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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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121 |
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(see pages 126-27) activities since late 1918, joined the
Nazi Party in 1931, and fled to Germany in 1934 following the failed putsch
against the Dollfuss regime, in which he may have been involved. By 1936, he
was active not only in the SS but in the SD; later it was officially understood
that he should publicly camouflage these affiliations.* Similarly, while
attending an early organizational meeting of the euthanasia program
in 1939, de Crinis was said to have demonstrated a positive
attitude toward all that was worked out, but was permitted to decline to
serve as an expert for personal reasons. He was, however, active in
the SS Race and Settlement Office and, in 1941, became medical director of the
Ministry of Education. He also took part in at least one bizarre intelligence
mission to Holland as the impersonator of a military officer involved in a plot
against Hitler.22
At his university
and hospital in Berlin, de Crinis was reputed to have been charming
and professorial in style. While his close Nazi connections were well known, he
went to great pains to keep secret his euthanasia involvement, even
to the point of appearing to be an opponent of medical killing. For instance,
there was an incident, related to me by a doctor I interviewed, of a severely
hydrocephalic child being brought to de Crinis for examination by him and his
assistant. But when, the question arose whether the child should be transferred
into a channel leading to euthanasia, de Crinis spoke sharply in
the negative: He has to go somewhere else. (After examining Hitler
and diagnosing his Parkinsons disease, de Crinis also became involved in
high-level, medically centered intrigue with Schellenberg, Himmler, and Conti
concerning an armistice in the West. 23)
Word eventually got around the university and hospital about de
Criniss activities, and it is said that Bonhoeffer confronted him on some
of these matters. Yet de Crinis did protect Charité patients from
medical killing. And he actively pursued scientific work on the somatic basis
for psychiatric disorders and for the emotions in general. De Crinis was a
spokesman for the psychiatric establishment in attacking psychogenic
assumptions and resisting nonmedical psychotherapy. Indeed, psychotherapy as
such was suspect as a Jewish pursuit.
Aside from any
reasons de Crinis may have had to hide the extent of his euthanasia
and SS involvements, his pattern reveals a manifest doubling
process (see chapters 19 and 20). It is possible that de Crinis, to a
significant degree, inwardly maintained his sense of being a proper academic
psychiatrist an older self that coexisted somewhat
autonomously with his Nazified euthanasia and SS-intelligence self.
This latter self, constructed from Nazi ideological fervor and grandiosity,
enabled him to carry out his important role in direct medical killing. De
Crinis killed himself on 1 May 1945 in the prescribed Nazi manner by swallowing
cyanide.24 A historian of the Charité
Hospital claimed in 1963 that, |
__________ * There is evidence of an
official policy of euthanasia physicians obscuring their SS
connections, but de Crinis seemed to carry this out to an extreme degree.
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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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