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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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100 |
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LIFE UNWORTHY OF LIFE: THE
GENETIC CURE |
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Medication
Killing by drugs
gave more leeway to physicians. Their methods included injections of morphine;
morphine plus scopolamine; or tablets, usually either veronal or luminal.
Killing by drugs of already-weak patients was the preferred method at the
killing centers now divested of their gas chambers. The proper dosage for
gradual killing had been tested by Dr. Nitsche. Now, more literally, the
syringe was in the hand of the physician or, as it happened of an
assistant or a nurse There had been occasional killings by injection even
during the height of T4 for instance, when a killing doctor at Hadamar refused
to send a pregnant woman to the gas chamber, though she had been duly selected
for that fate the matter was resolved by a nurse who gave her a lethal
injection.15
The year after the
disassembling of the gas chamber (which had killed ten thousand patients in
less than a year of operation) a new physician named Adolf Wahlmann became
medical director at Hadamar, an institution he had headed before the First
World War and again in the mid-1930s. Wahlmann had joined the Nazi Party in
1933, but had been in some difficulty with the Party for what it perceived to
be his greater commitment to a church choir he led.17 Called out of retirement at the age of sixty-six
to help with mental hospital work before being transferred to Hadamar, he
claimed at his later Frankfurt trial to have had no knowledge of the killing
prior to his arrival. Whatever the truth of that claim, when Wahlmann arrived
the chief administrator was then in the process of implementing a killing
procedure in which the chief doctor was expected to give orders to the head
male nurse to kill male patients and the head female nurse to do the same to
female patients. When informed of that procedure by the administrator Wahlmann
refused to do so indiscriminately, insisting upon going about things more
methodically that is, medically. He developed his own
professional system: he observed patients arriving on transports,
made daily rounds and studied medical records. He then held morning conferences
where these observations were considered along with patients records and then
would decide who was to be killed and what dose of what drug was to be used.
Death certificates were also signed at these conferences and plausible causes
of death were determined for those already killed. The orders to kill were
passed along by the head male and female nurses present at the conferences to
the ward nurses who carried them out The medication (usually
between six and twenty tablets of luminal, triomal or a |
__________ * The ten thousandth victim
at Hadamar had been celebrated as a milestone, as reported by an employee.
Invited by a T4 doctor named Berner, the employees gathered that evening. Each
was given a bottle of beer, and they adjourned to the basement. There on
a stretcher lay a naked male corpse with a huge hydrocephalic head. . . . I am
certain that it was a real dead person and not a paper corpse. The dead person
was put by the cremation personnel on a sort of trough and shoved into the
cremation oven. Hereupon [the administrator] Märkle, who had made himself
look like a sort of minister, held a burial sermon. Another witness
reported that the celebration, which included music, degenerated further into a
drunken procession through the institution grounds.16 |
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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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