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Report: Nazis Used Hospitals for Killings

By TONY CZUCZKA
.c The Associated Press

BERLIN (AP) - Nazi Germany used hundreds of hospitals and clinics to kill at
least 200,000 handicapped, mentally ill and other institutional patients who
were deemed physically inferior, researchers said Tuesday.

The conclusion is based on what researchers said was the most comprehensive
analysis of Nazi records on the sites that helped carry out Adolf Hitler's
program to purify, as he saw it, the German race.

In a report compiled by Germany's Federal Archive, researchers found new
evidence on the program under which doctors and hospital staff used gas, drugs or
starvation to kill disabled men, women and children at medical facilities in
Germany and in present-day Austria, Poland and the Czech Republic.

Even in internal documents, the Nazis cynically referred to the deaths as
mercy killings, said Harald Jenner, a researcher at the federal archive.

The program originated at the Nazi regime's highest levels, Jenner said in a
recent essay.

``The Fuehrer's chancellery and the Reich Interior Ministry were the starting
point for the murders,'' Jenner wrote.

The three-year effort to catalog the deaths was intended to ``restore some
dignity to the victims'' while encouraging further research into a dark chapter
of history, German Culture Minister Christina Weiss said at a news conference
Tuesday.

``We know that these crimes were meant to be kept secret,'' Weiss said. ``The
relatives of the victims received fake letters of condolence. The doctors in
charge worked under false names.''

The Nazis launched the drive to root out what they called ``worthless lives''
in the summer of 1939, predating their full-scale organization of the
Holocaust in which they killed 6 million European Jews.

Between January 1940 and August 1941, the Nazis turned six hospitals - in
Brandenburg, Grafeneck, Hartheim, Sonnenstein, Bernburg and Hadamar - into the
main killing grounds for what they referred to as ``euthanasia.'' Other clinics
and hospitals were added as the program expanded.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los
Angeles, said the program was a kind of training ground for the Nazi regime to
``fine tune'' its ``technology of death'' before the Holocaust.

``I think it's an extraordinarily important body of information,'' Cooper
said.

The program was ``a warning to society and to the scientific community that
it's a very slippery slope when you start putting different values on human
life,'' he added.

``Of course, with the Nazi regime it was a combination of racism but also
with the enthusiastic backing of the scientific community who saw mentally ill
and physically disabled people as cannon fodder for their pseudoscientific
research in the name of the great Aryan race.''

The federal archive is not publishing names of victims, but is posting a list
of the facilities used on its Web site. Relatives tracking down suspected
victims may benefit from the new research, Weiss said.

Cooper also said the German government should compensate victims' families.

In the new study, researchers drew in part on records from Hitler's Reich
chancellery found in the archives of the East German secret police, the Stasi,
after German reunification in 1990, said Klaus Oldenhage, the national archive's
deputy head.

At the Nuremberg war crimes trials after World War II, authorities determined
the number of handicapped and mentally ill victims of the Holocaust totaled
275,000 people, according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington,
D.C. In the first phase, from 1939 to 1941, the Nazis killed about 70,000
people, the museum reported.

On the Net:

http://www.bundesarchiv.de German federal archive site.



09/30/03 22:26 EDT


Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news
report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed
without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.  All active
hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

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<BODY style=3D"FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #fffff=
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<DIV><EM><FONT size=3D1>Want to send this story to another AOL member? Click=
 on the heart at the top of this window.</FONT></EM><FONT lang=3D0 face=3DAr=
ial color=3D#000000 FAMILY=3D"SANSSERIF" PTSIZE=3D"10"><BR><BR></FONT><FONT=20=
lang=3D0 face=3DArial color=3D#000000 size=3D5 FAMILY=3D"SANSSERIF" PTSIZE=
=3D"16"><B>Report: Nazis Used Hospitals for Killings<BR></FONT><FONT lang=
=3D0 face=3DArial color=3D#000000 size=3D2 FAMILY=3D"SANSSERIF" PTSIZE=3D"10=
"></B><BR><B>By TONY CZUCZKA</B><BR></FONT><FONT lang=3D0 face=3DArial color=
=3D#000000 size=3D1 FAMILY=3D"SANSSERIF" PTSIZE=3D"8"><I>.c The Associated P=
ress </FONT><FONT lang=3D0 face=3DArial color=3D#000000 size=3D2 FAMILY=3D"S=
ANSSERIF" PTSIZE=3D"10"></I><BR><BR>BERLIN (AP) - Nazi Germany used hundreds=
 of hospitals and clinics to kill at least 200,000 handicapped, mentally ill=
 and other institutional patients who were deemed physically inferior, resea=
rchers said Tuesday.<BR><BR>The conclusion is based on what researchers said=
 was the most comprehensive analysis of Nazi records on the sites that helpe=
d carry out Adolf Hitler's program to purify, as he saw it, the German race.=
<BR><BR>In a report compiled by Germany's Federal Archive, researchers found=
 new evidence on the program under which doctors and hospital staff used gas=
, drugs or starvation to kill disabled men, women and children at medical fa=
cilities in Germany and in present-day Austria, Poland and the Czech Republi=
c.<BR><BR>Even in internal documents, the Nazis cynically referred to the de=
aths as mercy killings, said Harald Jenner, a researcher at the federal arch=
ive.<BR><BR>The program originated at the Nazi regime's highest levels, Jenn=
er said in a recent essay.<BR><BR>``The Fuehrer's chancellery and the Reich=20=
Interior Ministry were the starting point for the murders,'' Jenner wrote.<B=
R><BR>The three-year effort to catalog the deaths was intended to ``restore=20=
some dignity to the victims'' while encouraging further research into a dark=
 chapter of history, German Culture Minister Christina Weiss said at a news=20=
conference Tuesday.<BR><BR>``We know that these crimes were meant to be kept=
 secret,'' Weiss said. ``The relatives of the victims received fake letters=20=
of condolence. The doctors in charge worked under false names.''<BR><BR>The=20=
Nazis launched the drive to root out what they called ``worthless lives'' in=
 the summer of 1939, predating their full-scale organization of the Holocaus=
t in which they killed 6 million European Jews.<BR><BR>Between January 1940=20=
and August 1941, the Nazis turned six hospitals - in Brandenburg, Grafeneck,=
 Hartheim, Sonnenstein, Bernburg and Hadamar - into the main killing grounds=
 for what they referred to as ``euthanasia.'' Other clinics and hospitals we=
re added as the program expanded.<BR><BR>Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dea=
n of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, said the program was a kind=
 of training ground for the Nazi regime to ``fine tune'' its ``technology of=
 death'' before the Holocaust.<BR><BR>``I think it's an extraordinarily impo=
rtant body of information,'' Cooper said.<BR><BR>The program was ``a warning=
 to society and to the scientific community that it's a very slippery slope=20=
when you start putting different values on human life,'' he added.<BR><BR>``=
Of course, with the Nazi regime it was a combination of racism but also with=
 the enthusiastic backing of the scientific community who saw mentally ill a=
nd physically disabled people as cannon fodder for their pseudoscientific re=
search in the name of the great Aryan race.''<BR><BR>The federal archive is=20=
not publishing names of victims, but is posting a list of the facilities use=
d on its Web site. Relatives tracking down suspected victims may benefit fro=
m the new research, Weiss said.<BR><BR>Cooper also said the German governmen=
t should compensate victims' families.<BR><BR>In the new study, researchers=20=
drew in part on records from Hitler's Reich chancellery found in the archive=
s of the East German secret police, the Stasi, after German reunification in=
 1990, said Klaus Oldenhage, the national archive's deputy head.<BR><BR>At t=
he Nuremberg war crimes trials after World War II, authorities determined th=
e number of handicapped and mentally ill victims of the Holocaust totaled 27=
5,000 people, according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington,=
 D.C. In the first phase, from 1939 to 1941, the Nazis killed about 70,000 p=
eople, the museum reported.<BR><BR>On the Net:<BR><BR>http://www.bundesarchi=
v.de German federal archive site.<BR><BR><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; <BR>09/30/03 22:26=
 EDT<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </FONT><FONT lang=3D0 face=3DArial color=3D#00000=
0 size=3D1 FAMILY=3D"SANSSERIF" PTSIZE=3D"8"><BR><BR><I>Copyright 2003 The A=
ssociated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be=20=
published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior w=
ritten authority of The Associated Press.&nbsp; All active hyperlinks have b=
een inserted by AOL.</I></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>

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