Eugenics and Nazi Germany: Difference between revisions

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Also known as Euthanasia, took place from 1939-1941. This was a top secret program that was eventually leaked which caused its demise. During this time over 100,000 inmates were killed. Sterilization was the first measure taken. Gas chambers were first used under this program. After this program became exposed, pressure forced Hitler and the S.S. to put a hault to this plan and the 3 million they had planned to kill.
Also known as Euthanasia, took place from 1939-1941. This was a top secret program that was eventually leaked which caused its demise. During this time over 100,000 inmates were killed. Sterilization was the first measure taken. Gas chambers were first used under this program. After this program became exposed, pressure forced Hitler and the S.S. to put a hault to this plan and the 3 million they had planned to kill.


=How did Nazi Germany affect the rest of the world?=
=Effects of Nazi Eugenics Today=
==Affect in the US==
==Affect in the US==



Revision as of 16:14, 4 December 2009

What is Eugenics?

-also referred to as race-hygiene

History of Eugenics

Gender Discrimination in Nazi Germany

Women's Role in Nazi Germany

Although mass murder is the most profound example of eugenics in Nazi Germany, it is also important to analyze the role women played in this time period. In 1932 Germany reached an international low in birth rates. This was most likely due to the economic conditions at the time; however it was perceived as a strike by women. The remedy was social improvement through the use of financial and social incentives.

In Nazi Germany, women were divided into two sections: superior and inferior. This classification was determined by their nationality, marital status, and position they held within society. Germans were considered superior, whereas people of Jewish, Polish or other national descent were inferiors. Additionally house servants, unskilled factory workers, farm workers, prostitutes, unmarried women, and anyone who deviated from the norm were classified as inferior as well. This separation determined who was allowed to reproduce and who would be forbidden. The ideology behind this was to promote the expansion of the German Volk or Aryan race.

These divisions of superior and inferior women determined the applicable laws dealing with pregnancy. Women of the superior race, were expected to bear children and continue on the Aryan race. These women were forbidden to obtain an abortion and if violated, faced various consequences depending on the degree of their crime committed. Whereas women of inferior status, were often prohibited to procreate through practices of sterilization or abortions. These women were considered as lacking value to the community and so were their offspring. The idea was that the number of degenerates born depends on the number of degenerate women capable of procreation, so take that ability away and the problem is solved. This caused physician- patient relationships to be replaced by loyalty to the state. Anyone who was deemed hostile or against the state could then be classified as inferior and have certain rights and privileges revoked.

Abortion Laws

Nazis' viewed women only as bearers of children and therefore the use of contraceptives were considered a violation against nature and a degradation of motherhood. Abortions were made illegal for women of the superior class. The Reich wanted to promote gene value by building up the superior race. Blocking reproduction of the German Volk or mixing blood with lesser races (Jews, Polish, or other inferiors) was considered detrimental to the German nation and people were punished for racial treason.

Laws and Punishment

In May 1933, two penal laws prohibited availability of abortion facilities, legalized eugenic sterilization, and prohibited voluntary sterilization. Restrictions were also placed on advertisements for abortions and the use of contraceptives. However, condoms were exempt because they could prevent venereal disease.

There were three main paragraphs of the penal code that were emphasized during this anti-abortion time period. Paragraph 218 of the penal code stated that a pregnant women who killed her baby in utero could serve 5 years of a penitentiary sentence. Paragraph 219 stated that any person who performs an abortion for financial gain would be subject to penitentiary sentence of 10 years. It also stated that anybody who advertised or advocated abortions would face a fine or prison sentence not exceeding two years. The final paragraph, 220 stated that anyone who publicly offers services for abortions will face a fine or punishment up to two years. Some punishments of disregarding the penal code were as extreme as imposing the death penalty, forcing people into retirement, or forced emigration. By 1938, convictions against these codes reached 7000, which was a 65% increase from 1932. Of those convicted, a majority were female physicians even though they accounted for the minority of doctors.

There were two exceptions to the penal code that allowed some superior women to be eligible for an abortion. The first exception was that abortion could only be performed if it threatened the health of the mother, which had to be confirmed by at least two doctors. The second exception stated that after having three children a woman was eligible to have an abortion. Between August 1944 and May of 1945, the Hamburg council of physicians had only 38 petitions for abortions (health issues etc), in which only 89% of those were approved. A woman with cancer had her request denied because there was no proof that an abortion would prolong her life. Furthermore, if a woman petitioned for an abortion her and her partner were required to undergo racial examination in which the court would deem if the future child would be racially valuable. For German women to have an abortion, serious health problems had to be the reason. Whereas a woman of Polish, Russian or other nationalities, need only state they were foreign to have an abortion. Polish abortionists were not punished so long as they only performed abortions on Polish women and not German Volk.

It is important to note that documentation of the enforcement of abortions was limited. There were documents that told of abortions being performed illegally by the women themselves or unqualified people. In 1926 Hamburg predicted that 2 out of 3 pregnancies were aborted illegally. Since abortion laws were not lifted, this number continued to grow and in 1937 it was estimated that 400,000 abortions occurred. The increasing social unrest also caused the number of abortions to increase.

As of 1988, abortion became legally available to pregnant women in the 1st 3 months of pregnancy. Abortions still often face medical opposition in Germany.


Sterilization Laws

Sterilization laws were applied to those of the inferior class. In 1934 sterilization laws determined nine different conditions that were summons to be sterilized: 5 related to psychiatric illnesses, 3 to physical invalidity, and the last to alcoholism. Mental problems, physical disabilities, alcoholism, prostitution, social problems, poverty, criminality, were all seen as inheritable traits. In 1936, castration by destruction of women gonads begun. X-rays were used for mass sterilization without the knowledge of the inmates. By 1937, German authorities had sterilized more than 220,000 people. In 1940 officers were granted permission to perform sterilization and abortions on inferiors.

Project T4

Also known as Euthanasia, took place from 1939-1941. This was a top secret program that was eventually leaked which caused its demise. During this time over 100,000 inmates were killed. Sterilization was the first measure taken. Gas chambers were first used under this program. After this program became exposed, pressure forced Hitler and the S.S. to put a hault to this plan and the 3 million they had planned to kill.

Effects of Nazi Eugenics Today

Affect in the US

Sources

Bock, Gisela. "Racism and Sexism in Nazi Germany: Motherhood, Compulsory Sterilization, and the State." Chicago Journals 8.3 (1983): 400-21. Jstor. Web. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/3173945>.

David, Henry P., Jochen Fleischhacker, and Charlotte Hohn. "Abortion and Eugenics in Nazi Germany." Population Council 14.1 (1988): 81-112. Jstor. Web. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/1972501>.