|
|
Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
|
|
Page
135 |
Back |
|
Contents |
Index |
Home
Page |
|
Forward |
|
|
Bringing Euthanasia to the
Camps |
|
Heydes involvement since 1936 with the camps
themselves as supervisor of neurologic and hereditary control of
prisoners. Early in 1941, T4 leader Bouhler agreed to let Himmler use T4
personnel and facilities to rid the camps of excess prisoners
notably those most seriously ill, physically and mentally.
Sometimes called prisoner euthanasia or (by prisoners)
Operation Invalid, the resultant program was officially
Operation [or Special Treatment] 14f13.* The designation came from
the reference number for the operation in documents of the Concentration Camp
Inspectorate. That spring, experienced psychiatrists from T4
were sent to the camps, assured that their work in selecting out
asocial elements had scientific importance. Their work, as in T4,
was based on prior questionnaires. For this purpose, however, they were
shorter, asking after a prisoners name, race, and health
(that is, whether incurable) ** The short form was explained by the T4
doctors lack of time, although camp commandants or camp doctors did the
initial screening. To camouflage procedures, those selected were told that they
were being sent to a rest home. (In fact, people apparently
volunteered until it was realized what was happening when personal effects, but
no rested prisoners, returned.)6
As low as T4 standards were, those in 14f13 were worse.
Examinations by T4 doctors were perfunctory or non-existent, and
the questionnaires frequently contained no medical information at all, but only
a list of an inmates ostensible crimes and political deviations. Ordinary
SS camp personnel could construe political beliefs or rude comments about the
Führer as mental deficiency or psychological
aberration, and the visiting doctors commission almost never
objected to an SS request for transfer (to a killing facility).
Whatever the travesty of medicine, inmates observed that the doctors were
dressed in white coats, although other prisoners apparently assumed that
they were Gestapo in disguise.7 Toward Jews
these white-coated doctors developed an approach that was to become a Nazi
trademark that of collective diagnosis. For Jews, neither
examination nor health considerations were necessary. As one
participating T4 psychiatrist recalled, it sufficed to take the reasons
for arrest (often very extensive!) from the documents and transfer them to the
questionnaires.8 This meant that the
only thing to be considered was |
__________ * There is some evidence
Friedrich Menneckes recollection in his testimony at
Nuremberg¹ that, as early as the summer of 1940, psychiatrists from
T4 were sent to concentration camps to evaluate inmates, whose original
questionnaires were filled out by camp doctors. One commentator sees in this
early sequence an experimental phase in the expansion of medical
killing.² But others question whether any such phase actually
occurred.³
Similarly, for example,
natural deaths were 14F1; 14f2 was a suicide or accidental death; 14f3, shot
while attempting to escape; 14fl, execution.
4
This contradicts
Nitsches later testimony that the combing out of the
c[oncentration] c[amps] was done according to precisely the same viewpoint, by
means of the same questionnaires, as those in the insane asylums. He
claimed that, because of rumors of popular unrest over the placing of the
mentally ill in camps, they were being returned to proper
institutions.5 |
|
|
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical Killing and the Psychology of
Genocide Robert J. Lifton ISBN 0-465-09094 ©
1986 |
|
Back |
Page 135 |
Forward |
|
|