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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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473 |
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Genocide |
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may be evaluated in different ways. I, for my
part, say Thank God, that this is so!29 |
The totalized modern state always claims a higher principle
in this case, purification of the worlds most valuable race as a
means of curing the prevailing human illness. And we recall Werner Bests
declaration of the Nazi cure as the political principle of
totalitarianism, within which any alternative ideas must be
ruthlessly dealt with, as the symptom of an illness which threatens the
healthy unity of the indivisible national organism (see page 153).30
One renders the body politic total as a
means of controlling underlying chaos and formlessness a principle
especially stressed in the creation of an overall, German imperial state
the Reich from a politically disunited group of regional entities.*
Hitler meant it when he contrasted the saving doctrine of the nothingness
and insignificance of the individual human being, and of his continued
existence in the visible immortality of the Nation. 32 Rather than be individuals, people at
least those who qualified biologically could share in this immortalizing
power of state and race. One could even come to believe the specific historical
totalism in the claim that all German history
must be seen only as
the pre-history of National Socialism.33
Again, there are suggestions of similar
currents in the Turkish situation. The young Turks who sought to
reform the Ottoman empire spearheaded a major campaign to change the
social structure of Ottoman society as an antidote to internal discord and
conflict, and also as a means of recapturing imperial, Panturkic glory.
Their cure included an admixture of religious and political
ideologies, and, genocide became a means for [bringing about] a
radical
change in the system.34
Totalism in a nation state, then, is most likely to emerge as a cure for a
death-haunted illness; and victimization, violence, and genocide
are potential aspects of that cure. |
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The Quest for
Transcendence |
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Part of the cure is the experience of transcendence: of a
psychic state so intense that time and death disappear. The cure must maintain,
or at least evoke periodically, that psychic experience. Ones own sense
of transcendence merges with the image of the endless life of ones
people. In that experience or promise of ecstasy, one may be
ready to kill, or at least to sanction killing. |
__________ * George Weippert, a
conservative sociologist, lauded the principle of totality of power" and
of only one ruler in the all-embracing task of
achieving one Reich as Germanys mission in this world.
31 |
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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 473 |
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