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The German Doctor' by Lucía Puenzo Nathan W
Student Publications Student Scholarship Spring 2016 History, Historical Fiction, and Historical Myth: 'The German Doctor' by Lucía Puenzo Nathan W. Cody Gettysburg College Follow this and additional works at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship Part of the European History Commons, Film and Media Studies Commons, Latin American Languages and Societies Commons, Latin American Studies Commons, and the Military History Commons Share feedback about the accessibility of this item. Cody, Nathan W., "History, Historical Fiction, and Historical Myth: 'The German Doctor' by Lucía Puenzo" (2016). Student Publications. 438. https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship/438 This is the author's version of the work. This publication appears in Gettysburg College's institutional repository by permission of the copyright owner for personal use, not for redistribution. Cupola permanent link: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship/ 438 This open access student research paper is brought to you by The uC pola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator of The uC pola. For more information, please contact [email protected]. History, Historical Fiction, and Historical Myth: 'The German Doctor' by Lucía Puenzo Abstract The se cape of thousands of war criminals to Argentina and throughout South America in the aftermath of World War II is a historical subject that has been clouded with mystery and conspiracy. Lucía Puenzo's film, The German Doctor, utilizes this historical enigma as a backdrop for historical fiction by imagining a family's encounter with Josef Mengele, the notorious SS doctor from Auschwitz who escaped to South America in 1949 under a false identity. -
Publikationen Schmaltz 10-2012
Dr. Florian Schmaltz Goethe Universität Frankfurt Historisches Seminar Arbeitsgruppe Wissenschaftsgeschichte Schriftenverzeichnis (Stand: Oktober 2012) Bücher mit Moritz Epple (Hg.), The History of Fluid Mechanics in the 20th Century, Stuttgart: Steiner-Verlag, im Erscheinen, ca. 350 S. Hans Frankenthal, Verweigerte Rückkehr. Erfahrungen nach dem Judenmord. Unter Mitarbeit von Babette Quinkert, Andreas Plake und Florian Schmaltz (Neuauflage), Berlin: Metropol-Verlag, 2012, 191 S. Ludwik Fleck, Style myślowe i fakty. Artykuły i świadectwa. [Denkstil und Fakten. Artikel und Zeugnisse.] hrsg. v. Sylwia Werner, Claus Zittel und Florian Schmaltz, Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Instytutu Filozofii i Socjologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk, 2007, 418 S. Kampfstoff-Forschung im Nationalsozialismus. Zur Kooperation von Kaiser-Wilhelm- Instituten, Militär und Industrie, Göttingen: Wallstein-Verlag, 2005 (= Geschichte der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft im Nationalsozialismus, Hrsg. von Reinhard Rürup und Wolfgang Schieder im Auftrag der Präsidentenkommission der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Bd. 11), 676 S. Hans Frankenthal, Unwelcome One – Returning Home from Auschwitz. In collaboration with Andreas Planke, Babette Quinkert & Florian Schmaltz, Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2002, 169 S. Hans Frankenthal, Verweigerte Rückkehr. Erfahrungen nach dem Judenmord. Unter Mitarbeit von Babette Quinkert, Andreas Plake und Florian Schmaltz, hrsg. von Wolfgang Benz, Frankfurt am Main: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, 1999, 188 S. 1 Zeitschriften- und Buchbeiträge mit Andreas Plake -
PEENEMUENDE, NATIONAL SOCIALISM, and the V-2 MISSILE, 1924-1945 Michael
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: ENGINEERING CONSENT: PEENEMUENDE, NATIONAL SOCIALISM, AND THE V-2 MISSILE, 1924-1945 Michael Brian Petersen, Doctor of Philosophy, 2005 Dissertation Directed By: Professor Jeffrey Herf Departmen t of History This dissertation is the story of the German scientists and engineers who developed, tested, and produced the V-2 missile, the world’s first liquid -fueled ballistic missile. It examines the social, political, and cultural roots of the prog ram in the Weimar Republic, the professional world of the Peenemünde missile base, and the results of the specialists’ decision to use concentration camp slave labor to produce the missile. Previous studies of this subject have been the domain of either of sensationalistic journalists or the unabashed admirers of the German missile pioneers. Only rarely have historians ventured into this area of inquiry, fruitfully examining the history of the German missile program from the top down while noting its admi nistrative battles and technical development. However, this work has been done at the expense of a detailed examination of the mid and lower -level employees who formed the backbone of the research and production effort. This work addresses that shortcomi ng by investigating the daily lives of these employees and the social, cultural, and political environment in which they existed. It focuses on the key questions of dedication, motivation, and criminality in the Nazi regime by asking “How did Nazi authori ties in charge of the missile program enlist the support of their employees in their effort?” “How did their work translate into political consent for the regime?” “How did these employees come to view slave labor as a viable option for completing their work?” This study is informed by traditions in European intellectual and social history while borrowing from different methods of sociology and anthropology. -
Reflections of Children in Holocaust Art (Essay) Josh Freedman Pnina Rosenberg 98 Shoshana (Poem) 47 the Blue Parakeet (Poem) Reva Sharon Julie N
p r an interdisciplinary journal for holocaust educators • a rothman foundation publication ism • an interdisciplinary journal for holocaust educators AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL FOR HOLOCAUST EDUCATORS E DITORS: DR. KAREN SHAWN, Yeshiva University, NY, NY DR. JEFFREY GLANZ, Yeshiva University, NY, NY EDITORIAL BOARD: DARRYLE CLOTT, Viterbo University, La Crosse, WI yeshiva university • azrieli graduate school of jewish education and administration DR. KEREN GOLDFRAD, Bar-Ilan University, Israel BRANA GUREWITSCH, Museum of Jewish Heritage– A Living Memorial to the Holocaust, NY, NY DR. DENNIS KLEIN, Kean University, NJ DR. MARCIA SACHS LiTTELL, School of Graduate Studies, The Richard Stockton College of New Jersey DR. ROBERT ROZETT, Yad Vashem DR. DAVID ScHNALL, Yeshiva University, NY, NY DR. WiLLIAM SHULMAN, Director, Association of Holocaust Organizations DR. SAMUEL TOTTEN, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville DR. WiLLIAM YOUNGLOVE, California State University Long Beach ART EDITOR: DR. PNINA ROSENBERG, Ghetto Fighters’ Museum, Western Galilee POETRY EDITOR: DR. CHARLES AdÉS FiSHMAN, Emeritus Distinguished Professor, State University of New York ADVISORY BOARD: STEPHEN FEINBERG, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum DR. HANITA KASS, Educational Consultant DR. YAACOV LOZOWICK, Historian YITZCHAK MAIS, Historian, Museum Consultant GERRY MELNICK, Kean University, NJ RABBI DR. BERNHARD ROSENBERG, Congregation Beth-El, Edison; NJ State Holocaust Commission member MARK SARNA, Second Generation, Real Estate Developer, Attorney DR. DAVID SiLBERKLANG, Yad Vashem SIMCHA STEIN, Ghetto Fighters’ Museum, Western Galilee TERRI WARMBRAND, Kean University, NJ fall 2009 • volume 1, issue 1 DR. BERNARD WEINSTEIN, Kean University, NJ DR. EFRAIM ZuROFF, Simon Wiesenthal Center, Jerusalem AZRIELI GRADUATE SCHOOL DEPARTMENT EDITORS: DR. SHANI BECHHOFER DR. CHAIM FEUERMAN DR. ScOTT GOLDBERG DR. -
La Sucia Historia De IG Farben
Startseite home (engl) francais italiano espanol Photo Artículos Fosgeno IG Farben Venezuela Tea Party Bayer USA BAYER Bhopal Bhopal EEUU Institute / USA La sucia historia de IG Farben 6 de diciembre de 2003 La sucia historia de IG Farben Entre 1933 y 1945 la explotación de los obreros alemanes voluntarios, forzados o esclavos y el monopolio químico tenía un nombre: IG Farben. Después de la derrota alemana las potencias victoriosas acabaron con el trust. Así nacieron BASF, Hoechst o Bayer, pero IG Farben siguio existiendo hasta ayer. El pasado 9 de noviembre el antiguo consorcio IG Farben, una especie de INI o SEPI germana, se ha declarado insolvente, pero ese hecho no significa que vaya a desaparecer de forma inmediata: sus acciones siguen siendo objeto de especulación en los corros bursátiles. La historia de la IG Farben se lee como el historial de un criminal. Fundada en 1925 por las mayores empresas alemanas de química, la IG Farben se convirtió en un importante actor en la política alemana de entreguerras. Fue el mayor agente financiero del partido nazi que lideraba Adolf Hitler. Cuando el "Führer" llegó al poder los grandes dirigentes de la IG Farben le aseguraron que habían solucionado el problema de la falta de petróleo: la fabricación de gasolina artificial. Gracias a los ingenieros y técnicos de la IG Farben, Hitler pudo empezar su guerra por el "espacio vital" en Europa. Los estrategas del trust tenían pensando hacerse con los mercados siguiendo a la victoriosa "Wehrmacht". Facilitaron informaciones sensibles al Comando Supremo y colocaron a agentes en sus sucursales. -
SN Holocaust.Pdf
BEITRÄGE ZUR HISTORISCHEN SOZIALKUNDE • 1 Whereas in analysis and discussion adults predominantly concentrated on the diffe ren Introduction ces in the national perspectives of the Holo caust, the limitations of each respective in terpretation, the political interests and pe da gogical objectives, which flow into these, and contributed comparisons with other examples of genocide; pupils, as a rule, very directly hit The statements and opinions could hardly upon the inhumane core of the politically be more contradictory, which have been generated mass murder, which appears so dis cussed in the media and on specialist con overwhelmingly repulsive that further que ferences in the past months. The demands stions sometimes are not possible anymore. on the topic are mounting as well as critical One academic asked a group of pupils that voices warning of asking too much of both told about a visit to Auschwitz: “Has anything pupils and teachers. What would, therefore, caused you particular dis tress?” A schoolgirl be more obvious than bring together the then replied: “I just kept asking myself how participants in the learning process? something like this could happen.” And to the question about reapprai sal, about comparison and parallels to the present, whether the Pupils are tired of constantly dealing with the Third Reich, Kosovo would have also played a role, there Pupils hardly have secured knowledge about National Socialism, followed an astonished shake of the head and Pupils show great interest in the subject and want to know more; the answer of a female guide that a transfer Teaching about the murderous racism of the Nazis offers a com- had explicitly not taken place. -
Susan Benedict, Ruth Jolanda Weinberger Medical Personnel in Auschwitz
Susan Benedict, Ruth Jolanda Weinberger Medical Personnel in Auschwitz: Inmate Dotors – and Nurses This chapter will look at the lives of two Auschwitz inmates that were part of Block 10s medical personnel. Their lives, “collaboration,” and possible assistance in medical experiments as well as their resistance will serve as example for the many inmate doctors and nurses drawn into medical experiments, and in this case Drs. Carl Clauberg’s, Horst Schumann’s and Eduard Wirth’s sterilization experiments. Historically speaking, since 1943 Jewish inmate doctors played an integrative role in every concentration camp throughout the Third Reich. However, prior to that date this was not always the case: The decision to allow Jewish doctors to care for Jewish inmates goes back to Dr. Eduard Wirths, then Auschwitz’s Standortarzt (garrison doctor)1, which came at a time when the National Socialist regime started to realize that it was in their very interest to keep and control a solid Jewish work force, especially as they could be utilized for cheap and effective slave labor. The situation faced by inmate doctors was difficult, to say the least: On a daily basis, they were faced with a never-ending ambiguity of being trapped in a world with no mercy, where the idea to heal and cure was far fetched. At the same time, however, they struggled to help, to assist or to simply show compassion with their fellow inmates. They still tried to honor the Hyppocratic Oath. Inmate doctors and nurses, including those drawn into medical experiments, as well as the medical personnel ‘assigned’ to work in the Krankenbau (the camp hospital) knew that it was largely dependent on their decision if an inmate was ‘worth’ saving, or if his/her state was so deteriorated that any help was deemed useless and probably a waste of the scarcely available medicine to begin with. -
The Factory Action and the Events at the Rosenstrasse in Berlin: Facts and Fictions About 27 February 1943 — Sixty Years Later
The Factory Action and the Events at the Rosenstrasse in Berlin: Facts and Fictions about 27 February 1943 — Sixty Years Later Wolf Gruner N 27 February 1943 in Nazi Germany the Gestapo brutally arrested more than ten thousand Jewish men and women. Martin Riesen- burger, later the Chief Rabbi of the German Democratic Republic, O 1 recalled that day as "the great inferno." This large-scale raid marked the begin- ning of the final phase of the mass deportations, which had been under way since October 1941. Also interned in Berlin were people who, according to NS termi- nology, lived in so-called mixed marriages. But new documents show that no deportation of this special group was planned by the Gestapo. In the past dec- ade, in both the German as well as the American public, quite a bit of attention has been paid to the fact that non-Jewish relatives publicly demonstrated against the feared deportation of their Jewish partners. The scholarly literature as well has pictured this protest as a unique act of resistance that prevented the depor- tation of these Jews living in mixed marriages. The fact that during this raid an untold number of Jews, both women and men, fled and went underground has so far been ignored. Since we still know much too little, the following article will discuss all the events of the spring of 1943 and their background.2 Memory and History Since the beginning of the 1990s, this "successful" protest during the NS dic- tatorship has been commemorated in Germany annually. Especially in Berlin, Translated by Ursula Marcum. -
Effizienz Und Mord: Das Kz System 1943 1945
98 | 99 EFFIZIENZ UND MORD: DAS KZ&SYSTEM 1943&1945 Stefan Hördler Ende Dezember 1943 sandte der SS-Hygieniker und Funktionskader desertierten, Wehrmacht, Polizei, SS-Sturmbannführer Karl Groß seine Vorschläge Feuerwehr, Volkssturm, Parteifunktionäre, SA, für eine eDzientere Organisation des Lagerbetrie- Reichsarbeitsdienst und Hitlerjugend sollten KZ- bes an den Amtschef D III (Sanitätswesen des KZ- HäNlinge beaufsichtigen und massakrierten nicht Systems) im SS-WirtschaNs-Verwaltungshaupt- selten – teils unter Beteiligung der ZiVilbeVölke- amt (SS-WVHA): „Um eine unnötige Belastung rung – aus Furcht oder aus niederen Beweggrün- des Betriebes mit körperlich mangelhaNem Men- den angeblich lästige, gefährliche, erschöpNe oder schenmaterial und eine dadurch bedingte Anhäu- flüchtende Gefangene. In summa bedeutete diese fung Von [A]rbeitsunfähigen zu Vermeiden, wäre Phase eine Aufgabe Vertrauter Machtstrukturen, eine entsprechend strenge Auswahl der HäNlinge gesicherter Machträume und eingeübter Hand- (ärztliche Musterung) Vor Arbeitseinstellung un- lungs- und Tagesabläufe. Die „Todesmärsche“ führ- bedingt zu empfehlen“. Weiter heißt es, dass „schon ten die bis dahin gültigen räumlichen und zeitli- jetzt an die Errichtung eines Ausweichlagers für chen Regeln ad absurdum. 2 arbeitsunfähige HäNlinge zu denken [sei], da deren Anzahl ständig steigen wird.“ Nicht zuletzt sei der Bau eines Krematoriums zu beschleunigen. „Hier- DAS KZ&SYSTEM IN DER ZWEITEN bei ist sofort an ausreichenden Verbrennungsraum KRIEGSHÄLFTE zu denken.“ 1 Was Groß nach seiner Visite des Buchenwal- Neben mehreren Zehntausend ungleich großen der Außenlagers Dora als menschenVerachtende sogenannten Arbeitserziehungslagern, Jugend- Handlungsanleitung für die reibungslose Auf- schutzlagern, Zigeunerlagern, Kriegsgefangenen- rechterhaltung des Lagerbetriebes formulierte, lagern, Zwangsarbeitslagern, Durchgangslagern, sollte 1944 zu einer Maxime für die Rationalisie- Ghettos und anderen HaNstätten stellten die Lager rung des gesamten KZ-Systems werden. -
[Pdf] Florian Schmaltz the Bunamonowitz Concentration Camp
www.wollheim-memorial.de Florian Schmaltz The Buna/Monowitz Concentration Camp The Decision of I.G. Farbenindustrie to Locate a Plant in Auschwitz . 1 The Buna ―Aussenkommando‖ (April 1941 to July 1942) . 10 The Opening of the Buna/Monowitz Camp – Demographics of the Prisoner Population . 15 Composition of the Prisoner Groups in Monowitz . 18 The Commandant of Buna/Monowitz . 19 The Administrative Structure of the Camp . 21 Guard Forces . 24 The Work Deployment of the Prisoners . 25 Casualty Figures . 28 The Camp Elders . 35 Escape and Resistance . 36 Air Attacks on Auschwitz . 38 The Evacuation of the Camp . 42 Norbert Wollheim Memorial J.W. Goethe-Universität / Fritz Bauer Institut Frankfurt am Main, 2010 www.wollheim-memorial.de Florian Schmaltz: The Buna/Monowitz Concentration Camp, p. 1 The Decision of I.G. Farbenindustrie to Locate a Plant in Auschwitz The Buna/Monowitz concentration camp, which was erected by the SS in October 1942, was the first German concentration camp that was located on the plant grounds of a major private corporation.1 Its most important function was the fur- nishing of concentration camp prisoners as slave laborers for building the I.G. Auschwitz plant, I.G. Farben‘s largest construction site. Instead of estab- lishing an industrial production location on the grounds of an existing concentra- tion camp, a company-owned branch camp of a concentration camp was put up here, for the first time, on a site belonging to an arms manufacturer. This new procedure for construction of the I.G. Auschwitz plant served as a model and in- fluenced the subsequent collaboration between the arms industry and the SS in the process of expanding the concentration camp system in Nazi territory throughout Europe, particularly toward the end of the war, when numerous sub- camps were established in the course of shifting industrial war production to un- derground sites.2 The Buna/Monowitz concentration camp was located in East Upper Silesia within the western provinces of Poland, which had been annexed by the German Reich. -
Glossar Verweigerte Rückkehr
Andreas Plake · Babette Quinkert · Florian Schmaltz Glossar zu Hans Frankenthal Verweigerte Rückkehr Erfahrungen nach dem Judenmord Metropol 2012 Hans Frankenthal, geboren 1926 in Schmallenberg Sauerland, wurde zu- sammen mit seiner Familie 1943 nach Auschwitz deportiert. Seine Eltern wurden ermordet. Hans und sein Bruder Ernst überlebten die Zwangs- arbeit im Lager Monowitz und das Konzentrationslager Mittelbau-Dora und wurden schließlich 1945 in Theresienstadt befreit. Nach ihrer Rück- kehr nach Schmallenberg betrieb der Autor eine Metzgerei und arbeitete als Viehhändler. Er war im Landesverband der Jüdischen Gemeinden Westfalen-Lippe, als Mitglied des Zentralrates der Juden in Deutschland und als stellvertretender Vorsitzender des Auschwitz-Komitees in der Bundesrepublik tätig. Hans Frankenthal starb am 22. Dezember 1999 in Dortmund. Er wurde auf dem jüdischen Friedhof in Hagen-Eilpe begra- ben. In Erinnerung an ihn verleiht die Stiftung Auschwitz-Komitee seit 2010 einmal jährlich den Hans-Frankenthal- Preis. Die 1999 im Fischer-Verlag erschienene Erstausgabe der Biografie von Hans Frankenthal enthielt ein Begriffsglossar und einen Plan des Kon- zentrationslagers Auschwitz-Monowitz. Sowohl der Lagerplan als auch das Glossar – um neue Stichworte ergänzt – sind in der 2012 im Metro- pol Verlag Berlin publizierten Neuauflage der Biografie nicht mehr Teil der Buchausgabe, sondern im Internet als kostenloses PDF-Dokument online verfügbar gemacht. Inhalt »Arbeitseinsatz« > »Geschlossener Arbeitseinsatz« ............................... 5 »Arisierung« -
Auschwitz Chronicle (1944)
Excerpts from Czech, Danuta. Auschwitz Chronicle 1939-1945: From the Archives of the Auschwitz Me- morial and the German Federal Archives. 1989. 1944 In May 1944, SS Lieutenant Colonel Rudolf Höss returns to Auschwitz after his appointment by SS Com- mander in Chief Himmler to oversee the extermination of the Hungarian Jews. The reason for Höss’s transfer back – as he explained during the trial conducted against him in 1947 by the Supreme People’s Court in War- saw – are the complaints by the RSHA to the Head of Branch D of the WVHA, by Glücks, about Comman- dant Liebehenschel of Auschwitz I: Through the destruction of the informer network in the camp, he has helped the prison resistance movement and given it the means for further development. The same is said to make the Commandant Hartjenstein of Auschwitz II unsuitable for his job. There are no complaints against the Commandant of Auschwitz III. During the same period, the Director of Section IV-B4 of the RSHA, SS Major Adolf Eichmann, who begins to implement the program for the destruction of the Hungarian Jews, identifies a number of “deficiencies,” during a visit to Auschwitz, among them: the shutting down of Incineration Facility V used to incinerate corpses outdoors, i.e., the pits near old Bunker 2, and the delay in the construction of a three-track railway spur from the unloading ramp to Auschwitz II. Eichmann also offers his opinion to the RSHA that he is for the appointment of Höss as director for the operation of destroying the Hungarian Jews.