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  1. 10 de ago. de 2020 · Many doctors either actively or passively benefited from the regime’s dismissal of their Jewish colleagues and the “Aryanization” of their profession. German doctors and medical scientists helped shape Nazi Germany’s racial laws.

  2. The diary of Dr. Aron Pik illustrates how Jewish doctors in German-occupied Eastern Europe were often removed from their jobs and subjected to public humiliation and violence. Doctors imprisoned within the Nazi camp system or confined to Jewish ghettos faced a range of dire health

    • A Doctor in The Lodz Ghetto
    • Coercion, Resistance
    • Liberation

    Esther was born in 1908 in Lodz, a city in central Poland. Her family kept a kosher household and observed Shabbat. Growing up in a predominantly Jewish neighborhood and attending a Jewish school, Esther experienced little anti-Semitism as a child, she reported. In 1926, she traveled to France for medical training because Poland’s numerus clausus(“...

    Running through Esther’s testimony are painful reminders that some Jewish functionaries held privileged positions and performed tasks that, one way or another, helped the Nazis achieve their goals. The anguish and complexity of that history is given voice through Esther, who, for example, refuses to pass judgment on Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski, the P...

    Esther’s incarceration at Guben ended in February 1945 when the camp was evacuated as the Red Army drove deeper into Germany. She was transferred in an uncovered truck through snow and freezing cold to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in northern Germany, where she was assigned to medical work. She fell ill with typhus about two weeks after her...

  3. 26 de ene. de 2022 · Jewish Physicians and the Holocaust: While the actions of Nazi doctors during the Holocaust were overwhelmingly horrifying and atrocious, there were doctors during this time who made the choice to practice medicine in a way that offered hope and was intended to save lives whenever possible.

    • Ruth Bueter
  4. 22 de mar. de 2015 · Jewish and female doctors were not allowed to practice medicine in Germany during Hitler’s rule from 1933 to 1945. Data about the consequences of this on the health service are difficult to come by, but what information can be gathered demonstrates a detrimental effect on the nation’s health.

    • Alexa R. Shipman
    • 2015
  5. Less qualified non-Jewish doctors often replaced Jewish physicians like Schattner, and the quality of medical care in Germany declined as the Nazi regime lowered academic standards for ideologically acceptable “Aryan” medical students.

  6. 8 de nov. de 2023 · The Holocaust, the systematic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of 6 million Jews by the National Socialist (Nazi) regime and its collaborators, is arguably the most extreme instance of crimes against humanity and genocide in history. During its reign of terror, the Nazi regime committed innumerable acts of violence against Jews, Sinti and Roma, people with disabilities or psychiatric ...