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					 | Dr Robert Jay Lifton | THE NAZI DOCTORS: Medical
						Killing and
						the
 Psychology
						of Genocide ©
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					 | LIFE UNWORTHY OF LIFE: THE
						GENETIC CURE |   
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					 | least indirect professional and psychiatric support for
						other psychiatrists efforts at resistance, however partial.5* 
 A psychiatrist for whom
						Bonhoeffers influence was said to be crucial was Professor Hans Gerhard
						Creutzfeldt of Kiel. One of just two members of the medical faculty who did not
						join the Nazi Party, Creutzfeldt was somewhat protected by his academic dean,
						who discreetly let him know how far he could go in his anti-Nazi stance.
						Creutzfeldt went farther than most, and is said to have managed to protect most
						or all of the patients in his institution from the project. One psychiatrist
						told me that Creutzfeldt was known to have attacked euthanasia
						during his lectures, declaring, They are murderers! and was able to
						get away with it because the Nazis thought him very eccentric or even a
						little mad. Close relatives I interviewed doubted that he would
						have been able to say such things directly. In any case, he was perceived as
						being capable of uttering that truth.
 
 
 Certain Medical Objections :
						Gottfried Ewald
 
 Just one psychiatrist Professor Gottfried
						Ewald of Göttingen, openly opposed the medical-killing project. (But see
						the footnote on page 87 and pages 88-89.) Ewald had sufficient standing with
						the regime to be invited to become a leader in the medical killing project,
						sufficient personal and professional humanitarianism to refuse for reasons of
						principle, and sufficient courage to distribute his extensive critique of the
						program to high medical authorities.
 
 At a planning meeting called by
						Werner Heyde, on 15 August 1940, to enlist prominent psychiatrists, Ewald
						refused to participate in the project and was asked to leave. He remembered
						Heyde presiding at a long table, explaining that the
						euthanizing must continue because, even though hospital beds
						were no longer urgently needed by the military, the institutions still had to
						be freed of patients, since one does not know what is going
						to happen. It would be the task of the assembled psychiatric leaders to
						become experts or senior experts, which meant rendering
						judgments on whether patients were to be euthanized (euthanisiert).
						Heyde reported that there were plans to expand the program to senile and
						tubercular patients, and that Hitler was about to sign a law (whose text could
						be seen in the next room) that would provide "judicial security."7 
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					 | __________ * It must be said that
						Bonhoeffer originally favored sterilization and, moreover, did not take a
						strong stand against the Nazification of German universities, as he later had
						the candor to admit (Unfortunately, neither I nor any of the other
						professors had the courage to get up and walk out in protest against the
						insulting attitude adopted by the Minister [for education and cultural affairs,
						Bernhard Rust] towards the academic profession).6 He did, however, struggle to maintain an
						atmosphere of decency and balanced professional work in his department.
 
  Creutzfeldt later played a central role in exposing Werner Heyde
						and bringing him to trial (see page 119).
 
  This text  if
						there actually was one  could have been the draft for such a law which,
						as we know, was never implemented.
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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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