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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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Page
225 |
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Prisoner Doctors: The Agony of Selections
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N., for instance, told of a courageous prisoner physician
whom she considered a heroine of abortions.
On one
occasion, Dr. N. herself was present when the Hungariandoctor induced labor in
a woman who was not far from delivering.* As Dr. N. said, the Hungarian
doctor's focus was to save the life of the woman, and she
[the doctor]. did it at the risk of her own life, depending upon the fact
that nobody talked there was . . . a silent conspiracy. Dr.
N. spoke of the psychological pain of everyone involved: For the mother
[it was] something terrible. But it was strange enough the women in the
end agreed. Some said no, I dont want it. They [would] rather die
together with the children. But at the end they all agreed. Some of us said,
Oh you can have another baby still [in the future], and so
on.
There were other accounts of newborns left in the block
to die and of others being strangled or suffocated in order to avoid detection.
For Dr. N. stressed that, had the SS found out, they would have insisted that
the Hungarian doctor and helpers and not they (the Nazis) themselves
were murderers.
Dr. Olga Lengyel has written
poignantly about these matters in her book Five Chimneys (1947), where
she describes the necessity, when infants were delivered on the medical block,
to make [them] pass for stillborn. She tells of sneaking a woman
onto the block for a delivery: [Afterward,] we pinched and closed the
little tikes nostrils and when it opened its mouth to breathe we gave it
a dose of a lethal product. An injection ... would have left a trace. Of
her own residual guilt, Dr. Lengyel says: Yet I try in vain to make my
conscience acquit me. I still see the infants issuing from their mothers. I can
feel their warm little bodies as I held them. I marvel to what depths these
Germans made us descend! And who cannot be haunted by her terrible
additional comment: And so, the Germans succeeded in making murderers of
even us.7
Dr. Cohen, in his
confession, commented more generally: As a student, as a
doctor, you ... had such very different things in mind."8 |
______ * Dr. N. was not sure of the
method employed (I think she gave some [form of] injection) but saw
her make use of a portable stand like a little operating table and
a little instrument
very primitive. |
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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 225 |
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