the camp in Działdowo. Many people believe that 30,000 people died here. During the investigation, we identified three thousand victims by name and surname, but we were sure that there were many more of these people. For this reason, this place is a breakthrough for us, because we are able to say that at least eight thousand people died in the Działdowo camp. Nobody will say that these are empty graves, nobody will question the crimes committed by the Germans anymore - he explained.