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					 |  Dr Robert Jay Lifton |  
					 THE NAZI DOCTORS:
						                         Medical
						Killing and
						the                             Psychology
						of Genocide ©  |  
				    
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					 | Dr. Auschwitz: Josef
						Mengele  |  
				    
				   
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						injected 10 cc. of chloroform. After one little
						  twitch the child was dead, whereupon Dr. Mengele had it taken into the morgue.
						  In this manner, all fourteen twins were killed during the night.31  |  
				    
				   
					  The dissection of corpses, then, could be the final step
						in Mengeles twin research. While this was by no means the fate of all
						twins (most had a much better chance to live because they were twins),
						it nonetheless epitomizes Mengeles combination of relatively ordinary
						scientific procedure with literally murderous scientific fanaticism.
						
  But Auschwitz was unique not only in the numbers of twins it could
						provide, but in what it enabled one to do with the twins: each one of a pair of
						twins could be observed under the same diet and living conditions and could be
						made to die together. . . and in good health  ideal for
						post-mortem comparisons.32 
  Sometimes
						Mengele killed twins simply to resolve a dispute over diagnosis. Dr. Abraham
						C., a radiologist who did work for Mengele; described to me one such situation:
						a pair of Gypsy twins, two splendid boys of seven or eight, whom we were
						studying from all aspects  from the sixteen or eighteen different
						specialties we represented. The boys had certain joint symptoms which,
						according to a belief at that time, could be linked to tuberculosis. Mengele
						was convinced that the boys were tubercular, but the various prisoner doctors,
						after careful clinical study, found no trace of that disease. Still
						unconvinced, Mengele shouted at the prisoner doctors, especially at Dr. C.,
						telling him, All the others could make a mistake, not the radiologist.
						
 It must be there. Mengele then left, ordering C. to remain there,
						and returned about an, hour later, now speaking calmly: You are right.
						There was nothing. After some silence, Mengele added, Yes, I
						dissected them. Later C. heard from Nyiszli that Mengele had shot the two
						boys in the neck and that while they were still warm, began to examine
						them: lungs first, and then each organ 
 [doing] some of the work
						himself. The two boys had been favorites with all the doctors, including
						Mengele: [They] were treated very well, spoiled in all respects. 
						These two especially, 
 they fascinated him considerably.
						
  Other research was done on twins, some of it difficult to evaluate from
						their reports. For instance, a survivor twin told me how shocked he and others
						were to discover a fully equipped laboratory right next to their block, as well
						as dark rooms 
 [with] all kinds of lights, 
 different lights
						
 [which] literally blinded us. He spoke of Mengeles
						supervising a lot of research with chemicals, sometimes applied to
						the skin to see what color or reaction they would cause. He stated that
						Mengeles assistants started with 
 the cervical area, then
						drew blood from behind the ear, and of how they might stick a
						needle in various places from behind, including the performing of spinal
						taps  all this done to young children and sometimes resulting in
						deafness, collapse, and, among the smaller ones, death. He and his twin sister,
						twelve years old, would be   |  
				    
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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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