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  1. Josef Mengele. Josef Rudolf Mengele (German: [ˈjoːzɛf ˈmɛŋələ] ⓘ; 16 March 1911 – 7 February 1979) was a German Schutzstaffel (SS) officer and physician during World War II at the Russian front and then at Auschwitz during the Holocaust, where he was nicknamed the "Angel of Death" (German: Todesengel). [1] He performed deadly ...

    • Types of Experiments Conducted
    • Roma
    • Twins
    • Persons with Congenital Anomalies
    • Children

    The experiments in the concentration camps permanently maimed many victims or caused them to die. In some experiments, death was the intended outcome for the victims. The medical professionals who conducted experiments at Auschwitz did not seek the prisoners’ consent or inform them of their treatment or possible effects. The types of experiments co...

    In addition to choosing Roma as subjects for his medical experiments, Mengele conducted an anthropological study of the Roma men, women, and children in the Zigeunerlager. When there was an outbreak of Noma, a gangrene of the mouth, among Roma children in the camp, he assigned prisoner physicians to study it. Noma is a bacterial infection that prim...

    In the 1930s, twins were a major focus of human genetic research. Before World War II, Verschuer and other biomedical researchers used twins to study the hereditary basis of diseases. These earlier researchers obtained the consent of the twins or their parents, but it was difficult for researchers to enlist many twins for these studies. At Auschwit...

    When he conducted selections of arriving Jews, Mengele looked for people with physical abnormalities. These people included dwarfs, people with gigantism, or persons who had a club foot. Mengele studied these people and then had them murdered. He sent their bodies to Germany for study by researchers. Mengele also sought out Roma and Jews with heter...

    Most of the victims of Mengele’s medical experiments were children. The children Mengele selected for experiments lived in separate barracks from the other prisoners and received somewhat better food and treatment. Mengele was friendly toward the children. Moshe Ofer, a survivor of Mengele’s experiments, recalled in 1985 that Mengele used children ...

  2. Sep 16, 2024 · Holocaust. Josef Mengele (born March 16, 1911, Günzburg, Germany—died February 7, 1979, Enseada da Bertioga, near São Paulo, Brazil) was a Nazi doctor at Auschwitz extermination camp (1943–45) who selected prisoners for execution in the gas chambers and conducted medical experiments on inmates in pseudoscientific racial studies.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The German Doctor (Spanish: Wakolda) is a 2013 historical drama thriller film directed, produced, and written by Lucía Puenzo, based on her own novel Wakolda (2011). [1] The film stars Àlex Brendemühl as Nazi SS officer and physician Josef Mengele , [ 2 ] infamous for performing human experiments in the Auschwitz concentration camp .

  4. Feb 25, 2020 · He once invited an SS doctor to visit his clinic, occupied him with a specialist discussion and a lot of cognac - his ruse prevented the arrest of a Nazi opponent persecuted by the Gestapo. Nevertheless, Sauerbruch received the German National Prize for Art and Science in the Reich Chancellery, and called for the support of Nazi politics in an open letter in 1933.

  5. May 2, 2014 · The German Doctor (director: Lucia Puenzo)We are in Patagonia, on a road that lasts 300 miles. A family are ready to make the journey in a battered white van—father, mother and three children ...

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  7. Apr 25, 2014 · “The German Doctor,” which was Argentina’s selection for the foreign-language category at this year’s Academy Awards, doesn’t build to any great, explosive climax. Its big reveal of Mengele’s true identity—complete with eerie medical drawings in his hidden notebook—comes and goes with the same sort of understated tone that permeates the entire film.

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