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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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218 |
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AUSCHWITZ: THE RACIAL CURE |
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arm (in fact, she was given an Aryan rather than a Jewish
number). It turned out that Dr. J. was needed to provide actual medical care
for the women on the notorious Block 10, where various experiments were done.
Since the real medical work of Auschwitz treatment of sick
inmates was inseparable from selections, when SS doctors involved
prisoner doctors in the first they brought them at least to the periphery of
the second. In so doing, the SS doctors sought to avoid recognition of their
own guilt by bringing prisoner doctors as close as possible to the dirtiest of
all medical work. To the extent that they could succeed in tainting those they
ruled over, they felt themselves to be less tainted. In that way they could
blur, at least for themselves, distinctions between victimizer and victim,
between physician jailer and physician prisoner.
When discussing these
matters, Dr. B. would revert to this view, emphasizing again his conviction,
quoted earlier, that all those who survived Auschwitz lived from the food
that was taken away from the others.
Thus, the ultimate
adaptation of prisoner doctors involved a quid pro quo that is,
something for something. The something" given by the SS via
the SS doctors to prisoner doctors was, first of all, survival. And not only
one's own survival but the capacity to contribute to the survival of others.
Prisoner doctors were very clear about the relation of their medical status to
staying alive: If I were not in the hospital [as a doctor], I'd be dead
too; or, For me to be a doctor has been life saving; or,
We survived because of our profession. One prisoner doctor tells of
the concrete ways in which this was true: |
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Bread was ... the main currency, the symbol of
power and status . ... I realized that, as a doctor-nurse, I was sort of upper
middle class in the camp society: the better fed I looked, the more authority I
seemed to have. As a member of the [medical] staff, I received a double ration
of soup and occasionally some extra bread. It was important to husband
ones energy. I managed, following the example of my veteran co-nurse, to
sneak a little after-lunch nap in a corner.³ |
One way prisoner doctors overcame this potential guilt
toward other prisoners was by helping them.
The something
gained by SS doctors from prisoner doctors involved the work of the camp, work
that took them to the edge of selections as another prisoner doctor put
the matter self-laceratingly when he declared, We did the work. They gave
us something extra extra food . ... But [they said], You must help
us. You must do the work. They are shrewd. They know a lot about human
psychology.
There were further paradoxes about what prisoner
doctors did. Many of those who worked closely with SS doctors, and appeared to
be actively collaborating in selections, were actually using their position to
save as many people as possible. And those who expressed themselves vehe-
[mently] |
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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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