August 24, 1941 – Hitler orders the discontinuation of the T4 euthanasia program for the mentally and physically ill

On August 24, 1941, Adolf Hitler ordered the cessation of the T4 euthanasia program for the mentally and physically ill in response to protests in Germany led by the Bishop of Munster, Clemens von Galen. Pope Pius XII had earlier denounced the program, stating in December 1940 that it violated Divine Law and that the “killing of an innocent person because of mental or physical defects is not allowed”. Despite the official cessation in August 1941, the program continued to be performed until Germany’s defeat in 1945. Its implementation had begun in September 1939.





T4 (later given the name “Aktion T4” after the war) was Nazi Germany’s program of mass killing the severely mentally and physically ill people in psychiatric hospitals in Germany and occupied territories, Austria, Poland, and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (present-day Czech Republic). The reasons for its implementation were eugenics, reduce suffering, racial purification, and cost savings for the government.





In the latter stages, patients were killed en masse with
cyanide poison in gas chambers.





(Taken from Wars of the 20th Century – World War II in Europe)





Genocide and slave
labor
Because of the failure of Operation Barbarossa and succeeding
campaigns, Germany
was unable to implement the planned mass-scale transfer of targeted populations
to the Russian interior.  Elimination of
the undesired populations began almost immediately following the outbreak of
war, with the conquest of Poland.  The killing of hundreds of thousands of
civilians occurred in hundreds of incidents of massacres and mass shootings in
towns and villages, reprisals against attacks on German troops, scorched earth
operations, civilians trapped in the cross-fire, concentration camps, etc.





By far, the most famous extermination program was the
Holocaust, where six million Jews, or 60% of the nine million pre-war European
Jewish population, were killed in the period 1941-1945.  German anti-Jewish policies began in the
Nuremberg Laws of 1935, and violent repression of Jews increased at the
outbreak of war.  Jews were rounded up
and confined to guarded ghettos, and then sent by freight trains to
concentration and labor camps.  By
mid-1942, under the “Final Solution to the Jewish Question” decree, Jews were
transported to extermination camps, where they were killed in gas
chambers.  Some 90% of Holocaust victims
were Jews.  Other similar exterminations
and repressions were carried out against ethnic Russians, Ukrainians, Poles,
and other Slavs and Romani (gypsies), as well as communists and other political
enemies, homosexuals, Freemasons, and Jehovah’s Witnesses.  In Germany itself, a clandestine
program implemented by German public health authorities under Hitler’s orders,
killed tens of thousands of mentally and physically disabled patients,
purportedly under euthanasia (“mercy killing”) procedures, which actually
involved sending patients to gas chambers, applying lethal doses of medication,
and through starvation.





Some 12-15 million slave laborers, mostly civilians from
captured territories in Eastern Europe, were rounded up to work in Germany,
particularly in munitions factories and agriculture, to ease German labor
shortage caused by the millions of German men fighting in the various fronts
and also because Nazi policy discouraged German women from working in
industry.  Some 5.7 million Soviet POWs
also were used as slave labor.  As well,
two million French Army prisoners were sent to labor camps in Germany, mainly to prevent the formation of
organized resistance in France
and for them to serve as hostages to ensure continued compliance by the Vichy government.  Some 600,000 French civilians also were
conscripted or volunteered to work in German plants.  Living and working conditions for the slave
laborers were extremely dire, particularly for those from Eastern
Europe.  Some 60% (3.6
million of the 5.7 million) of Soviet POWs died in captivity from various
causes: summary executions, physical abuse, diseases, starvation diets, extreme
work, etc.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 24, 2020 01:43
No comments have been added yet.