On this date, July
30, 1943, August Hirt had 79 Jewish men, 30 Jewish women, 2 Poles, and 4
"Asians" selected among the inmates at Auschwitz. These people were
sent to Natzweiler-Struthof on July 30, 1943. Here they
were gassed, by Josef Kramer, on August 17 and August 19, 1943. Their bodies
were returned to Hirt at the anatomical laboratory of the Reich University in
Strasbourg for preparation as an anthropological display, where they were re-discovered
after the liberation.
I will post
information from Wikipedia about The Jewish Skeleton Collection.
Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp entrance (behind, the Monument to the Departed) |
The
Jewish skeleton collection was
an attempt by the Nazis to create an anthropological display to showcase the
alleged racial inferiority of the "Jewish race" and to emphasize the
Jews' status as Untermenschen ("sub-humans"), in contrast to
the German race which the Nazis considered to be Aryan Übermenschen. The
collection was to be housed at the Anatomy Institute at the Reich University of
Strasbourg in the annexed region of Alsace, where the initial preparation of
the corpses was performed.
The
collection was sanctioned by Reichsführer of the SS Heinrich Himmler, and under
the direction of August Hirt with Rudolf Brandt and Wolfram Sievers, general
manager of the Ahnenerbe, being responsible for procuring and preparing
the corpses.
Beger conducting
anthropometric studies in Sikkim, India.
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Selection
Originally
the "specimens" to be used in the collection were to be Jewish
commisars in the Red Army captured on
the Eastern front by the Wehrmacht. The
individuals ultimately chosen for the collection were obtained from among a
pool of 115 Jewish inmates at Auschwitz concentration camp in Occupied Poland. They were chosen for their
perceived stereotypical racial characteristics. The initial selections and
preparations were carried out by SS-Hauptsturmführer Dr. Bruno Beger and Dr. Hans Fleischhacker
(whose name literally translates to "butcher"), who arrived in
Auschwitz in the first half of 1943 and finished the preliminary work by June
15, 1943.
Due
to a typhus epidemic at Auschwitz, the candidates chosen for the skeleton
collection were quarantined in order to prevent them from becoming ill and
ruining their value as anatomical specimens. An excerpt from a letter written
by Sievers in June 1943 reports on the preparation and the typhus epidemic:
"Altogether 115 persons were worked on, 79 were Jews, 30 were Jewesses, 2
were Poles, and 4 were Asiatics. At the present time these prisoners are
segregated by sex and are under quarantine in the two hospital buildings of
Auschwitz."
In
February 1942, Sievers submitted to Himmler, through Rudolf Brandt, a report
from which the following is an extract read at the Nuremberg Doctors Trial by
General Telford Taylor, Chief Counsel for the prosecution at Nuremberg:
"We
have a nearly complete collection of skulls of all races and peoples at our
disposal. Only very few specimens of skulls of the Jewish race, however, are
available with the result that it is impossible to arrive at precise
conclusions from examining them. The war in the
East now presents us with the opportunity to overcome this
deficiency. By procuring the skulls of the Jewish-Bolshevik Commissars, who
represent the prototype of the repulsive, but characteristic subhuman, we have
the chance now to obtain a palpable, scientific document.
"The
best, practical method for obtaining and collecting this skull material could
be handled by directing the Wehrmacht to turn over alive all captured
Jewish-Bolshevik Commissars to the Field Police. They in turn are to be given
special directives to inform a certain office at regular intervals of the
number and place of detention of these captured Jews and to give them special
close attention and care until a special delegate arrives. This special
delegate, who will be in charge of securing the 'material' has the job of
taking a series of previously established photographs, anthropological
measurements, and in addition has to determine, as far as possible, the
background, date of birth, and other personal data of the prisoner. Following
the subsequently induced death of the Jew, whose head should not be damaged,
the delegate will separate the head from the body and will forward it to its
proper point of destination in a hermetically sealed tin can especially
produced for this purpose and filled with a conserving fluid.
"Having
arrived at the laboratory, the comparison tests and anatomical research on the
skull, as well as determination of the race membership of pathological features
of the skull form, the form and size of the brain, etc., can proceed. The basis
of these studies will be the photos, measurements, and other data supplied on
the head, and finally the tests of the skull itself."
The cadaver of Berlin
dairy merchant Menachem Taffel. He was deported to Auschwitz in March 1943
along with his wife and child, who were gassed upon arrival. He was chosen to
be an anatomical specimen. He was shipped to Natzweiler-Struthof and murdered in the gas
chamber in August 1943.
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Portrait of Rudolf
Brandt as a defendant in the Medical Case Trial at Nuremberg. [Photograph
##07335], Porträt von Rudolf Brandt als Angeklagter im Nürnberger Ärzteprozess.
[Fotografie#07335]
|
Mugshot of Wolfram
Sievers, taken by American authorities after his arrest
|
August Hirst [PHOTO
SOURCE: http://www.die-namen-der-nummern.de/html/august_hirt.html]
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Preparation
Ultimately
87 of the inmates were shipped to Natzweiler-Struthof, 46 of these individuals
were originally from Thessaloniki, Greece. The deaths of 86 of these inmates
were, in the words of Hirt, "induced" in an improvised gassing
facility at Natzweiler-Struthof and their corpses, 57 men and 29 women, were
sent to Strasbourg. One male victim was shot as he fought to keep from being
gassed. Josef Kramer, acting commandant of Natzweiler-Struthof (who would
become the commandant at Auschwitz and the last commandant of Bergen Belsen) personally carried
out the gassing of 80 of these 86 victims.
The
first part of the process for this "collection" was to make
anatomical casts of the bodies prior to reducing them to skeletons. In 1944,
with the approach of the allies, there was concern over the possibility that
the corpses, which had still not been defleshed,
could be discovered. In September 1944 Sievers telegrammed Brandt: "The
collection can be defleshed and rendered unrecognizable. This, however, would
mean that the whole work had been done for nothing-at least in part-and that
this singular collection would be lost to science, since it would be impossible
to make plaster casts afterwards."
Elizabeth Klein,
murdered at the Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp.
Her mother, Elizabeth
Klein, was born in Thalheim on 29 May 1878. While in Vienna she married a
Hungarian merchant Koloman Klein from Kisnána,
with whom she had a daughter, Elizabeth Klein. The family emigrated to Belgium
in 1938. Elizabeth was arrested during a raid in February 1943. On 19 April
1943 she was deported to Auschwitz from the Mechelen internment camp. There she
was selected for the Jewish skeleton collection directed by August Hirt. She
was one of 86 people murdered in the Natzweiler-Struthof camp whose bodies were
shipped to Reich University of Strasbourg in the Alsace region of Occupied
France, where the initial preparation of the corpses was performed.
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Aftermath
Brandt
and Sievers were indicted, tried and convicted in the Doctors' Trial in
Nuremberg and both were hanged in Landsberg
Prison on June 2, 1948. Hirt committed suicide in Schönenbach, Austria, on
June 2, 1945 with a gunshot to the head. Josef Kramer was convicted of war
crimes and hanged in Hamelin prison by noted British executioner Albert
Pierrepoint on December 13, 1945. In 1974 Bruno Beger was convicted by a West
German court as an accessory to 86 murders for his role in procuring the
victims of the Jewish skeleton collection. He was sentenced to three years
imprisonment, the minimum sentence, but did not serve any time in prison.
According to his family, Beger died in Königstein im Taunus on October 12,
2009.
For
many years only a single victim, Menachem Taffel (prisoner no. 107969), a Polish born
Jew who had been living in Berlin, was positively identified through the
efforts of Serge and Beate Klarsfeld. In 2003 Dr.
Hans-Joachim Lang, a German professor at the University of Tübingen succeeded
in identifying all the victims, by comparing a list of inmate numbers of the 86
corpses at Strasbourg, surreptitiously recorded by Hirts' French assistant
Henri Henrypierre, with a list of numbers of inmates vaccinated at Auschwitz.
The names and biographical information of the murder victims were published in
the book Die Namen der Nummern (The Names of the Numbers). In 1951 the
remains of the 86 victims were reinterred in one location in the
Cronenbourg-Strasbourg Jewish Cemetery. On December 11, 2005, memorial stones
engraved with the names of the 86 victims were placed at the cemetery. One is
at the site of the mass grave, the other along the wall of the cemetery.
Another plaque honoring the victims was placed outside the Anatomy Institute at
Strasbourg's University Hospital.
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