German Culture

All about Germany

  • Home
  • Learn German
    • German Language Basics
    • German Grammar & Vocabulary
    • German Learning Tips
    • German Idioms & Expressions
    • German Quizzes & Exercises
  • Articles
    • Famous Germans
    • German Holidays
    • German Cuisine
    • How To In Germany
    • Daily Life in Germany
    • German Facts
    • German Traditions
  • Facts About Germany
  • German History
    • Early History of Germany
    • Middle Ages in German History
    • German Reformation Period
    • 19th Century and German Unification
  • German Recipes
    • German Baking Recipes
    • German Bread Recipes
    • German Christmas Recipes
    • Desserts
    • German Easter Recipes
    • Halloween Recipes
    • Main Dishes
    • German Salad Recipes
    • German Salads
    • Sauerkraut Recipes
  • Travel to Germany
  • Contact

Nazi Nightmares

nazi_doctorsNazi doctors carried out direct medical killings as part of “life unworthy of life” policy, as well as deathly experiments on concentration camp prisoners. German doctors were forced to do that according to the Nazi medical decisions. There were two racial programs which directed the entire work of the German physicians of that time:
– coercive sterilization,
– killing of “impaired” people.

Euthanasia program alone, the centers of which were in Hartheim, Somnenstein, Grafeneck, Bernburg, Brandeburg and Hademar, has launched into eternity about 100000 mentally and permanently sick people. They were murdered in carbon monoxide gas chambers. The systematic euthanasia procedures began in April 1940 and within three weeks all Jewish patients were to be murdered.

Along with that, Nazi obsession with an idea of complete erasure of the Jews out of Europe led to the elimination of Jewish physicians and the gradual exclusion and barring of Jews from medical practice altogether. In 1939 an amendment to the Nuremberg Laws nullified the medical licenses of all Jewish doctors. Jewish professors, among them well known authorities, were excluded from the universities and medical schools.

In June 1933 a sterilization law was introduced. Chronically sick and “asocial” Germans were sterilized. Physicians took part in “Heredity Health Courts” and performed the sterilization surgical procedures. Reliable estimates for the number of sterilizations fall between 200000 and 350000.

Further on, in their fulfillment of the Reich commands, the Nazi set up a series of pure extermination camps using gas chambers and specially trained personnel. SS doctors also practiced a murderous “epidemiology” sending prisoners with a contagious disease, especially typhus and scarlet fever, to the gas chambers, sometimes with their fellow patients, contagious or not, so that the entire block could be “disinfected”. In the medical blocks, SS doctors ordered and supervised, and sometimes themselves killed debilitated prisoners with phenol injections.

Author – Tatyana Gordeeva

Related article:
Germany Under Hitler and the Nazi
Nazi Gold
Josef Mengele – the Infamous Nazi Doctor

You might also like:

  • How Germany Handles Its Past: Memory and Identity
    How Germany Handles Its Past: Memory and Identity
  • "Kirche, Küche, Kinder": Germany's Three K's
    "Kirche, Küche, Kinder": Germany's Three K's
  • Social Welfare in Germany: Bismarck’s Lasting Legacy
    Social Welfare in Germany: Bismarck’s Lasting Legacy
  • The Black Death and Its Impact on Germany
    The Black Death and Its Impact on Germany
  • Where Germans Retire: Cities, Countryside, and Coastal Dreams
    Where Germans Retire: Cities, Countryside, and Coastal…
  • The Underground Cities of Germany: Bunkers, Tunnels, and Hidden Secrets
    The Underground Cities of Germany: Bunkers, Tunnels, and…
  • The Death of the Hindenburg: The Catastrophe That Ended the Airship Era
    The Death of the Hindenburg: The Catastrophe That Ended the…
  • German Work Culture: Understanding Work Life in Germany
    German Work Culture: Understanding Work Life in Germany

Recent Posts

German potato soup (Kartoffelsuppe) represents the heart of traditional German home cooking.

German Potato Soup Recipe (Kartoffelsuppe)

Frederick the Great and the Potato

Frederick the Great and the Potato

Potatoes are one of the most beloved ingredients in German cuisine

Traditional German Potato Dishes

Traditional German potato dishes

Traditional German Potato Dishes You Should Know

Discover how potatoes in German culture shaped history

Potatoes in German Culture

The German Zeppelin represents far more than a transportation technology.

German Zeppelin: The Rise and Fall of Germany’s Giant Airships

Discover how the German Zeppelin worked

How the German Zeppelin Worked: Inside the Engineering of Airship Giants

Valentine’s Day in Germany: Love, History, and Traditions

Valentine’s Day in Germany: From American Import to Cultural Tradition

Copyright © 2026 · German Culture

Go to mobile version