Josef Rudolf Mengele
([ˈjoːzɛf ˈmɛŋələ]; 16 March 1911 – 7 February 1979), also known as the Angel of
Death (German: Todesengel), was a German Schutzstaffel (SS) officer and
physician during World War II. He performed deadly experiments on prisoners at
the Auschwitz II (Birkenau) concentration camp, where he was a member of the
team of doctors who selected victims to be killed in the gas chambers, and was
one of the doctors who administered the gas.
Before the war, Mengele received doctorates in anthropology
and medicine, and began a career as a researcher. He joined the Nazi Party in
1937 and the SS in 1938. He was assigned as a battalion medical officer at the
start of World War II, then transferred to the Nazi concentration camps service
in early 1943 and assigned to Auschwitz, where he saw the opportunity to
conduct genetic research on human subjects. His experiments focused primarily
on twins, with no regard for the health or safety of the victims. With Red Army
troops sweeping through German-occupied Poland, Mengele was transferred 280
kilometres (170 mi) from Auschwitz to the Gross-Rosen concentration camp on 17
January 1945, ten days before the arrival of the Soviet forces at Auschwitz.
After the war, Mengele fled to Argentina in July 1949,
assisted by a network of former SS members. He initially lived in and around
Buenos Aires, then fled to Paraguay in 1959 and Brazil in 1960, all while being
sought by West Germany, Israel, and Nazi hunters such as Simon Wiesenthal, who
wanted to bring him to trial. Mengele eluded capture in spite of extradition
requests by the West German government and clandestine operations by the
Israeli intelligence agency Mossad. He drowned in 1979 after suffering a stroke
while swimming off the coast of Bertioga, and was buried under the false name of
Wolfgang Gerhard. His remains were disinterred and positively identified by
forensic examination in 1985.
Early life
Mengele was born into a Catholic family in Günzburg, Bavaria
on 16 March 1911, the eldest of three sons of Walburga (née Hupfauer) and Karl
Mengele. His two younger brothers were Karl Jr. and Alois. Their father was
founder of the Karl Mengele & Sons company (later renamed as Mengele
Agrartechnik [de]), which produced farming machinery. Mengele was successful at
school and developed an interest in music, art, and skiing. He completed high
school in April 1930 and went on to study philosophy in Munich, where the
headquarters of the Nazi Party were located. He attended the University of
Bonn, where he took his medical preliminary examination. In 1931 he joined Der
Stahlhelm, a paramilitary organization that was absorbed into the Nazi
Sturmabteilung ('Storm Detachment';
SA) in 1934. In 1935, Mengele earned a PhD in anthropology from the University
of Munich. In January 1937, he joined the Institute for Hereditary Biology and
Racial Hygiene in Frankfurt, where he worked for Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer,
a German geneticist with a particular interest in researching twins.
As Von Verschuer's assistant, Mengele focused on the genetic
factors that result in a cleft lip and palate, or a cleft chin. His thesis on
the subject earned him a cum laude doctorate in medicine (MD) from the University
of Frankfurt in 1938. (Both of his degrees were revoked by the issuing
universities in the 1960s.) In a letter of recommendation, Von Verschuer
praised Mengele's reliability and his ability to verbally present complex
material in a clear manner. The American author Robert Jay Lifton notes that
Mengele's published works were in keeping with the scientific mainstream of the
time, and would probably have been viewed as valid scientific efforts even
outside Nazi Germany.
On 28 July 1939, Mengele married Irene Schönbein, whom he
had met while working as a medical resident in Leipzig. Their only son, Rolf,
was born in 1944.
Military service
The ideology of Nazism brought together elements of
antisemitism, racial hygiene, and eugenics, and combined them with
pan-Germanism and territorial expansionism with the goal of obtaining more
Lebensraum (living space) for the Germanic people. Nazi Germany attempted to
obtain this new territory by attacking Poland and the Soviet Union, intending
to deport or kill the Jews and Slavs living there, who were considered by the
Nazis to be inferior to the Aryan master race.
Mengele joined the Nazi Party in 1937 and the Schutzstaffel
(SS; 'Protection Squadron') in 1938.
He received basic training in 1938 with the Gebirgsjäger ('light infantry mountain troop') and was called up for service in
the Wehrmacht (Nazi armed forces) in June 1940, some months after the outbreak
of World War II. He soon volunteered for medical service in the Waffen-SS, the
combat arm of the SS, where he served with the rank of SS-Untersturmführer
('second lieutenant') in a medical reserve battalion until November 1940. He
was next assigned to the SS-Rasse- und Siedlungshauptamt ('SS Race and Settlement Main Office') in Poznań, evaluating candidates
for Germanization.
In June 1941, Mengele was posted to Ukraine, where he was
awarded the Iron Cross 2nd Class. In January 1942, he joined the 5th SS Panzer
Division Wiking as a battalion medical officer. After rescuing two German
soldiers from a burning tank, he was decorated with the Iron Cross 1st Class,
the Wound Badge in Black, and the Medal for the Care of the German People. He
was declared unfit for further active service in mid-1942, when he was seriously
wounded in action near Rostov-on-Don. Following his recovery, he was
transferred to the headquarters of the SS Race and Settlement Main Office in
Berlin, at which point he resumed his association with Von Verschuer, who was
now director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity,
and Eugenics. Mengele was promoted to the rank of SS-Hauptsturmführer ('captain') in April 1943.
Auschwitz
In 1942, Auschwitz II (Birkenau), originally intended to
house slave laborers, began to be used instead as a combined labour camp and
extermination camp. Prisoners were transported there by rail from all over
Nazi-controlled Europe, arriving in daily convoys. By July 1942, SS doctors
were conducting "selections"
where incoming Jews were segregated, and those considered able to work were
admitted into the camp while those deemed unfit for labor were immediately
killed in the gas chambers. The arrivals that were selected to die, about
three-quarters of the total, included almost all children, women with small
children, pregnant women, all the elderly, and all of those who appeared (in a
brief and superficial inspection by an SS doctor) to be not completely fit and
healthy.
In early 1943, Von Verschuer encouraged Mengele to apply for
a transfer to the concentration camp service. Mengele's application was
accepted and he was posted to Auschwitz, where he was appointed by
SS-Standortarzt Eduard Wirths, chief medical officer at Auschwitz, to the
position of chief physician of the Zigeunerfamilienlager (Romani family camp)
at Birkenau, a subcamp located on the main Auschwitz complex. The SS doctors
did not administer treatment to the Auschwitz inmates but supervised the
activities of inmate doctors who had been forced to work in the camp medical
service. As part of his duties, Mengele made weekly visits to the hospital
barracks and ordered any prisoners who had not recovered after two weeks in bed
to be sent to the gas chambers.
Mengele's work also involved carrying out selections, a task
that he chose to perform even when he was not assigned to do so, in the hope of
finding subjects for his experiments, with a particular interest in locating
sets of twins. In contrast to most of the other SS doctors, who viewed
selections as one of their most stressful and unpleasant duties, he undertook
the task with a flamboyant air, often smiling or whistling. He was one of the
SS doctors responsible for supervising the administration of Zyklon B, the
cyanide-based pesticide that was used for the mass killings in the Birkenau gas
chambers. He served in this capacity at the gas chambers located in crematoria
IV and V.
When an outbreak of noma—a gangrenous bacterial disease of
the mouth and face—struck the Romani camp in 1943, Mengele initiated a study to
determine the cause of the disease and develop a treatment. He enlisted the
assistance of prisoner Berthold Epstein, a Jewish pediatrician and professor at
Prague University. The patients were isolated in separate barracks and several
afflicted children were killed so that their preserved heads and organs could
be sent to the SS Medical Academy in Graz and other facilities for study. This
research was still ongoing when the Romani camp was liquidated and its remaining
occupants killed in 1944.
When a typhus epidemic began in the women's camp, Mengele
cleared one block of six hundred Jewish women and sent them to their deaths in
the gas chambers. The building was then cleaned and disinfected and the
occupants of a neighboring block were bathed, de–loused, and given new clothing
before being moved into the clean block. This process was repeated until all of
the barracks were disinfected. Similar procedures were used for later epidemics
of scarlet fever and other diseases, with infected prisoners being killed in
the gas chambers. For these actions, Mengele was awarded the War Merit Cross
(Second Class with swords) and was promoted in 1944 to First Physician of the
Birkenau subcamp.
Human experimentation
Mengele used Auschwitz as an opportunity to continue his
anthropological studies and research into heredity, using inmates for human
experimentation. His medical procedures showed no consideration for the
victims' health, safety, or physical and emotional suffering. He was
particularly interested in identical twins, people with heterochromia iridum
(eyes of two different colors), dwarfs, and people with physical abnormalities.
A grant was provided by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft ('German Research Foundation'), at the
request of Von Verschuer, who received regular reports and shipments of
specimens from Mengele. The grant was used to build a pathology laboratory
attached to Crematorium II at Auschwitz II-Birkenau. Miklós Nyiszli, a
Hungarian Jewish pathologist who arrived in Auschwitz on 29 May 1944, performed
dissections and prepared specimens for shipment in this laboratory. The twin
research was in part intended to prove the supremacy of heredity over the
environment in determining phenotypes and thus strengthen the Nazi premise of
the genetic superiority of the Aryan race. Nyiszli and others reported that the
twin studies may also have been motivated by an intention to uncover strategies
for 'racially desirable' Germans to reproduce more twins.
Mengele's research subjects were better fed and housed than
the other prisoners, and temporarily spared from execution in the gas chambers.
His research subjects lived in their own barracks, where they were provided
with a marginally better quality of food and somewhat improved living
conditions than the other areas of the camp. When visiting his young subjects,
he introduced himself as "Uncle Mengele" and offered them sweets,
while at the same time being personally responsible for the deaths of an
unknown number of victims whom he killed via lethal injection, shootings,
beatings, and his deadly experiments. In his 1986 book, Lifton describes
Mengele as sadistic, lacking empathy, and extremely anti-Semitic, believing the
Jews should be eliminated as an inferior and dangerous race. Rolf Mengele later
claimed that his father had shown no remorse for his wartime activities.
A former Auschwitz inmate doctor said of Mengele:
He was capable of
being so kind to the children, to have them become fond of him, to bring them
sugar, to think of small details in their daily lives, and to do things we
would genuinely admire ... And then, next to that, ... the crematoria smoke,
and these children, tomorrow or in a half-hour, he is going to send them there.
Well, that is where the anomaly lay.
Twins were subjected to weekly examinations and measurements
of their physical attributes by Mengele or one of his assistants. The experiments
he performed on twins included unnecessary amputation of limbs, intentionally
infecting one twin with typhus or some other disease, and transfusing the blood
of one twin into the other. Many of the victims died while undergoing these
procedures, and those who survived the experiments were sometimes killed and
their bodies dissected once Mengele had no further use for them. Nyiszli
recalled one occasion on which Mengele personally killed fourteen twins in one
night by injecting their hearts with chloroform. If one twin died from disease,
he would kill the other twin to allow comparative post-mortem reports to be produced
for research purposes.
Mengele's eye experiments included attempts to change the
eye color by injecting chemicals into the eyes of living subjects, and he
killed people with heterochromatic eyes so that the eyes could be removed and
sent to Berlin for study. His experiments on dwarfs and people with physical
abnormalities included taking physical measurements, drawing blood, extracting
healthy teeth, and treatment with unnecessary drugs and X-rays. Many of his
victims were dispatched to the gas chambers after about two weeks, and their
skeletons were sent to Berlin for further analysis. Mengele sought out pregnant
women, on whom he would perform experiments before sending them to the gas
chambers. Alex Dekel, a survivor, reports witnessing Mengele performing
vivisection without anesthesia, removing hearts and stomachs of victims.
Yitzhak Ganon, another survivor, reported in 2009 how Mengele removed his
kidney without anesthesia. He was forced to return to work without painkillers.
Witness Vera Alexander described how Mengele sewed two Romani twins together,
back to back, in a crude attempt to create conjoined twins; both children died
of gangrene after several days of suffering.
After Auschwitz
Along with several other Auschwitz doctors, Mengele
transferred to Gross-Rosen concentration camp in Lower Silesia on 17 January
1945, taking with him two boxes of specimens and the records of his experiments
at Auschwitz. Most of the camp medical records had already been destroyed by
the SS[62][63] by the time the Red Army liberated Auschwitz on 27 January.
Mengele fled Gross-Rosen on 18 February, a week before the Soviets arrived
there, and traveled westward to Žatec in Czechoslovakia, disguised as a
Wehrmacht officer. There he temporarily entrusted his incriminating documents
to a nurse with whom he had struck up a relationship. He and his unit then
hurried west to avoid being captured by the Soviets, but were taken prisoners
of war by the Americans in June 1945. Although Mengele was initially registered
under his own name, he was not identified as being on the major war criminal
list due to the disorganization of the Allies regarding the distribution of
wanted lists, and the fact that he did not have the usual SS blood group
tattoo. He was released at the end of July and obtained false papers under the
name "Fritz Ulmann",
documents he later altered to read "Fritz
Hollmann".
After several months on the run, including a trip back to
the Soviet-occupied area to recover his Auschwitz records, Mengele found work
near Rosenheim as a farmhand. He eventually escaped from Germany on 17 April
1949, convinced that his capture would mean a trial and death sentence.
Assisted by a network of former SS members, he used the ratline to travel to
Genoa, where he obtained a passport from the International Committee of the Red
Cross under the alias "Helmut
Gregor", and sailed to Argentina in July 1949. His wife refused to
accompany him, and they divorced in 1954.
In South America
Mengele worked as a carpenter in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
while lodging in a boarding house in the suburb of Vicente López. After a few
weeks, he moved to the house of a Nazi sympathizer in the more affluent
neighborhood of Florida Este. He next worked as a salesman for his family's
farm equipment company, Karl Mengele & Sons, and in 1951 he began making
frequent trips to Paraguay as a regional sales representative. He moved into an
apartment in central Buenos Aires in 1953, used family funds to buy a part
interest in a carpentry concern, and then rented a house in the suburb of
Olivos in 1954. Files released by the Argentine government in 1992 indicate
that Mengele may have practiced medicine without a license while living in
Buenos Aires, including performing abortions.
After obtaining a copy of his birth certificate through the
West German embassy in 1956, Mengele was issued an Argentine foreign residence
permit under his real name. He used this document to obtain a West German
passport using his real name and embarked on a trip to Europe. He met with his
son Rolf (who was told Mengele was his "Uncle
Fritz") and his widowed sister-in-law Martha, for a ski holiday in
Switzerland; he also spent a week in his home town of Günzburg. When he
returned to Argentina in September 1956, Mengele began living under his real
name. Martha and her son Karl Heinz followed about a month later, and the three
began living together. Josef and Martha were married in 1958 while on holiday
in Uruguay, and they bought a house in Buenos Aires. Mengele's business
interests now included part ownership of Fadro Farm, a pharmaceutical company.
Along with several other doctors, he was questioned in 1958 on suspicion of
practicing medicine without a license when a teenage girl died after an
abortion, but he was released without charge. Aware that the publicity could
lead to his Nazi background and wartime activities being discovered, he took an
extended business trip to Paraguay and was granted citizenship there in 1959 under
the name "José Mengele". He
returned to Buenos Aires several times to settle his business affairs and visit
his family. Martha and Karl lived in a boarding house in the city until
December 1960, when they returned to West Germany.
Mengele's name was mentioned several times during the
Nuremberg trials in the mid-1940s, but the Allied forces believed that he was
probably already dead. Irene Mengele and the family in Günzburg also alleged
that he had died. Working in West Germany, Nazi hunters Simon Wiesenthal and
Hermann Langbein collected information from witnesses about Mengele's wartime
activities. In a search of the public records, Langbein discovered Mengele's
divorce papers, which listed an address in Buenos Aires. He and Wiesenthal
pressured the West German authorities into starting extradition proceedings,
and an arrest warrant was drawn up on 5 June 1959. Argentina initially refused
the extradition request because the fugitive was no longer living at the
address given on the documents; by the time extradition was approved on 30
June, Mengele had already fled to Paraguay and was living on a farm near the
Argentine border.
Efforts by Mossad
In May 1960, Isser Harel, director of the Israeli intelligence
agency Mossad, personally led the successful effort to capture Adolf Eichmann
in Buenos Aires. He was hoping to track down Mengele so that he too could be
brought to trial in Israel. Under interrogation, Eichmann provided the address
of a boarding house that had been used as a safe house for Nazi fugitives.
Surveillance of the house did not reveal Mengele or any members of his family,
and the neighborhood postman claimed that although Mengele had recently been
receiving letters there under his real name, he had since relocated without
leaving a forwarding address. Harel's inquiries at a machine shop where Mengele
had been part owner also failed to generate any leads, so he was forced to
abandon the search.
Despite having provided Mengele with legal documents using
his real name in 1956 (which had enabled him to formalize his permanent
residency in Argentina), West Germany was now offering a reward for his
capture. Continuing newspaper coverage of his wartime activities, with
accompanying photographs, led Mengele to relocate again in 1960. Former pilot
Hans-Ulrich Rudel put him in touch with the Nazi supporter Wolfgang Gerhard,
who helped Mengele cross the border into Brazil. He stayed with Gerhard on his
farm near São Paulo until a more permanent accommodation could be found, which
came about with Hungarian expatriates Géza and Gitta Stammer. The couple bought
a farm in Nova Europa with the help of an investment from Mengele, who was
given the job of managing for them. The three bought a coffee and cattle farm
in Serra Negra in 1962, with Mengele owning a half interest. Gerhard had
initially told the Stammers that the fugitive's name was "Peter Hochbichler", but they discovered his true
identity in 1963. Gerhard persuaded the couple not to report Mengele's location
to the authorities by convincing them that they themselves could be implicated
for harboring a fugitive. In February 1961, West Germany widened its
extradition request to include Brazil, having been tipped off to the
possibility that Mengele had relocated there.
Meanwhile, Zvi Aharoni, one of the Mossad agents who had
been involved in the Eichmann capture, was placed in charge of a team of agents
tasked with tracking down Mengele and bringing him to trial in Israel. Their
inquiries in Paraguay revealed no clues to his whereabouts, and they were
unable to intercept any correspondence between Mengele and his wife Martha, who
by this time was living in Italy. Agents who were following Rudel's movements
also failed to produce any leads. Aharoni and his team followed Gerhard to a
rural area near São Paulo, where they identified a European man whom they
believed to be Mengele. This potential breakthrough was reported to Harel, but
the logistics of staging a capture, the budgetary constraints of the search
operation, and the priority of focusing on Israel's deteriorating relationship
with Egypt led the Mossad chief to call off the manhunt in 1962.
Later life and death
In 1969, Mengele and the Stammers jointly purchased a
farmhouse in Caieiras, with Mengele as half owner. When Wolfgang Gerhard
returned to Germany in 1971 to seek medical treatment for his ailing wife and
son, he gave his identity card to Mengele. The Stammers' friendship with
Mengele deteriorated in late 1974, and when they bought a house in São Paulo,
he was not invited to join them. The Stammers later bought a bungalow in the
Eldorado neighborhood of Diadema, São Paulo, which they rented out to Mengele.[
Rolf, who had not seen his father since the ski holiday in 1956, visited him at
the bungalow in 1977; he found an "unrepentant
Nazi" who claimed he had never personally harmed anyone and only
carried out his duties as an officer.
Mengele's health had been steadily deteriorating since 1972.
He suffered a stroke in 1976, experienced high blood pressure, and developed an
ear infection which affected his balance. On 7 February 1979, while visiting
his friends Wolfram and Liselotte Bossert in the coastal resort of Bertioga, Mengele
suffered another stroke while swimming and drowned. His body was buried in Embu
das Artes under the name "Wolfgang
Gerhard", whose identification Mengele had been using since 1971.
Other aliases used by Mengele in his later life included "Dr. Fausto Rindón" and "S. Josi Alvers Aspiazu".
Exhumation
Sightings of Mengele were being reported all over the world
in the decades following the war. Wiesenthal claimed to have information that
placed Mengele on the Greek island of Kythnos in 1960, in Cairo in 1961, in
Spain in 1971, and in Paraguay in 1978, eighteen years after he had left the
country. He insisted as late as 1985 that Mengele was still alive—six years
after he had died—having previously offered a reward of US$100,000 (equivalent
to $300,000 in 2022) in 1982 for the fugitive's capture. Worldwide interest in
the case was heightened by a mock trial held in Jerusalem in February 1985,
featuring the testimonies of over one hundred victims of Mengele's experiments.
Shortly afterwards, the West German, Israeli, and U.S. governments launched a
coordinated effort to determine Mengele's whereabouts. The West German and
Israeli governments offered rewards for his capture, as did The Washington
Times and the Simon Wiesenthal Center.
On 31 May 1985, acting on intelligence received by the West
German prosecutor's office, police raided the house of Hans Sedlmeier, a
lifelong friend of Mengele and sales manager of the family firm in Günzburg.
They found a coded address book and copies of letters sent to and received from
Mengele. Among the papers was a letter from Wolfram Bossert notifying Sedlmeier
of Mengele's death. German authorities alerted the police in São Paulo, who
then contacted the Bosserts. Under interrogation, they revealed the location of
Mengele's grave and the remains were exhumed on 6 June 1985. Extensive forensic
examination indicated with a high degree of probability that the body was indeed
that of Josef Mengele. Rolf Mengele issued a statement on 10 June confirming
that the body was his father's and that news of his father's death had been
concealed to protect people who had sheltered him.
In 1992, DNA testing confirmed Mengele's identity beyond
doubt, but family members refused repeated requests by Brazilian officials to
repatriate the remains to Germany. The skeleton is stored at the São Paulo
Institute for Forensic Medicine, where it is used as an educational aid during
forensic medicine courses at the University of São Paulo's medical school.
Later developments
In 2007, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
received as a donation the Höcker Album, an album of photographs of Auschwitz
staff taken by Karl-Friedrich Höcker. Eight of the photographs include Mengele.
In February 2010, a 180-page volume of Mengele's diary was
sold by Alexander Autographs at auction for an undisclosed sum to the grandson
of a Holocaust survivor. The unidentified previous owner, who acquired the
journals in Brazil, was reported to be close to the Mengele family. A Holocaust
survivors' organization described the sale as "a cynical act of exploitation aimed at profiting from the
writings of one of the most heinous Nazi criminals". Rabbi Marvin Hier
of the Simon Wiesenthal Center was glad to see the diary fall into Jewish
hands. "At a time when Ahmadinejad's
Iran regularly denies the Holocaust and anti-Semitism and hatred of Jews is
back in vogue, this acquisition is especially significant", he said.
In 2011, a further 31 volumes of Mengele's diaries were sold—again amidst
protests—by the same auction house to an undisclosed collector of World War II memorabilia
for US$245,000.
Publications
Racial-Morphological Examinations of the Anterior Portion of
the Lower Jaw in Four Racial Groups. This dissertation, completed in 1935 and
first published in 1937, earned him a PhD in anthropology from Munich
University. In this work Mengele sought to demonstrate that there were
structural differences in the lower jaws of individuals from different ethnic
groups, and that racial distinctions could be made based on these differences.
Genealogical Studies in the Cases of Cleft Lip-Jaw-Palate
(1938), his medical dissertation, earned him a doctorate in medicine from
Frankfurt University. Studying the influence of genetics as a factor in the
occurrence of this deformity, Mengele conducted research on families who
exhibited these traits in multiple generations. The work also included notes on
other abnormalities found in these family lines.
Hereditary Transmission of Fistulae Auris. This journal
article, published in Der Erbarzt ('The
Genetic Physician'), focuses on fistula auris (an abnormal fissure on the
external ear) as a hereditary trait. Mengele noted that individuals who have
this trait also tend to have a dimple on their chin.
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