Dr Josef Mengele was a German (SS) solider and a Nazi doctor at Auschwitz death camp during WWII. Dr Mengele was known as the ‘Angel of Death’ of ‘White Angel’ because of his cruel gruesome experiments he performed on prisoners. Dr Josef Mengele, with his role of Nazi doctor at a famous death camp, was cruel and cold-hearted because of his gruesome experiments on prisioners. Mengele was the eldest of three children and was born March 11, 1911 in Gunzburg, Germany.
Dr Mengele performed medical experiments on men, women and children prisoners of Auschwitz Death Camp. Mengele was given complete freedom under secrecy enabling him to give lethal injections, dissect, shot, freeze and even castarate his prisoner test subjects. These lethal injections, made from germs were used in attempt to artificially change the subject’s eye colour. The test subjects also known as the prisoners, either died from the experiment or from being shoot, very few survived. However, post mortem examinations were conducted whether they did from the experiment or
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The man Mengele was working with, Dr Omar Von Verschuer, was also widely known for having a fascination with twins, more specifically identical twins. Mengele performed a range of experiments on as many as 1500 sets of twins. Some of these experiments were chemically changing eye colour, conjoining twins and even seeing how long they could last with breathing in poisonous gas daily. He also attempted to work with genetics as he believed that genetics can help improve our futures. Dr Mengele a well-educated, experienced, research doctor at Auschwitz death camp believed that; if Aryan women could assuredly give birth to twins who were sure to be blond and blue eyed - then the future could essentially be saved. Mengele was a cruel man but there were still a few survivors from his gruesome
The horrific experiments of Dr. Mengele demonstrate the cruelty of the Nazi’s during the holocaust. Most of the world today knows of Dr. Mengele of having been the doctor of death for being responsible for killing more than 6 million Jews.
At Auschwitz, Josef Mengele nicknamed, “ The Angel of Death” was an experienced doctor that experiments on kids and other people, for example, he injected some serum into a kids eye to see if the eye would change color and most of his experiments didn't have any anesthesia so his patients would feel a lot of pain.
During the holocaust prisoners of concentration camps were faced with evil, torture and death every day. Some of the prisoners in these camps were selected for Nazi medical experiments. Nazi doctors performed several different human experiments on prisoners throughout the Holocaust. A specifically horrific experiment was the twin experiments. This experiment was performed by Dr. Joseph Mengele and several of his assistants in Auschwitz. He is known for performing some of the most inhumane experiments during the holocaust.
Josef Mengele, a demoralized Nazi doctor and scientist is known for his frightful human experiments during the holocaust. Mengele generally studied and examined twin children and other human experimentation. Due to these events, Josef Mengele's nickname was "The Angel of Death".
Mengele. Dr. Mengele was a German officer at Auschwitz and was often referred to as the “Angel of Death” (Gutman, 2). He is known for his horribly unethical experiments performed on prisoners and immense number of bodies killed in Auschwitz. Mengele treated the majority of his patients ruthlessly, with no remorse, and as objects for his destruction. He was also known for his bad temper and was seen beating prisoners with metal poles, burning them alive, and shooting them. The only patients he treated less horrifically were twins, which he found to be enticing. Mengele would provide them with clean clothes and regular meals in order to strengthen them, and once they were healthy he would perform horrific surgeries on them (Schmittroth, 315). How Dr. Mengele treated the prisoners in Auschwitz would have an extensive influence on the difficulties they had
His experiments were vicious and are considered crimes in every sense of the word. Josef Mengele did experiments on twins because the their genetic makeup was the same, so every change would be considered an environmental one. He would use twins to compare and contrast the effects of certain chemicals.When one of the twins died, they would both be executed and then dissected it for differentiation.A mass murder he once committed in which he killed 14 patients in one night and spent hours performing autopsies on them. Josef Mengele was a person with a quick temper and he once sended 600 women to be killed in the gas chambers because there was a spread of typhus in a block cell. As other examples of a war crimes done by Josef Mengele he stitched a pair of twins together, gouged out the eyes of patients, vivisected some of the children that had affection towards him and sawed off the head of infected prisoners to send them of to study.
Mengele called the experiments sessions. “After one of these sessions, she developed a high fever and swelling in her arms and legs, and Mengele put her in ‘the hospital’ which was actually a place to keep victims who were expected to die” (Wells). The people that were sent to ‘the hospital’ weren’t given food or water. They also weren’t given medications either. “If she had died, her sister would have been killed so the Nazi’s could perform an autopsy and compare the twins in death, too” (Wells). One of Mengele’s experiments consisted of “Gypsy twins who had been taken away for surgery returned joined at the back” (Wells). Mengele had tried to join the twins by attaching the boys and joining blood vessels together. The boys ended up dying three days later. “Out of 1,500 sets of twins subjected to the Mengele experiments, fewer than 200 individuals survived” (Wells). The experiments had a negative effect on the survivor’s health later on. “The experiment’s permanently stunted the growth of Miriam Mozes’ kidney’s, Kor said, and in 1985 she developed a rare form of cancer probably attributed to the experiments. She died in 1987” (Wells). Kor never forgave the Nazi’s or Dr. Mengele for what they had done until several years
Specific purpose: To inform the audience about Josef Mengele, a doctor in Auschwitz and a psychological quandary.
The life story of Josef Mengele is one that is filled many twists and turns that play out like a suspense story with an ending that does not seem to fit what one would expect. The authors of the book Mengele: The Complete Story, Gerald L. Posner and John Ware, wrote this book largely with information taken from diaries and letters of Mengele’s, and interviews with those who knew him. It is a look into the life and times of a man whose nickname was “The Angel of Death.'; Josef’s life and post-mortem fate could be divided into three different chapters. His pre-war life and life during World War II was one of privilege and freedom to satisfy his perverse desire to perform bizarre and mostly useless medical
Josef Mengele, a hero of the Nazis for his breakthrough discoveries and service as a soldier, was additionally a heartless individual that performed countless experiments on the young victims of the war. To being raised in a wealthy family and succeeding early on in his life, he became such an evil man terrorizing his victims beyond reality. Josef Mengele’s childhood and education contributed to his joining of the Nazi Party. Despite his career and horrific experimentations being disturbing, he delivered valuable knowledge about the scientific world. Auschwitz was and is recognized as a place where many horrors occurred by Mengele’s barbaric efforts in the name of science. All in all, Josef Mengele was a heartless physician who enjoyed causing
Luckily for Eva Kor and Dr. Mengele, not only did the twin girl survive, but she forgave Mengele – perhaps it is people like these who truly frighten Mengele back into hiding. Among other experiments, Mengele also decided to do some research on a disease called Noma that was rare, but usually occurred in gypsies. “At one point, Mengele had two of the Gypsy children killed so that he could examine their detached heads.” (Cefrey 87) It is important to note that Mengele preferred children as patients or guinea pigs; while the reason is mysterious it could be assumed due to children being naïve or easier to obtain than adults (especially twins) and could be easily ripped away from parents.
Many of Josef Mengele victims recall him as a sweet, almost father like figure. When visiting his child subjects, he introduced himself as "Uncle Mengele" and offered them sweets. Many of these children knew that Dr.Mengele would either be there savior or their death. Mengele's research subjects were better fed and housed than other prisoners and temporarily safe from the gas chambers but how can such a man be capable of acting so sweet when he’s has killed many people by shootings, beatings and deadly experiments.
Josef Mengele had studied Anthropology, Human Genetics, and Eugenics. While working in Auschwitz, he had worked with identical and fraternal twins to trace the genetic origin of various diseases along with other experiments (“Josef Mengele” Holocaust Encyclopedia). Most officers or German task force had a hard time with this job, but Josef Mengele did not (Minster). He enjoyed separating those on the ramp and would often appear “off duty” searching through the crowd looking for twins to experiment on (“Josef Mengele” Holocaust Encyclopedia). He always had a reason for what he did. More horrific experiments included Mengele injecting chloroform into a set of twin’s hearts and it killing them instantly. He would then dissect the bodies and look at the genetic structures. Dr. Josef Mengele had also sown twins together to make Siamese Twins (“Angel of Death”). There are photos and documentation that proves that this was an experiment he did perform and was very unsuccessful. Approximately three thousand twins passed through
Dr. Josef Mengele was one of the notorious physicians at the time of the Nazi regime, carrying out many atrocious acts at Auschwitz, such as cremation, euthanization, and the infamous gassing of internees. However, it was his experiments, including the injection of dye into the patient’s eyes and operations on twins for research, that led to him achieving a place in history for crimes against the moral order. The intention of the experiments was to further understand human genetics and use the information to make the “Master Race”. In Bertioga, Brazil on the 7th of February 1979, Mengele died, suffering a stroke while swimming. He drowned and was later buried in a suburb of Sao Pãolo under the fictitious name “Wolfgang Gerhard.” His actions
Ethos. This is a large part of what makes Mengele’s defense ineffective. Almost everybody knows the name, Josef Mengele. And it is not associated with ethical ideas. A Nazi sympathizer, Mengele was a “doctor” in the extermination camp called Auschwitz. He experimented on the elderly, the sick, young children, and most notably, twins. Very few victims