Jewish Doctors and the Holocaust

Jewish Doctors and the Holocaust

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  • Author: Ross W. Halpin
  • Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
  • ISBN: 3110598213
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 249

This is the first attempt to explain how Jewish doctors survived extreme adversity in Auschwitz where death could occur at any moment. The ordinary Jewish slave labourer survived an average of fifteen weeks. Ross Halpin discovers that Jewish doctors survived an average of twenty months, many under the same horrendous conditions as ordinary prisoners. Despite their status as privileged prisoners Jewish doctors starved, froze, were beaten to death and executed. Many Holocaust survivors attest that luck, God and miracles were their saviors. The author suggests that surviving Auschwitz was far more complex. Interweaving the stories of Jewish doctors before and during the Holocaust Halpin develops a model that explains the anatomy of survival. According to his model the genesis of survival of extreme adversity is the will to live which must be accompanied by the necessities of life, specific personal traits and defence mechanisms. For survival all four must co-exist.


Jewish Medical Resistance in the Holocaust

Jewish Medical Resistance in the Holocaust

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  • Author: Michael A. Grodin, M.D.
  • Publisher: Berghahn Books
  • ISBN: 1782384189
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 328

Faced with infectious diseases, starvation, lack of medicines, lack of clean water, and safe sewage, Jewish physicians practiced medicine under severe conditions in the ghettos and concentration camps of the Holocaust. Despite the odds against them, physicians managed to supply public health education, enforce hygiene protocols, inspect buildings and latrines, enact quarantine, and perform triage. Many gave their lives to help fellow prisoners. Based on archival materials and featuring memoirs of Holocaust survivors, this volume offers a rich array of both tragic and inspiring studies of the sanctification of life as practiced by Jewish medical professionals. More than simply a medical story, these histories represent the finest exemplification of a humanist moral imperative during a dark hour of recent history.


Auschwitz

Auschwitz

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  • Author: Miklós Nyiszli
  • Publisher: Arcade Publishing
  • ISBN: 9781559702027
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 246

Auschwitz was one of the first books to bring the full horror of the Nazi death camps to the American public; this is, as the New York Review of Books said, "the best brief account of the Auschwitz experience available."


I Was a Doctor in Auschwitz

I Was a Doctor in Auschwitz

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  • Author: Gisella Perl
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
  • ISBN: 1498583938
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 140

Gisella Perl’s memoir is an extraordinarily candid account of women’s extreme efforts to survive Auschwitz. It was the first memoir by a woman survivor and established the model for understanding the gendered Nazi policies and practices targeting Jewish women as racially poisonous.


The Essence of Survival

The Essence of Survival

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  • Author: Ross Halpin
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9780992286033
  • Category : Holocaust survivors
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 386

Narative version of Ross Halpin's PHD Thesis. Based on a series of interviews with Jewish doctors who survived Auschwitz. Postulates reasons for their survival beyond other inmates.


Murderous Medicine

Murderous Medicine

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  • Author: Naomi Baumslag
  • Publisher: Praeger
  • ISBN: 9780275983123
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0

More than 1.5 million concentration camp prisoners died of typhus, a preventable disease. Despite advances in public health measures to control and prevent typhus outbreaks, German doctors, fueled by their racist ideology and their medieval approach to the disease, used the disease as a form of biological warfare against Jews, Slavs, and gypsies. Jewish hospitals in ghettos were burned--along with patients and staff--if typhus was present. In concentration camps, even suspected typhus cases were killed in the gas chambers or through intracardiac injections. Typhus vaccines were tested on prisoners deliberately infected with typhus. Only a handful of doctors were ever prosecuted for their crimes. Against all odds, Jewish health providers struggled to avoid the worst through innovative steps to save lives. Despite the removal of their equipment, drugs, and other resources, they organized health care and sanitary hygienic measures. Doctors were forced to conceal cases, falsify diagnoses and cause of death in order to save lives. This important study explores the role of the International Red Cross in typhus epidemics during and after World War I and World War II. It details the widespread complicity of foreign companies in the Nazi typhus research. Finally, the author stresses the importance of monitoring and holding accountable the medical profession, researchers, and drug companies that continue to invest in research on biological agents as weapons of war.


Doctors from Hell

Doctors from Hell

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  • Author: Vivien Spitz
  • Publisher: Sentient Publications
  • ISBN: 1591810329
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 354

A chilling story of human depravity and ultimate justice, told for the first time by an eyewitness court reporter for the Nuremberg war crimes trial of Nazi doctors. This is the account of 22 men and 1 woman and the torturing and killing by experiment they authorized in the name of scientific research and patriotism. Doctors from Hell includes trial transcripts that have not been easily available to the general public and previously unpublished photographs used as evidence in the trial. The author describes the experience of being in bombed-out, dangerous, post-war Nuremberg, where she lived for two years while working on the trial. Once a Nazi sympathizer tossed bombs into the dining room of the hotel where she lived moments before she arrived for dinner. She takes us into the courtroom to hear the dramatic testimony and see the reactions of the defendants to the proceedings. This landmark trial resulted in the establishment of the Nuremberg code, which set the guidelines for medical research involving human beings. 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.


The Nazi Doctors

The Nazi Doctors

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  • Author: Robert Jay Lifton
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category :
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 561


Refuge in Hell

Refuge in Hell

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  • Author: Daniel B. Silver
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
  • ISBN: 0547975058
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 393

“Fascinating footnote to Holocaust history . . . a Jewish hospital in the heart of Berlin that treated patients to the very end of Hitler’s reign” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review) “One of the most incredible stories of World War II.” —Dallas Morning News How did Berlin’s Jewish Hospital, in the middle of the Nazi capital, survive as an institution where Jewish doctors and nurses cared for Jewish patients throughout World War II? How could it happen that when Soviet troops liberated the hospital in April 1945, they found some eight hundred Jews still on the premises? Daniel Silver carefully uncovers the often surprising answers to these questions and, through the skillful use of primary source materials and the vivid voices of survivors, reveals the underlying complexities of human conscience. The story centers on the intricate machinations of the hospital’s director, Herr Dr. Lustig, a German-born Jew whose life-and-death power over medical staff and patients and finely honed relationship with his own boss, the infamous Adolf Eichmann, provide vital pieces to the puzzle—some have said the miracle—of the hospital’s survival. Silver illuminates how the tortured shifts in Nazi policy toward intermarriage and so-called racial segregation provided a further, if hugely counterintuitive, shelter from the storm for the hospital’s resident Jews. Scenes of daily life in the hospital paint an often heroic and always provocative picture of triage at its most chillingly existential. Not since Schindler’s List have we had such a haunting story of the costs and mysteries of individual survival in the midst of a human-created hell. “Gripping . . . one physician’s actions are depicted in all their fascinating complexity.” —The Washington Post Book World


Death of Medicine in Nazi Germany

Death of Medicine in Nazi Germany

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  • Author: Wolfgang Weyers
  • Publisher: Madison Books
  • ISBN:
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 476

Only one generation ago, the world watched as highly trained physicians abandoned medical ethics in response to the Nazi regime. Weyers' book takes an in-depth look at the circumstances which allowed this to happen and the steps necessary to ensure such genocide never happens again.