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It is not widely known that Hitler's extermination policies began with the
widespread killing of institutionalized disabled people in Germany in the
1940s, and that the eugenics theories that were the basis for Hitler's
policies originated in the United States in the 1920s. Sterilization and
euthanasia were not the ideas of the Nazis. Germany, however, was the only
country in which the political climate allowed materialization of the final
goal of sterilization and euthanasia.
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The Hadamar Mental Institution where killings of disabled people took place. |
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The project that carried out the extermination of children and adults with
disabilities was known as "T4." The initials came from Tiergartenstrasse 4,
Berlin which was the full address of the Fuhrer Chancellery. The T4 Project
included four organizations: the Realms Work Committee in charge of
collecting information on candidates for euthanasia from questionnaires
sent to hospitals, the Realms Committee for Scientific Approach to Severe
Illness Due to Heredity set up exclusively to apply euthanasia to children,
the charitable company for the transport of the sick which transported
patients to the killing centers, and the Charitable Foundation for
Institutional Care, in charge of final disposition of the victims' remains.
At Hadamar Mental Institution, the victims were stripped, dressed in paper shirts and taken to a gas chamber where they were murdered with hydrocyanic acid gas, and the bodies moved to crematoriums by conveyer belts, six bodies to a furnace. The psychiatrist in charge at Hadamar was Dr. Adolf Wahlmann, an active member of the German Mental Hygiene Movement. After information about the exterminations began to filter down to the German public, some members of the clergy started speaking out against the program. Hitler ordered the T4 program to stop killing patients in gas chambers. Instead the program went underground and victims were poisoned or starved to death. On May 8, 1945, the war ended in Germany. In the extermination institutes, they either kept on killing, or let the patients starve to death. As late as May 29, 1945, a four-year-old feebleminded boy was murdered in Kaufbeuren. Estimates of how many disabled people died under the Nazis range up to 250,000. The extermination program in Nazi Germany caused eugenics theorists in the United States and Europe to backpedal on their beliefs about eliminating mental illness and congenital disabilities through euthanasia. However sterilization of people with disabilities continued to be a widespread practice well into the 1970s.
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