Dr. Joseph
Mengele
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Mengele
promoted medical experimentation on inmates,
especially dwarfs and twins. He is said to have
supervised an operation by which two Gypsy
children were sewn together to create Siamses
twins; the hands of the children became badly
infected where the veins had been resected. ( Snyder) "The only firsthand evidence on these
experiments comes from a handful of survivors and from a Jewish
doctor, Miklos Nyiszli, who worked under Mengele as a pathologist.
Mengele subjected his victims - twins and dwarfs aged two and above
- to clinical examinations, blood tests, X rays, and anthropological
measurements. In the case of the twins, he drew sketches of each
twin, for comparison. He also injected his victims with various
substances, dripping chemicals into their eyes (apparently in an
attempt to change their color). |
He then killed them himself by injecting chloroform
into their hearts, so as to carry out comparative pathological
examinations of their internal organs. Mengeles purpose, according to
Dr. Nyiszli, was to establish the genetic cause for the birth of twins,
in order to facilitate the formulation of a program for doubling the
birthrate of the Aryan race. The experiments on twins affected 180
persons, adults and children.
Mengele also carried out a large number of
experiments in the field of contageous diseases, (typhoid and
tuberculosis) to find out how human beings of different races withstood
these diseases. He used Gypsy twins for this purpose. Mengeles
experiments combined scientific (perhaps even important) research with
the racist and ideological aims of the Nazi regime. which made use of
government offices, scientific institutions, and concentration camps.
From
the scanty information available, it appears that his
research differed from the other medical experiments
in that the victims death was programmed into his
experiments and formed a central element in it."
( Encyclopedia, Vol.
3, 964)
Professor
Carl Clauberg
Professor Carl Clauberg performed experiments
into sterilization at both Auschwitz and Ravensbrück. This was done
on Hitlers initiative, as he had been convinced by several doctors
that mass sterilization could provide a powerful weapon against Germanys
enemies during total war.
Clauberg
injected chemical substances into wombs during normal gynocological
examinations. Thousands of Jewish and Gypsy women were subjected to
this treatment. Clauberg sought to answer Himmlers query about how
long it would take to sterilize one thousand women, and eventually informed
him that, using methods he developed, a staff of one doctor and ten
assistants could do the job in a single day. The injections totally
destroyed the lining membrane of the womb and seriously damaged the
ovaries of the victims, which were then removed and sent to Berlin to
test the effectiveness of the method. ( Encyclopedia, Vol. 3,
964)
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