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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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31 |
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Sterilization and the Nazi Biomedical
Vision 31 |
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Physicians could thrill to that message. Dr. S., for
instance, described joining the Party immediately after hearing Deputy Party
Leader Rudolf Hess say, at a mass meeting in 1934, National Socialism is
nothing but applied biology. And in his work of Nazi medical organizing,
this doctor saw himself as primarily spreading a biological message: We
wanted to put into effect the laws of life, which are biological laws.
His medical faction was disdainful of any politics that did not follow that
principle: We understood National Socialism from the biological side
we introduced biological considerations into [Party] policies. He
stressed the conviction that physicians alone possess the necessary combination
of theoretical knowledge and direct human experience to serve as the authentic
biological evangelists: Every practitioner has much more knowledge about
biology than a philosopher or what have you, because he has seen it.
At the same time, it was claimed that the desired identity of the Nazi
physician evolved naturally from medical tradition a tradition that now
required Germanizing and eugenicizing. One lavishly
illustrated volume by two medical historians was entitled The Face of the
Germanic Doctor over Four Centuries. It featured Paracelsus, the great
sixteenth-century Swiss-German physician-alchemist, and praised him for both
his scientific empiricism and his nationalism. He was quoted as saying,
Each country developed its own sickness, medicine, and its own
doctor. More recent German scientists, especially Carl Correns who did
pioneering work in plant genetics, were hailed as having created the
foundation for the eugenic and racial-biological measures of the National
Socialist peoples state. The authors SS ranks are included;*
and the introduction by Ernst Robert Grawitz, chief physician of the SS, puts
forward the concept of the physician, past and present, as the protector
of life who "knows himself to be deeply obligated to the future of our
Volk.28
Another
such introduction to a volume on medical ethics was written by Joachim
Mrugowsky, a high-ranking SS doctor who became head of the Hygienic Institute,
which was responsible for maintaining and dis- [
tributing] |
__________ * The SS
(Schutzstafel, or defense squadron) began as Hitlers personal
guard unit. Particularly after 1929, under the control of Heinrich Himmler, it
advertised itself as an élite corps whose members fit the ideal Aryan
model. As such, it attracted considerable support from the aristocracy and
professional classes, including physicians. The SS grew in power and influence
by purging the less disciplined and lower-class SA in 1934, then by its
assumption of control over all police forces during the late 1930s. Himmler
purportedly modeled the SS on the Jesuits, with absolute obedience sworn to
Hitler. The SS came to be divided into a number of units, including the SD
(Sicherheitsdienst, or Security Service), the Office of Race and Settlement,
and the WVHA (Wirtschafts-und Verwaltungshauptamt, or Economic and
Administrative Department), which administered the concentration camps. The
Waffen-SS, or armed SS, amounted to a separate army, indeed existed in rivalry
with the regular Wehrmacht. Its units were most involved in the atrocities of
the Einsatzgruppen during the early part of the war. During the war the
Waffen-SS became increasingly independent and acted more as a regular military
force. Utilizing relatively large numbers of ethnic Germans from
outside the Reich from the outset, after 1942 it depended upon conscription to
maintain its forces.
The concept of Germanic
physicians included Austrians, Dutch, Belgians, and
Scandinavians. |
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THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical Killing and the Psychology of
Genocide Robert J. Lifton ISBN 0-465-09094 ©
1986 |
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