Esther M. Zimmer Lederberg: No Supporter of Eugenics
    
   Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and Eugenics
 
  Dr. Esther M. Zimmer Lederberg was always the scientist, always the 
  humanist, she never supported racial theories, she opposed racism, 
  and such ideologically based Eugenics!
 
 
  The Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and Eugenics 
  (KWI-A) was founded in 1927. The Rockefeller Foundation supported both the Kaiser 
  Wilhelm Institute of Psychiatry and the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, 
  Human Heredity and Eugenics. The Rockefeller Foundation partially funded the 
  actual building of the Institute and helped keep the Institute afloat during the 
  Depression. 
 
 
    
     - 
       The Kaiser Wilhelm Society was composed of high-level representatives or 
       liaisons with the German government, as well as industrialists and financiers. 
       These also included people with political contacts (especially during the 
       Third Reich, people who insured that National Socialist attitudes would 
       prevail at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institutes.) Later on, during the Nuremberg 
       War Criminal Trials, interlocking directorates expressing political, financial 
       and governmental direction were discussed and are precisely what existed at 
       the Kaiser Wilhelm Society. In terms of the actual work accomplished at the 
       Kaiser Wilhelm institutes, the most important institute was the KWI-A. This 
       was reflected in the fact that the KWI-A was the only institute with a 
       "W" classification (Wehrwirtschaft; 
       important for a wartime economy). 1 
       It was first directed by Eugen Fischer (1927-1942), then Otmar von Verschuer 
       (1942-1945), until the Kaiser Wilhelm institutes were renamed Max Planck 
       Institutes.
      
 
  .
      -  Eugen Fischer, Anthropologist, KWI-A.
       First director of the KWI-A. Worked primarily in the area of 
       race eugenics, an area of work that straddled both the Second Reich (in 
       German South West Africa) and the Third Reich. His areas of specialization 
       included Bastard studies, the name then in use for the offspring of mixed 
       races. He coordinated his work with fellow 
       International Federation of Eugenics Organizations member 
       Charles Davenport. Even before Fischer formally became a Nazi in 1940, he 
       devoted himself to directing various programs identified with the Nazi agenda, 
       including twin studies, sterilization, and euthanasia (Action T4). Prior to his 
       retirement from the KWI-A in 1942, Fischer prepared the transition of leadership 
       from himself to Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer, the second Director of the KWI-A, 
       partly through a shift in emphasis from twin study to phenogenetics. Fischer was 
       a racial anti-Semite. He participated in the Final Solution (volkstod) to 
       the Jewish Question when he attended the Frankfurt Institute for the 
       Investigation of the Jewish Question on March 27-28, 1941.
       
  .
      -  Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer, Physician, Anthropologist, KWI-A.
       Joined the National Socialist Deutsch Workers Party (Nazi) in 1940. Became 
       the second director of the KWI-A. Started at the KWI-A in 1927 (under 
       Eugen Fischer, the first Director of the KWI-A), 
       as the director of the KWI-A Department of Human Genetics; he subsequently 
       became director of the KWI-A Division on Twin Research. In 1935 Verschuer 
       continued to work at the KWI-A but shifted his primary attention to the 
       Frankfurt Institute for Genetic Biology and Racial Hygiene ('Institut für 
       Erbbiologie und Rassenhygiene'), leading the sterilization effort in the city 
       of Frankfurt. Verschuer once again gave his primary attention to the KWI-A in 
       1942, when he succeeded Fischer as Director of the KWI-A. Verschauer worked 
       primarily in the area of twin studies, with a strong interest in racial hygiene
       as implemented via sterilization. He was responsible for implementing the 
       transition from twin study to phenogenetics: an approach. that emphasized what 
       modern scientists would call developmental biology. Two of Verschuer's most 
       well-known assistants were Karin Magnussen and Josef Mengele. Karin Magnussen 
       studied eyes from living twins at Auschwitz harvested for her by Mengele at 
       Auschwitz. Verschauer participated in the Final Solution ('volkstod') to the 
       Jewish Question when he attended the Frankfurt Institute for the Investigation 
       of the Jewish Question on March 27-28, 1941. At the close of the war, Verschuer 
       hid or destroyed the records of KWI-A activities and other activities, at his 
       family home.
       
  .
      -  Karin Magnussen, Biologist, teacher, KWI-A.
       Researcher at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and 
       Eugenics during Germany's Third Reich, known for her 1936 publication "Race and 
       Population Policy Tools", and her studies of heterochromia iridis (different 
       colored eyes) using iris specimens from Auschwitz concentration camp victims 
       (supplied by her colleague, Joseph Mengele).
       
  .
      -  Josef Mengele
       Physician, anthropologist. Closely associated with the KWI-A due to his 
       relationship with Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer. Mengele earned doctorates 
       in anthropology from Munich University and in medicine from Frankfurt University. 
       Verschuer was Mengele's doctoral advisor at the Frankfurt Institute for Genetic 
       Biology and Racial Hygiene; Mengele joined Verschuer's staff as a "promising 
       young researcher" in 1937, 2
       the same year he officially joined the Nazi party. When Verschuer became Director 
       of the KWI-A in 1942, he continued his association with Mengele. A member of the 
       Waffen-SS, Mengele performed human experiments on inmates at Auschwitz death 
       camp, primarily on twins (mainly children). Mengele supplied Karin Magnussen 
       with iris specimens from Auschwitz concentration camp victims, for her studies 
       of heterochromia iridis (different colored eyes). 
       Mengele was the only one of the Nazi anthropologists who was prosecuted before 
       an international court because his crimes were so obvious. He was sentenced in 
       absentia, for he had escaped to South America.
       
  .
       
      -  Prosecution For War Crimes
       Fischer, Verschuer, Magnussen and many others involved in medical anthropology 
       during the Third Reich were never prosecuted as war criminals, though it was 
       recommended several times, because it was feared that the German public would 
       utterly lose confidence in both German science and the German medical 
       establishment; thus, the political transition after World War II, into the 
       Cold War, would not be disrupted. Although some of the preceding views may seem 
       controversial, there is ample written documentation to substantiate these views. 
       A more complete historical record continues to be impeded by the limited access 
       provided to the public of further documentation. See 
       Research Materials: Max Planck Society Archive.
       
   
  .
   -  Kaiser Wilhelm Institute and National Socialist Propaganda
     Anthropobiology was used to support stereotyped views of Gypsies, Jews, 
     Blacks, the mentally ill, and physically handicapped people. Anthropobiology 
     utilized anthropometry: the measurement and recording of "metrics" 
     (different physical or mental factors) which could then be used to classify people 
     by race or value. To create reproducible anthropometric results, Hermann Werner 
     Siemens developed a technique called "polysymptomatic similarity diagnosis ". This 
     was initially associated with twin research, as such measurements would only be of 
     value if they were understood to be inheritable and independent of the environment. 
    
  .
     Characteristics measured by anthropometry were grouped into distinct 
     stereotypes. For example, "Jews" had a particular type of nose; "Blacks" had kinky 
     hair; "Gypsies" were always criminals; etc. However, the work done at the KWI-A 
     used as criteria to identify races, such as:
      
       -  hair color and shape                     
 
       -  skin color                               
 
       -  color of lanugo hairs                    
 
       -  eye color                                
 
       -  freckles                                 
 
       -  telangiesctasia                          
 
       -  cornification in hair follicles          
 
       -  tongue creases                           
 
       -  blood group                              
 
       -  skulls (shape, capacity)                 
 
       -  facial characteristics                   
 
       -  shape of the ear                         
 
       -  form of the hand                         
 
       -  dactyloscopy  (handprints, fingerprints) 
 
       -  body type                                
 
       -  spine vertebrae types                    
 
       -  Human race crossings                     
 
       -  Human internal organs:                   
         
           -  heart (shape)              
 
           -  stomach function           
 
           -  taste sensations           
 
           -  anterior pituitary hormone 
 
           -  menarche and climate       
 
           -  hardness of soft tissues   
 
         
        
 
 
 
 
  These stereotypes were primarily used to create propaganda support for the 
  Lebensborn program; the 
  sterilization program; the euthanasia 
  program; genocide at concentration camps; 
  deportations; and medical 
  experimentation done by other programs such as the Waffen-SS 
  (low pressure experiments, hyper- and hypothermia experiments, etc.). For 
  details, see the Doctors' Trial, also known as the Nuremberg Medical Trial.
 
  The purpose of the propaganda was to dehumanize those who were considered 
  to be enemies of the Third Reich. Methods of dehumanization included the 
  use of stereotypes in newspapers (Julius Streicher cartoons) and films 
  such as Jud Suss (1940 film). At that time, films that were very popular 
  internationally, such as "Nosferatu" (directed by F. W. Murnau, 
  starring actor Max Schreck), depicted dehumanized forms with very wan 
  complexions, long noses and long ears, and cadaverous body shapes, who drank 
  blood. Unfortunately, some people in the 21st century still believe these 
  things. 3, 4, 5
 
 
   1  
    
    Hans-Walter Schmuhl, "The Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Anthropology, Human 
    Heredity and Eugenics, 1927-1945", Boston Studies in the Philosophy of 
    Science, Vol 259, Wallstein verlag, Gottingen, 2003, p. 263.
    
 
  .
 
   2  
    
    Yisrael Gutman, Michael Berenbaum , "Anatomy of the Auschwitz death camp", 
    Indiana U. Press, 1998, p. 318
    
 
  .
 
   3  
    
    Marcel Lozinski, "Witnesses: Anti-Semitism in Poland, 1946" released 1990. 
    A university-educated person provides his evidence that Jews are vampires.
    
 
  .
 
   4  
    
    John Frankenheimer, "The Fixer", released 1968. Based on a novel and 
    screenplay by Bernard Melamud about the famous 1913 Beilis 'blood libel' 
    trial in Czarist Russia in 1913.
    
 
  .
 
   5  
    
    Judit Elek, "Memories of a River", released 1990. Based on the famous Tiza 
    River blood libel trial of the late 19th century, in the Austro-Hungarian 
    empire.
    
 
 
  
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