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					 | Dr Robert Jay Lifton | THE NAZI DOCTORS: Medical
						Killing and
						the
 Psychology
						of Genocide ©
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				209 |   
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					 | Socialization to Killing |   
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					 | as one SS doctor recalled years later: One could
						react like a normal human being in Auschwitz only for the first few hours. Once
						one had spent some time there, it was impossible to react normally. In that
						setup everyone was sullied. And SS doctors, as a survivor added, were
						doing what the society wants you to do. 
 Dr. Henri Q, noting
						angrily that doctors who are to care for the sick instead
						participated in such a massacre without resisting, pointed out that
						only one SS doctor (and there is actually some doubt about him) asked to be
						sent to the Russian front instead. Dr. Q. contrasted that record with
						consistent resistance by prisoner doctors who risked their lives changing lists
						and protecting people from selections in various ways. And he observed closely
						the relationship between routinization and extreme moral blunting  the
						relaxed manner of gentlemen who came and went described
						in the epigraph to this chapter. And the prisoner doctor Magda V. pointed out
						(as did the SS doctor Ernst B.) that, whatever the difference in the Nazi
						doctors attitudes toward selections, they did them as part of their
						job  with such compliance that I think those bastards knew
						what they came for.
 
 But Dr. V. nonetheless noticed that doctors
						could behave differently from one another. One factor was fear. Of Dr.
						König, she said that he took more people from the medical blocks in
						selections than he need have taken because he was scared, and
						added, [Among SS doctors] there [werent] ... many brave men there
						.... We didnt get the cream of . . . humanity.
 
 The doctors
						were affected as well by the impending German defeat. Some became considerably
						more pleasant and helpful, looking for the support from liberated prisoners
						they knew they would soon need. But some had a reverse reaction, selecting
						people to die all the more energetically; as Dr. Lottie M. observed, it
						seemed to them more necessary to believe that they [were] right .... Somehow
						you felt them say, We are still right. Individual
						psychological attitudes toward women and men could also be important in ways to
						be discussed. Dr. M. told me, for instance, that Rohde was relatively
						considerate to women prisoner doctors  and, in fact, was especially
						active in arranging release from the camp of pregnant non-Jewish women inmates
						(made possible by later Auschwitz rules)  but was at the same time
						an awful man toward the men.
 
 Another element was their
						education and general knowledge. The Polish doctor Tadeusz S. stressed that
						they were not educated doctors, did not understand either
						human beings or medicine, and sometimes resembled medical students whose
						basic ignorance enabled them to think of fantastic experiments, all
						the more so when combined with Nazi ideology. This ignorance was greatest in
						older SS doctors who had been early Nazis, the medical version of the old
						fighters. But Dr. S. was referring to the overall Nazi impairment of the
						profession and to medical versions of the Nazi pseudo intellectual: the
						half-educated visionary,
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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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