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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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88 |
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LIFE UNWORTHY OF LIFE: THE
GENETIC CURE |
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Psychiatrists in Religious Institutions
Resistive psychiatrists and church leaders probably influenced each
other more than has been generally recognized, but still in sporadic and
limited fashion. Psychiatrists working within church institutions, however,
could at times become part of more sustained and shared forms of resistance. At
Schussenried, a Protestant psychiatric institution, the chief physician, a Dr.
Götz, had a violent quarrel with the expert on the
euthanasia physicians commission because he
consistently evaluated [the work capacity] of the patients much too
low. Dr. Götz remembered a previous situation in which
patients had been sent to their deaths; now he felt that the visitor
put responsibility on [him for selecting patients for death], which was
impossible for him to bear. He had been ordered to cooperate in the
matter by the Württemberg minister of the interior, and was therefore
aware that he had not followed an order from the office of his superior
and ... that some day he would have to account for this.23 That sense of potential guilt for patients
deaths could be a powerful fulcrum for resistance, especially in men with a
strong Christian conscience.
Dr. Rudolph Boeckh, chief psychiatrist at
the Evangelical Lutheran institution at Neuendettelsau (the site of the
invasion of medical students and typists [see page 67]) was blunt in declaring
the commissions method of operation prejudiced and contrary to all
medical practice. He added, Since the final purpose of these
reports on patients is known to the public, a heavy responsibility is imposed
on me as the chief doctor, ... even if several commissions are brought in prior
to the final decision.24
In
both cases, we see a tendency to protest the criteria and methods of operation
rather than the overall project itself (a much more difficult, and probably
more dangerous undertaking): thus, Dr. Boeckh, for example, demanded the
questionnaires be returned so that he could fill them out adequately.25
That kind of compromise pressing to save as many patients as possible
while surrendering those one felt unable to save was frequent.
Perhaps the most notable psychiatric resistance from within a church
setting came from Dr. Karsten Jasperson, chief physician at the psychiatric
institution at Bethel (separate from the associated institution for
epileptics). As a Nazi Party member since 1931, Jasperson could go so far as to
institute criminal proceedings against police groups associated with murder
arrangements; refuse to fill out questionnaires, claiming that to, do so was
aiding and abetting murder according to existing criminal law; try
to win support for that position from senior academic physicians, including his
own Professor Rüdin (with whom he had little success) and Professor August
Bostroem of Leipzig (who was responsive and apparently went on to make contact
with Ewald). Jaspersons resistance could |
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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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Page 88 |
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