Doctors From Hell: The Horrific Account of Nazi Experiments on Humans
By Vivien Spitz
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About this ebook
Vivien Spitz reported on the Nuremberg trials for the U.S. War Department from 1946 to 1948. In Doctors from Hell, she vividly describes her experiences both in and out of the courtroom. A chilling story of human depravity and ultimate justice, this important memoir includes trial transcripts as well as photographs used as evidence.
The author describes the experience of being in bombed-out, dangerous, post-war Nuremberg. She recounts dramatic courtroom testimony and the reactions of the defendants to the proceedings. Witnesses tell of experiments in which they were deprived of oxygen; frozen; injected with malaria, typhus, and jaundice; subjected to the amputation of healthy limbs; forced to drink seawater for weeks at a time; and other horrors.
Doctors from Hell is a significant addition to the literature on World War II and the Holocaust, medical ethics, human rights, and the barbaric depths to which human beings can descend.
“In this personal account of her service in the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials, Vivien Spitz continues to contribute to the cause of human rights.” —President James Carter
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Reviews for Doctors From Hell
41 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book is pretty amazing. It's a first hand account of the Nuremberg Trials relating to the medical experiments and torture the Nazi's perpetrated against humanity. The author was a court reporter, a mere 22 years old when she went to Nuremberg to record this horrific trial. Good insight on humanity and a kind of bonus of a little international law thrown in. Overall, really good.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This well written memoir/historical account reveals the horrifying torture and experiments that took place in some of the death camps. Compelling story of how these men were brought to justice.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5They should have all hung.
1 person found this helpful
Book preview
Doctors From Hell - Vivien Spitz
Doctors from Hell
The Horrific Account of
Nazi Experiments on Humans
Vivien Spitz
with a new Foreword by Elie Wiesel
SENTIENT PUBLICATIONS, LLC
Epigraph
The Moving Finger writes; and having writ,
Moves on; nor all your Piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
Nor all your Tears wash out a word of it.
—The Rubaiyat, Omar Khayyam
Contents
Title Page
Epigraph
Dedication
Hippocratic Oath
Foreword by Elie Wiesel—Without Conscience
Foreword by Fredrick R. Abrams, M.D.
Introduction
1. October 1946, Westover Air Field, Massachusetts
The U.S. War Department Recruitment
Orientation and Boarding the Plane
Emergency over the North Atlantic
Safe Landing in Paris
Boarding the Douglas C-47 Skytrain for Frankfurt
The Final Anxiety-Ridden Flight
2. The Nuremberg War Crimes Trials
History’s First International Criminal Trials
The Major Nazi Leaders’ Trial
The Pretrial Gathering of Evidence
November 6, 1946
3. The Subsequent Proceedings
My First Nuremberg Home
The Palace of Justice
My Raw Orientation
Meeting My Co-workers
Daughter of the Chicago German Bund Leader
The Court Reporting Process
4. Case No. 1, The Medical Case
Tribunal Members
The Arraignments
The Defendants
A Respite from Initial Shock
Grand Hotel
Thanksgiving Day 1946
December 9, 1946
Crimes of Mass Extermination
Illegal Euthanasia
Protection of Animals
December 10, 1946
5. High-Altitude Experiments
Autopsy Report
Testimony of Walter Neff
Testimony of Defendant Rudolf Brandt
Testimony of Defendant Dr. Romberg
6. Freezing Experiments
Women Used For Rewarming
7. Malaria Experiments
Extracts from the Testimony of Father Leo Miechalowski
Extracts from the Testimony of August H. Vieweg
8. Bone, Muscle, and Nerve Regeneration and Bone Transplantation Experiments
Extracts from the Testimony of Vladislava Karolewska
Extract from the Testimony of Expert Witness Dr. Leo Alexander
9. Mustard Gas Experiments
10. Sulfanilamide Experiments
Testimony of Jadwiga Dzido
Testimony of Dr. Leo Alexander
11. Sea Water Experiments
High Drama in the Courtroom
12. My Life in Nuremberg
No. 8 Hebelstrasse
Another Historical House on Hebelstrasse
Growing Numb to What Humanity Meant
Nazi Terrorists Bomb the Grand Hotel Dining Room
13. Epidemic Jaundice (Hepatitis)
Extract of Testimony by Dr. Karl Brandt
14. Sterilization
Sterilization by X-rays
Denial Testimony by Viktor Brack
15. Typhus Experiments
Testimony by Dr. Eugen Kogon
Denial Testimony of Dr. Rose
16. Poison Experiments
Testimony of Dr. Eugen Kogon
17. Incendiary Bomb Experiments
Testimony of Dr. Eugen Kogon
18. Phlegmon, Polygal, & Phenol Experiments
Phlegmon (Inflammation and Infection) Experiments
Polygal (Blood Coagulant) Experiments
Phenol (Gas Oedema) Experiments
19. Jewish Skeleton Collection
20. Euthanasia
Protest by the Bishop of Limburg
Prosecution Exhibit 428
21. Medical Ethics
Permissible Medical Experiments
Statement of IMT Chief Prosecutor, Robert H. Jackson
22. Judgments and Sentences in the Medical Case
Extracts from Final Statements of Defendants
Sentences—July 20, 1947
Petitions and Executions
23. Going Home
Culture Shock
Appointment as Reporter in the U.S. House of Representatives
Holocaust Television Series
The President’s Commission on the Holocaust
Days of Remembrance
Meeting Hitler’s Court Reporter
24. Confronted by Holocaust Denial
Wounds Reopened
The Holocaust Awareness Institute
Meeting Elie Wiesel
Interview by the Steven Spielberg SHOAH Foundation
Confronted by Holocaust Denial Again
More Challenges
More Holocaust Denial
Appearance on Broadway with Tony Randall
Afterword
Appendix: Statistics on the Medical Case
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Copyright
Dedication
Whoever [shall] save a single life, saves an entire world.
—The Talmud
In genocides there are perpetrators. There are victims. There are silent bystanders. There are rescuers.
This book is dedicated to two rescuers: the late Father Bruno Reynders and Dr. Michel Reynders.
In 1939, a Benedictine monk was on a mission in Frankfurt, Germany. Hearing some commotion in the street, he looked up and, to his horror, he saw an old Jew being harassed, maligned, and brutalized by the passers-by. The monk was Pere Bruno Reynders of Louvain, Belgium. He was outraged by the scene to the point of nausea.
When the Nazis invaded Belgium and began persecuting and deporting Jews, Pere Bruno decided to come to the help of these innocent people and, with the help of his family and many friends, he was able to rescue about 320 Jewish children and a few adults. Among his cooperating relatives was his nephew, Michel, then a young teenager, who assisted him as a messenger and occasional escort.
Always shy and modest, when asked why he put his life at risk to save Jewish children, Pere Bruno said, because they were human beings in peril, and it was our duty to help save their lives.
Michel Reynders never forgot these words and became a doctor, guided by the same principles. He retired in 1995 as a Clinical Professor of the University of Colorado School of Medicine and lives in Denver, Colorado, with Colette, his wife of forty-four years. They have two sons and four grandsons.
Hippocratic Oath
I swear by Apollo Physician and Asclepius and Hygieia and Panaceia and all the gods and goddesses, making them my witnesses, that I will fulfill according to my ability and judgment this oath and this covenant:
To hold him who has taught me this art as equal to my parents and to live my life in partnership with him, and if he is in need of money to give him a share of mine, and to regard his offspring as equal to my brothers in male lineage and to teach them this art—if they desire to learn it—without fee and covenant; to give a share of precepts and oral instruction and all the other learning to my sons and to the sons of him who has instructed me and to pupils who have signed the covenant and have taken an oath according to the medical law, but no one else.
I will apply dietetic measures for the benefit of the sick according to my ability and judgment; I will keep them from harm and injustice.
I will neither give a deadly drug to anybody who asked for it, nor will I make a suggestion to this effect. Similarly I will not give to a woman an abortive remedy. In purity and holiness I will guard my life and my art.
I will not use the knife, not even on sufferers from stone, but will withdraw in favor of such men as are engaged in this work.
Whatever houses I may visit, I will come for the benefit of the sick, remaining free of all intentional injustice, of all mischief and in particular of sexual relations with both female and male persons, be they free or slaves.
What I may see or hear in the course of the treatment or even outside of the treatment in regard to the life of men, which on no account one must spread abroad, I will keep to myself, holding such things shameful to be spoken about.
If I fulfill this oath and do not violate it, may it be granted to me to enjoy life and art, being honored with fame among all men for all time to come; if I transgress it and swear falsely, may the opposite of all this be my lot.
Without Conscience Foreword by Elie Wiesel
THIS IS ONE of those stories that invite fear.
Now we know. During the period of the past century that I call Night, medicine was practiced in certain places not to heal but to harm, not to fight off death but to serve it.
In the conflict between Good and Evil during the Second World War, the infamous Nazi doctors played a crucial role. They preceded the torturers and assassins in the science of organized cruelty that we call the Holocaust. There is a Talmudic adage, quite disturbing, that applies to them: Tov she-barofim le-gehinom—The best doctors are destined for hell.
The Nazi doctors made hell.
Inspired by Nazi ideology and implemented by its apostles, eugenics and euthanasia in the late 1930s and early 1940s served no social necessity and had no scientific justification. Like a poison, they ultimately contaminated all intellectual activity in Germany. But the doctors were the precursors. How can we explain their betrayal? What made them forget or eclipse the Hippocratic Oath? What gagged their conscience? What happened to their humanity?
In all truth, the medical field was not the only one to subscribe to Hitler’s plan. There was the judicial profession. And in some ways, the church. Only the literary world retained its sense of honor: the great writers, for the most part, were exiled. Not only Jews—Thomas Mann and Bertolt Brecht were not Jewish, but they were unable to breathe in the stifling air of the Third Reich. Doctors, on the other hand, mostly stayed—not the Jewish ones, but the others.
We know the facts. The motives as well. One day, Hitler and Himmler’s health minister made it known to leaders in the medical field that, according to a secret decision made at the highest level, it was necessary to get rid of useless mouths
—the insane, the terminally ill, children, and elderly people who were condemned to misfortune by nature and to suffering and fear by God. Few in the German medical profession believed it worthy or good to refuse.
Thus, instead of doing their job, instead of bringing assistance and comfort to the sick people who needed them most, instead of helping the mutilated and the handicapped to live, eat, and hope one more day, one more hour, doctors became their executioners.
In October 1939, several weeks after the beginning of hostilities, Hitler gave the first order concerning the Gnadentod, or charitable death.
On the 15th of that month, gas was used for the first time to kill patients
in Poznán, Poland. But similar centers had already been created in Germany three years earlier. Now, psychiatrists and other doctors collaborated in a professional atmosphere exemplary for its camaraderie and efficiency. In less than two years, 70,000 sick people disappeared into the gas chambers. The Gnadentod program was going so well that the head of the Wehrmacht Hospital psychiatric ward, Professor Wurth, worried, With all the mentally ill being eliminated, who will want to pursue studies in the burgeoning field of psychiatry?
The program was interrupted only when the bishop of Münster, Clemens August Graf von Galen, had the courage to denounce it from his cathedral’s pulpit; protest, in other words, came not from the medical profession, but from the church. Finally, public opinion was moved: too many German families were directly affected.
Like the fanatical German theorists, Nazi doctors did their work without any crisis of conscience. They were convinced that by helping Hitler to realize his racial ambitions, they were contributing to the salvation of humanity. The eminent Nazi doctor responsible for ethical
questions, Rudolf Ramm, did not hesitate to declare that only an honest and moral person may become a good doctor.
Thus, the doctors who tortured, tormented, and killed men and women in the concentration camps for medical
reasons had no scruples. Human guinea pigs, prisoners both young and not so young, weakened or still in good health, were subjected to unspeakable suffering and agony in laboratories managed by doctors from the best German families and the most prestigious German universities. As a consequence, after the war, there were survivors of occupied Germany who refused to receive care from German doctors. They were scared. They remembered other doctors—or the same ones— from elsewhere.
In Ravensbrück, Dachau, Buchenwald, and Auschwitz, German scientists operated on their victims without anesthesia in an effort to discover cures for obscure diseases. The researchers let them die of hunger, thirst, cold; they drowned them, amputated their limbs, suffocated them, dissected their still-living bodies to study their behavior and measure their stamina.
At the first trial of doctors before the international court at Nuremberg in 1946, 23 of the accused were charged with having initiated, directed, and organized criminal activities against prisoners. Acting under their authority, a number of well-respected doctors caved in to their orders. How did they turn into assassins?
I personally met only one: Josef Mengele, who was known best not as a doctor but as a criminal and a murderer. Like so many other deportees, I saw him the night of my arrival in Birkenau. I remember the thought that crossed my mind: he looked elegant. I remember his calm voice as he asked me my occupation and age (warned by an inmate, I made myself older). And I recall his fateful gesture that separated the living from the soon-to-be dead. I learned his name only later. Morbid rumors went around about him. Wherever he sprang up, Death spread its shadow. It was known that he was always on the lookout for little twins and children with spinal problems. In the camp for Gypsies, he came across as likeable, warm, and tender toward one particular boy. He had the boy dressed in nice clothes, gave him the best food. This was his favorite prisoner. And on the night the Gypsies were liquidated, the doctor himself led this boy to the gas chamber.
Did I meet other doctors? In my barracks at Buna, some of them supervised the division of those permitted to live from those who were to die. I have described elsewhere the silence that preceded this event: it filled our being. We were afraid to look at one another. As on Yom Kippur evening, I had the feeling that the dead were mixed with the living. As for the doctors, I knew not who they were and have forgotten their faces.
Over the succeeding years, as I studied documents and archives about the Final Solution, I became familiar with the dominant role played by Nazi medicine and science. They were integral to the concentration-camp system and were as guilty as the various branches of Hitler’s armed services and police force of the monstrous crimes committed in occupied Europe out of hatred for the Jews and other socalled inferior races and groups. Yet after Germany’s defeat, with rare exceptions, criminal doctors calmly returned home to resume normal practices and ordinary life. No one bothered them at home, nothing threatened them. Only on the occasion of the trial of Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem did German justice suddenly remember their crimes. The police found their addresses in telephone books.
But if an Eichmann shocks us, a Mengele revolts us. Eichmann was a rather ordinary low-life, without education or culture, whereas Mengele spent a number of years at a university. The existence of an Eichmann casts doubt on the nature and mentality of the German people, but the possibility of a Mengele throws into question the very basis of German education and culture. If the former represents Evil at a bureaucratic level, the latter embodies Evil at an intellectual level. Eichmann denied having been anti-Semitic and pleaded not guilty: he was only following orders. But the Nazi doctors? None among them acted under duress—neither those who presided over the nocturnal division of new arrivals, nor those who killed the prisoners in their laboratories. They could have slipped away; they could have said no. Until the end, they considered themselves public servants loyal to German politics and science. In other words, patriots, devoted researchers. Without too great a stretch, maybe even societal benefactors. Martyrs.
Must one conclude that, since a humane science exists, there was also a science that wasn’t humane? I won’t even consider racist theorists who tried to treat racism as an exact science. Their vulgar stupidity deserves nothing but disdain. But there were excellent physicians, well-informed chemists, and great surgeons—all racist. How could they seek truth and happiness for human beings at the same time that they hated some of them solely because they belonged to human communities other than their own?
One of the brutal shocks of my adult life came the day I discovered that many of the officers of the Einsatzgruppen—the death commandos in Eastern Europe—had received degrees from Germany’s best universities. Some held doctorates in literature, others in philosophy, theology, or history. They had spent many years studying, learning the lessons of past generations, yet nothing kept them from killing Jewish children at Babi Yar, in Minsk, Ponàr. Their education provided them with no shield, no shelter from the temptation and seduction of cruelty that people may carry within. Why? This question still haunts me.
It is impossible to study the history of German medicine during the Nazi period in isolation from German education in general. Who or what is to blame for the creation of the assassins in white coats? Was the culprit the anti-Semitic heritage that German theologians and philosophers were dredging up? The harmful effects of propaganda? Perhaps higher education placed too much emphasis on abstract ideas and too little on humanity. I no longer remember which psychiatrist wrote a dissertation demonstrating that the assassins hadn’t lost their moral bearings: they knew how to discern Good and Evil; it was the sense of reality that was missing. In their eyes, the victims did not belong to humankind; they were abstractions. The Nazi doctors were able to manipulate their bodies, play with their brains, mutilate their future without remorse; they tortured them in a thousand ways before putting an end to their lives.
Yet inside the concentration camps, among the prisoners, medicine remained a noble profession. More or less everywhere, doctors without instruments or medications tried desperately to relieve the suffering and misfortune of their fellow prisoners, sometimes at the price of their own health or their own lives. I knew several such doctors. For them, each human being represented not an abstract idea but a universe with its secrets, its treasures, its sources of anguish, and its poor possibilities for victory, however fleeting, over Death and its disciples. In an inhumane universe, they had remained humane.
When I think about the Nazi doctors, the medical executioners, I lose hope. To find it again, I think about the others, the victim-doctors; I see again their burning gazes, their ashen faces.
Why did some know how to bring honor to humankind, while others renounced humankind with hatred? It is a question of choice. A choice that even now belongs to us—to uniformed soldiers, but even more so to doctors. The killers could have decided not to kill.
Yet these horrors of medical perversion continued beyond Auschwitz. Traces may be found, for example, in the hellish Stalin and post-Stalin eras. Communist doctors betrayed their brethren. Psychiatrists collaborated with the secret police to torture prisoners.
And how can the recent, shameful torture to which Muslim prisoners were subjected by American soldiers be justified? Shouldn’t the prison conditions in Iraq have been condemned by legal professionals and military doctors alike?
Am I naive in believing that medicine is still a noble profession, upholding the highest ethical principles? For the ill, doctors still stand for life. And for us all, hope.
Elie Wiesel April, 2005
This essay was modified by the author from an essay in his collection D’où viens-tu? (Editions du Seuil, 2001) and was translated from the French by Jamie Moore. It was then published in The New England Journal of Medicine, who graciously granted permission for its inclusion here.
Foreword by Fredrick R. Abrams, M.D.
I wish I were writing this as a foreword to a book that simply reminds readers of an aberration that happened once-upon-a-time in Germany over half a century ago, but in many respects it was not an aberration. I wish I could report that it was the behavior of only a few misguided individuals that led the scientists and doctors of that country down a perverse path, but it was not a few. It was a preponderance of politically co-opted scientists and physician opportunists. The professional group that had the largest percentage of Nazi Party members was medicine. It was not a minority of professional outcasts that approved of sorting civilian prisoners for either work or execution, nor did their fellows ostracize the doctors that carried out atrocious experiments. In fact, it was the doctors that upheld the ethics of medicine that were ostracized. Protesters sometimes shared the fate of the persons whom they were trying to protect.
I wish I could write that after the trials at Nuremberg, the lessons learned and the international laws and codes that followed had put an end to genocide, torture, and experimentation on unconsenting human beings, but the laws and codes continue to be flouted. It is essential to revisit history as Vivien Spitz documented it, contemporaneously. We must remain aware that, despite the veneer of civilization and the outward manifestations of culture and refinement, insidious atavistic impulses remain in every country and no nation has a monopoly on atrocity.
There is good science and there is bad science—in the sense of careful and accurate theory and experimentation. Facts have no dogma and scientific fact-finding benefits society, but no science may be divorced from its human context. When it is, the scene is set for tragedy. Science and ideology are treacherous partners. When an ounce of science is mixed with a ton of zealotry, catastrophic results can be anticipated. This explosive mixture led to the disaster in German scientific activities of medical experimentation and eugenic research. Vivien Spitz provides witness to testimony that reports atrocities performed by professionals whose betrayal of trust is beyond outrageous, because they are members of a profession ostensibly dedicated to human welfare. There have been many theories about how and why this happened in a country considered to be among the most cultured and civilized of its day. What can lay the foundation for the scale of such horrendous behavior?
It serves a demagogue well to set up a scapegoat or a public enemy to unite the populace behind him and by so doing, enable them to overlook incursions on human rights through fear and ignorance. It serves him well to designate a group as other and, for that reason, treat them as inferior, subhuman, and ineligible for the protection of the laws of civilized society. Do the Jews, Gypsies, and homosexuals of Hitler’s Germany spring to mind as you read this?
Think first of the early history of the United States. Here are examples that speak to unethical medical experimentation long before the Nazi era. In the 1800s in the American south, Dr. Thomas Hamilton of Georgia placed a slave in a pit oven in order to study heat stroke. Dr. Walter Jones of Virginia and several colleagues poured scalding water over sick slaves in an experiment to cure typhoid fever. Consider that Dr. J. Marion Sims perfected an operation on a series of slave women of Alabama that cured a maternal birth injury that untreated, caused continuous flow of urine from the vagina. The Father of Gynecologic Surgery,
Dr. Ephraim McDowell of Kentucky, before successfully removing an ovarian tumor from a white patient, had first operated on four slaves. Dr. Crawford Long of Georgia conducted a controlled demonstration of anesthesia by amputating two fingers from a slave boy—-one with ether and the other without. There is no record that either finger was diseased. In 1856, the Medical Journal of Virginia proposed severe sanctions be imposed on a surgeon after investigating the accusation of a slave that his leg had been amputated for an ulcer just to let the students see the operation.
Regardless of medical necessity, the master could permit or prohibit surgery on property
he owned. The master made no complaint, therefore there was no remedy.¹
What of eugenics, academic forerunner of the racial purity doctrine that justified abuse of undesirable elements
of society? The rediscovered findings of Mendel at the turn of the century advanced the ideas of social Darwinism. Evolution was studied widely among nations, but for unprecedented implementation of eugenic theory, again you must look to the United States. It was hard to accommodate the institution of slavery to a theology that created humankind in God’s image, especially in a nation where all men were created equal. Conventional wisdom that assumed inferiority of the black person and of the mentally deficient was explained by theories of degeneracy—as retrogression from the authentic human, therefore allowing them to be subject to treatment normal humans would not. As the eugenic movement progressed in the United States in the twentieth century, congenital degeneracy was presented in scientific terms as a hereditary disease, along with congenital pauperism, congenital prostitution, and congenital criminality. Beginning in Indiana in 1907, more than half the state legislatures were persuaded to pass laws permitting involuntary asexualization.
They did not distinguish between sterilization and castration. Epilepsy, feeble-mindedness, and insanity were grouped together as indications for sterilization, to avoid future generations with these afflictions.
As the states succumbed to this pseudoscience, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes added authority in the infamous Buck v. Bell Supreme Court decision in 1927. Carrie Buck, the eighteen-year-old illegitimate daughter of an allegedly feeble-minded mother, herself gave birth to a child. Carrie reportedly had the mental age of nine, and her child was alleged to be feeble-minded. (As the child matured, long after the case was closed, the child proved to be quite normal.) The Virginia law permitted involuntary sterilization, and the board of the institution in which Carrie lived recommended it. Schoolteacher and self-anointed expert
Harry Laughlin was a prolific author and speaker on the subject of eugenics. He was asked