[D66] Holocaust Memorial Day: remembering the psychiatric patients who were victims of Nazi persecution

A.OUT jugg at ziggo.nl
Mon Jan 27 13:37:45 CET 2020


Het feit dat ze van de Holocaust een uitsluitend joodse aangelegenheid 
maken zie je wel aan het dragen van keppeltjes bij de ceremonie's. 
Minderheden die ook slachtoffer werden, worden niet herdacht. 
Nederlanders kijken wederom weg... (Niet verrassend in een 'land' 
waarbij euthanasie van psychiatrische patienten genormaliseerd is.)

On 27-01-2020 10:29, A.OUT wrote:
> (Hier hoor je Rutte dus niet over. Het gaat alleen maar over de 
> jodenvervolging.)
> 
> https://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/blog/holocaust-memorial-day-remembering-psychiatric-patients-who-were-victims-nazi-persecution 
> 
> 
> Holocaust Memorial Day: remembering the psychiatric patients who were 
> victims of Nazi persecution
> 27 January 2017
> 
> We’re all familiar with the horror of the Nazi attempts to annihilate 
> the Jewish population in the 1940s – the Holocaust.
> 
> One of the less well-known aspects of Nazi policy was the genocide that 
> included the slaughter of up to 275,0001 psychiatric patients. The 
> majority of them, like me, had a diagnosis of schizophrenia. A further 
> 400,000 people were sterilised on medical grounds.
> 
> Nazi persecution
> 
> Between 1941 and 1945, the Nazis attempted to kill all Jewish people in 
> Europe. This is known as the Holocaust (The Shoah in Hebrew). In 
> addition, the Nazis targeted gypsies, black people, Slavic people, gay 
> people, people with disabilities political opponents and those whose 
> religious beliefs conflicted with Nazi ideology.
> 
> This year’s theme for Holocaust Memorial Day is “how can life go on?” It 
> includes remembering past events, encouraging us to consider how we are 
> facing hate today and how we can help people from persecuted groups to 
> ensure that life goes on in the face of hate and persecution.
> 
> With these themes in mind, consider some of the arguments used to 
> promote the murderous policy adopted toward psychiatric patients and why 
> we must be aware of the impact this thinking could have now and in the 
> future.
> 
> In the 1930s the eugenics movement was well established in the US and 
> UK. The work of Ernst Rüdin and Franz Kallmann reinforced this - they 
> believed that schizophrenia was simply an inherited disease. It became 
> part of the quest for rassenhygiene (racial hygiene), which drove the 
> Holocaust with mass murder at its core.
> 
> But this interpretation of the science was by no means the only driver. 
> One early motivation was cutting the cost of care for psychiatric 
> patients. Funding for care decreased as demand increased.2
> 
> In 1920, Karl Binding and Alfred Hoche published Permission for the 
> Destruction of Life Unworthy of Life. In it, they asked the question “Is 
> there human life [whose] prolongation represents a perpetual loss of 
> value, both for its bearer and for society as a whole?” They answered 
> this by describing patients as “mentally dead”. This argument was 
> repeated in, among others, The Eradication of the Less Valuable from 
> Society.2
> 
> Hitler adopted these arguments. The result was a memorandum on "the 
> destruction of life unworthy of life" and a draft law that included the 
> following provision:
> 
> "The life of a person who, because of incurable mental illness, requires 
> permanent institutionalisation and is not able to sustain an independent 
> existence, may be prematurely terminated by medical measures in a 
> painless and covert manner. Selected professors of psychiatry and asylum 
> directors, known to be sympathetic to the plan, were asked to comment on 
> the draft. All agreed that such a programme was necessary." 1,2,3
> 
> On 1 September 1939, Hitler wrote a letter authorising the programme to 
> kill psychiatric patients and, from October that year, a committee of 
> psychiatrists assessed all patients. The committee identified the first 
> 70,000 patients who were to die as part of the policy. By August 1941, 
> records showed that 70,273 patients had been killed.
> 
> The killing continued throughout the war. The exact figures are unknown 
> but the best estimates give us 200,000-275,000, with a further 400,000 
> subjected to forced sterilisation.
> 
> In short, the murder of about a quarter of a million,  just like many of 
> our fellow citizens who today thrive in their families and workplaces, 
> was based on poor science, cost cutting, economic prejudice, propaganda 
> and media portrayals which presented us as worthless substandard human 
> beings.
> 
> What implications does this have for the present day?
> 
> In Nazi Germany, a diagnosis of schizophrenia was a death sentence. 
> Today it merely reduces life expectancy by 10-25 years (Laursen, 
> Munk-Olsen, & Vestergaard, 2012). Thankfully, in large part attitudes 
> towards people living with mental health problems have improved 
> dramatically. However, this isn’t to say that discrimination doesn’t 
> exist. We must remain ever vigilant.
> 
> There is no better time to remember the importance of behaving as a 
> whole community. We must never forget what happens when hatred, 
> discrimination, poor science and blaming community problems on the most 
> disadvantaged in communities goes unchallenged.
> 
> References
> 
>      Torrey, E. F., & Yolken, R. H. (2010). Psychiatric genocide: Nazi 
> attempts to eradicate schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 36(1), 
> 26–32. http://doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbp097
>      Burleigh, M. (1994). Death and Deliverance: “Euthanasia” in Germany 
> c. 1900–1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
>      Muller-Hill, B. (1988). Murderous Science. Elimination by 
> Scientific Selection of Jews, Gypsies, and Others, Germany, 1933-1945. 
> New York, United States: Oxford University Press. 
> http://doi.org/10.1126/science.241.4866.730
>      Laursen, T. M., Munk-Olsen, T., & Vestergaard, M. (2012). Life 
> expectancy and cardiovascular mortality in persons with schizophrenia. 
> Current Opinion in Psychiatry, 25(2), 83–88. 
> http://doi.org/10.1097/YCO.0b013e32835035ca
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