Joseph Mengele, the Angel of Death
December 13th, 2011
Hardly has the history seen a man more cruel, ruthless and cold-blooded than Josef Mengele. The story of this Nazi felon and his gruesome activity in the Auschwitz Camp remains to this day one of the most blood-curdling tales from the Holocaust and the whole WW2 period.
Mengele joined the Auschwitz staff in 1943, after his predecessor had fallen ill. Earlier, the doctor had lead a successful life as an SS officer, so upon arriving at the camp he had already had a strong position and immediately gained power over his co-workers. From the very beginning of his stay, he took a particular liking to sorting the inmates arriving at the camp – so much so that he supervised even the arrivals that he wasn’t designated to. Standing on the platform in a white coat and directing the prisoners either to the right or to the left (gas chambers) by subtle motions of hand or a riding crop, he quickly started to be referred to as the „White Angel”. The nickname was later transformed into the „Angel of Death”, due to the doctor’s extreme cruelty, hiding beneath the smooth, handsome looks. Mengele was known for his radical methods – when an epidemy of typhus struck the Romani part of the camp, Mengele ordered the death in gas chambers on all 1042 inhabitants of the barracks. He was convinced that typhus was something that should be eliminated rather than treated.
The high regard for Mengele among his co-workers allowed him to use the camp and its prisoners for developing his studies on physical abnormalities, heredity and eugenics. For this purpose he opened a medical experimentation block, where he performed pseudo-medical tests on Romanian and Jewish inmates. He had a particular interest in the matter of relations between twins. The experiments he performed involved changing eye colour by injecting chemicals into children’s eyes, limb amputations, vivisections, deliberate wound infecting and blood transfusions between siblings, not to mention his effort to create conjoined twins by sewing two Romanian children together. Most of the prisoners that Mengele had chosen for his operations died a painful death during or after the procedures.
We don’t have the full knowledge of the scale of experiments conducted by the ‘Angel of Death’. Shortly before the closure of the camp in 1945 Mengele fled, taking all his medical documentation with him and destroying it afterwards. Still, the researchers were able to unveil most of the truth thanks to confessions of the camp’s survivors. One of such people, Alex Dekel, describes the doctor as follows: “I have never accepted the fact that Mengele himself believed he was doing serious work – not from the slipshod way he went about it. He was only exercising his power. Mengele ran a butcher shop – major surgeries were performed without anaesthesia. Once, I witnessed a stomach operation – Mengele was removing pieces from the stomach, but without any anaesthetic. Another time, it was a heart that was removed, again without anaesthesia. It was horrifying. Mengele was a doctor who became mad because of the power he was given. Nobody ever questioned him – why did this one die? Why did that one perish? The patients did not count. He professed to do what he did in the name of science, but it was a madness on his part.”
