|
|
Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
|
|
Page
243 |
Back |
|
Contents |
Index |
Home
Page |
|
Forward |
|
|
Prisoner Doctors: Collaboration with Nazi
Doctors |
|
about it. I'm quite old now.) and by his combination
of wariness and defensiveness when we did meet. I encountered an elegantly
dressed man who received me in a lavishly furnished home and referred quickly
to his large clinic and his summer home on the Mediterranean.
But he
also showed me the tattooed number on his arm and pointed out how low it was,
meaning he had been at Auschwitz very early and very long four full
years. He told me that, when a member of a Polish resistance group, he had been
arrested for listening to Allied broadcasts, had undergone six months of brutal
treatment in a prison in Krakow (You keep
expecting that at any
moment they are going to shoot you), was subjected to a severe beating at
the hands of SS personnel upon his arrival in Auschwitz (from which he emerged
with a broken arm), and soon afterward developed a serious case of typhus. As a
patient on the medical block he observed the way the SS did things
(giving phenol injections and removing the corpses to vehicles to carry them
off); the day after his discharge, the whole hospital was put in the gas
chamber. Even if he stressed these things in order to exculpate himself,
there was no doubt about his, violent initiation not just to Auschwitz (though
he also worked awhile as a laborer) but to the essence of Auschwitz
medicine.
He recalled with some feeling the terror of the
early Auschwitz period: how large numbers of Polish prisoners died every day
from various forms of brutality; and how this was in accordance with the
overall Nazi project of destroying the Polish intelligentsia. Then he added in
a way I thought odd, For their strategy, maybe that was right
odd because he seemed unusually empathic toward their
strategy.
His situation improved greatly when he was permitted to
do medical work and then to run a large medical block at a major subcamp. There
he described himself as beleaguered by political prisoners whom he referred to
as old German Communists, Jewish Communists, and
German Jewish Communists who, he claimed, constantly made trouble
for him by intriguing against him. He insisted that some of those people were
still doing so in attempts to accuse him falsely (he was referring not only to
attitudes held about him but to talk of bringing him to trial).
Jacob
R. gave what is undoubtedly an accurate picture of the situation Dr. T.
referred to. A Jewish Communist prisoner, who was an influential functionary in
the hospital, told Dr. R., when he arrived there, that T. was anti-Semitic and
fascistic and had to be countered; while T. went much further at the time and
confided to R. that it was necessary to eliminate certain
Communists and that R. could have the functionarys job when the
latter had been properly taken care of. Jacob R had the impression that his
troubled retreat from any such suggestion was viewed by Adam T. as very
dumb, that Dr. T. had taken on Auschwitz mores to an unusual degree, that
he considered himself like a god in the hospital and embraced
his absolute power without restraint. T. came to resemble Nazi
doctors in performing surgery on Jewish prisoners just to learn
|
|
|
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical Killing and the Psychology of
Genocide Robert J. Lifton ISBN 0-465-09094 ©
1986 |
|
Back |
Page 243 |
Forward |
|
|