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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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245 |
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Prisoner Doctors: Collaboration with Nazi
Doctors |
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[trans
] fer them to the central
hospital. It was no problem for the SS. There was the same
situation at the front. If a German soldier would have an open break [bone
fracture] - a leg amputation - if it would heal in three or four weeks, he was
sent to work in an office. But with soldiers they couldnt help
they had to die. They did it with their own soldiers. That was the war a
very hard situation.* |
In addition to the exaggeration and probable falsehood
contained in the account, it presents the Auschwitz authorities as a
beleaguered group trying to do their best with a very hard wartime
situation. Dr. T. could thus add the equally dubious contention that
usually if someone was sent to the gas chambers, he was very sick ...
[and would] have no chance to live in the camp.
Despite his
general sympathy for SS doctors, Dr. T. condemned Wirths as largely
responsible for the whole catastrophic situation
[in which] they
made this extermination from the medical point of view. His anger
probably reflected both a residual fear of SS doctors (In the evening
they [could] send a piece of paper down to the office, which means [someone],
will be killed the next day) and, more important, his recollection of
Wirthss connection with the group of Communist political prisoners he,
Adam T., considered to be his enemies. At one point, however, he softened
notably in talking about Wirths and gave me the distinct impression that he was
unconsciously associating the chief SS doctor with his own moral dilemma:
I ask myself, why did Wirths stay in Auschwitz? He could go away. He
could say he wanted to go to the front. Of course the commandant may say,
I have no one else. I need you.
Dr. T. made a point of
his frequent contacts with Jews, in the German city in which he lived. One
prisoner doctor, in commenting on Dr. T.s extensive contact with the
Jewish community, said with gentle sarcasm, I hear he has become a
Tzodik, using the Hebrew term for saint. The turnabout,
hardly convincing to Jewish survivors, was a part of T.s post-war
adaptation.
Another Jewish survivor, Isaac K., who had worked as a
non-physician in the same hospital, confirmed Adam T.s clear
anti-Semitism but acknowledged that he would occasionally help save a Jewish
prisoners life when requested, though in such cases he usually had to be
bribed (with food, money, clothing, or whatever). K. condemned Dr. T. for
performing selections as he apparently did on occasions when the SS
noncommissioned officer evaded the task though adding that within the
Auschwitz structure somebody had to make the selections [because of) the
overcrowding of the hospital. K. was saying that Dr. T. had gone beyond
what a prisoner doctor was required to do even in Auschwitz. K. made a still
more damning accusation: We have proof that he collaborated |
__________ * Concerning
euthanasia of German soldiers, see page 143.
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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 245 |
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