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Dr. Conti responsible for the abuses and mismanagement which
occurred. It was he who, as Under Secretary in the Reich Ministry of the
Interior, was in charge of the whole federal public health system. He,
therefore, was the actual Reich Chief Physician, not Dr. Blome who would never
have been indicted at all if Dr. Conti had not committed suicide and a deputy
had not been needed, even after his death, to represent him in the dock. From
the very beginning Dr. Blome had nothing to do with medical studies. He was
only concerned with the doctors after they had completed their studies and
training and were subjected to the disciplinary authority of the Reich Chamber
of Physicians as licensed physicians. If the medical training was no good, if
medical officers were released with insufficient scientific knowledge or with
bad or wrong professional ethics, then the professor may be considered
responsible for this if their teaching did not reach the required goal. On the
other hand perhaps the heads of the clinics were responsible. Perhaps they did
not imbue their practitioners and assistants with the proper professional
ethics. Whatever the case may have been, one should not merely look around for
a scapegoat to shoulder the moral responsibility.
* * * * * * * * *
*
After all Blome was not consulted
in 1935 when the Nuremberg laws against Jewish citizens were enacted,
nor in 1938 and the years following when Jewish doctors were gradually
prevented from practicing. Blome is in no way responsible for this. These laws
were promulgated by the Reich, that is, by the supreme national authority. They
were ordered by Reich law and they not only affected the medical profession but
also applied to all independent professions and to the entire economic life.
They destroyed the economic existence of the Jewish doctor as well as that of
the Jewish attorney, author, and businessman. The medical professional
organization was not asked at the time whether it agreed to these measures
as a matter of fact, it was only subsequently informed of the Reich laws
enacted and consequently was confronted with accomplished facts. If these laws
and government orders were crimes against humanity, very well, then the
statesmen and the ministers who introduced such laws can be held responsible
for them, also the Reichstag deputies who enacted such laws, and the government
agencies which published these laws and regarded them as generally binding. But
it would be unfair today to try to impose the moral guilt for this development
upon a man who was always a mere subordinate executive agent with no
independent authority to give orders; a man who always fought against the
manifestations of radicalism and tried wherever possible to have the federal
laws enforced without harshness. This, for instance, is proved by the affidavit
of Dr. Strakosch (Blome 22, Blome Ex. 21) who himself had two Jewish
grandparents and who owed the defendant Blome the preserva- [...tion]
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