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Karin Magnussen

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Karin Magnussen
Born(1908-02-09)9 February 1908
Died19 February 1997(1997-02-19) (aged 89)
ParentWalter Magnussen

Karin Magnussen (9 February 1908 – 19 February 1997) was a German biologist, teacher and researcher at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and Eugenics during the Third Reich. She is known for her 1936 publication "Race and Population Policy Tools", and her studies of heterochromia iridis (different-colored eyes) using iris specimens, supplied by Josef Mengele, from Auschwitz concentration camp victims.[1]

Early life and education

Karin Magnussen, daughter of the landscape painter and ceramist Walter Magnussen, grew up with her sister in a middle-class home. She completed her schooling in Bremen, graduating with a degree. She then studied biology, geology, chemistry and physics at the University of Göttingen. Magnussen joined the National Socialist German Students' League (NSDStB) while she was still an undergraduate in college. By 1931, when she was 23, she was a member of the National Socialist German Workers Party. Later she became a leader of the League of German Girls (Bund Deutscher Mädel, or BDM) and a member of the National Socialist Teachers League. As a BDM leader, she held lectures on the politics of race and population. She graduated in 1932 with an examination in the subjects of botany, zoology and geology. In July 1932, her thesis was accepted: Studies on the physiology of the butterfly wing.[1]

After receiving her doctorate, she studied at the Zoological Institute of the University of Göttingen in Alfred Kühn. She placed first and later second on her state exam for a high school teaching position; inter alia in biology in 1936. In Hanover, Magnussen was employed as a teacher at a secondary school. Magnussen possibly modeled herself after "...the biologist Agnes Bluhm, who worked at the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut fur Biologie and wrote "Die rassenhygienischen Aufgaben des weiblichen Arztes", Berlin, 1934, and who unhesitatingly supported Hitler's regime." In 1935, Magnussen went to work in the Nazi Racial Policy Office in the District of Hanover. A year later, she wrote Race and Population Policy Tools.[1]

National Socialist views

Magnussen had already joined the National Socialist German Student League (NSDStB) during her studies. In 1931, she became a member of the NSDAP. Later, she became BDM leader and was a member of the National Socialist Teachers League (NSLB).[2] In Bremen, she lectured on racism and demographics. Magnussen was BDM leader in the Gau. In 1935, she was employed in the Gau Hannover in the Racial Politics Office.[3] Her publication of racial and folkisch political tools appeared in 1936.[2] In 1939, this script was used by Lehmann of Munich. After the end of the Second World War, in the Soviet zone of occupation, it appeared on the list of prohibited literature.[4]

In the third published edition of 1943, Magnussen expressed the following:

"This war is not just about the preservation of the German people, but is about the question, which races and peoples should live in the future on European soil.... Basically England had no interest in the prosecution of this war, but it is a very different people, working parasitically behind the scenes and which is afraid to lose everything. In all of the enemy States, Judaism has significant influence. And just as Judaism had probably the clearest recognition that in the decisive struggle, the question of them was to be decided. The current war must therefore be also about the repression of the black danger in the West and the elimination of the Bolshevik threat in the East, which still resolves a racial problem in Europe, which all States are more or less interested in: the Jewish question. Also the Jew who enjoys life as a host in our country, is our enemy, even if he does not actively engage with weapons in this fight. …From the European point of view, the Jewish question is resolved in that the emigre Jews do the thinking for the leaders in the other States. We have seen that these emigrants are only troublesome and set up the peoples against each other."[5]

Kaiser Wilhelm Institute

Due to receiving a scholarship, Magnussen was suspended in the fall of 1941 from her teaching profession and moved to the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and Eugenics (KWI-A), in Berlin-Dahlem.[6] From this time on, she worked in the Department of Experimental Pathology of Heritage under the Department head, Hans Nachtsheim. Her research focused on the inheritance of eye color in rabbits and humans.[7] Her particular interest was the Heterochromic iris that she had examined since 1938. Magnussen used the scientific method to lead her to the conclusion that the eye is not only genetically, but also hormonally-determined. While there, she initially undertook studies on rabbit eyes.[8] In July 1943, she was the research assistant of Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer, at the KWI-A.[6] At the KWI-A she also met Dr Mengele, who worked there temporarily.

The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) promoted her study to "explore the heritage conditionality for the development of eye color as a basis for racial and ethnicity studies" in 1943, in addition to eight other research projects at the KWI-A. This project was overseen and the publication edited by Magnussen.[9][10]

Auschwitz-Birkenau

From a colleague, she received the information that more twins and family members with Heterochromic irises would be found in the Sinti family in Mechau from northern Germany. Members of the family were taken in the spring of 1943 to the KWI-A, where they were photographed. In March 1943, the Sinti family in the Auschwitz concentration camp was deported, where Mengele had worked since late May 1943 as camp physician. This circumstance allowed Mengele to carry out the experiments (that Magnussen had done on rabbits) on the people.

Josef Mengele in 1956. Photo taken by a police photographer in Buenos Aires for Mengele's Argentine identification document.

According to a statement by Magnussen, Mengele dealt, among other things, with the eyes of these Sinti family using hormonal substances. Often, these painful interventions resulted in suppuration of the eyes and blindness of the victims. These experiments aimed at the investigation and eradication of the abnormality in people with Heterochromic Irises. In the event of death of the prisoners, Mengele pledged to Magnussen to give her the eyes of the victims for further research and evaluation.[11] In the second half of 1944, Magnussen received the eyes of the experiment victims from Auschwitz-Birkenau in several deliveries.[12] No fewer than 40 pairs of eyes should have been received by Magnussen from Auschwitz-Birkenau.[13] The Hungarian prisoner pathologist Miklós Nyiszli noted after the autopsy of Sinti twins that they had been killed, not due to illness, but because of a chloroform injection to the heart. Nyiszli had to prepare their eyes and send them to the KWI-A.[11]

After the war

At least until the spring of 1945, Magnussen was working in Berlin.[14] After the end of the Second World War, Magnussen moved to Bremen again and continued her research. Her completed research was published in 1949, being entitled "On the relationship between histological distribution of pigment, Iris color and pigmentation of the eyeball of the human eye."[15] She was later denazified in Bremen.

In 1950, Magnussen taught at a girls' high school in Bremen. She worked as study counselor and official, including the teaching of biology. She was considered a popular teacher who led an interesting biology lesson. Magnussen's pupils could examine, for example, living and dead rabbits from their breeding. Until 1964, essays in scientific journals were published by Magnussen. Magnussen retired in August 1970. Even in old age, Magnussen justified the Nazi racial ideology. She noted in 1980, in a conversation with the geneticist Benno Müller-Hill, that the Nuremberg Laws were not fair enough. She also denied until the last minute that Mengele would have killed children for their scientific studies.[16] She was entangled by her cooperation with Mengele and the supply of "human material", and mired deep in concentration camp crimes, but she claimed to know nothing about them.

In 1990, Magnussen moved into a nursing home; she died in February 1997 in Bremen.

Further reading

  • Wolfgang Schieder, Achim Trunk: Adolf Butenandt and the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft. Science, industry and politics in the Third Reich. Series: History of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft IM Nationalsozialismus, 7 Hg. Max Planck Society for the advancement of science, Wallenstein, Göttingen 2004, ISBN 978-3-89244-423-7
  • Hans Hesse: Eyes from Auschwitz. A lesson in National Socialist racial delusion and medical research. The case of Dr. Karin Magnussen, plain text, Essen 2001, ISBN 3-89861-009-8
  • Sascha Hönighaus: "Karin Magnussen", in: Jessica Hoffman, Anja Megel, Robert Parzer & Helena Seidel eds.: Dahlemer Memorial locations, Frank & Timme Verlag for scientific literature, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-86596-144-0
  • Ernst Klee: the person lexicon to the Third Reich: who was what before and after 1945? Fischer, Frankfurt 2007, ISBN 3-596-16048-0 DSB.: Auschwitz, NAZI medicine and its victims. 3rd Edition. S. Fischer, Frankfurt 1997, ISBN 3-596-14906-1
  • Carola Sachse Ed.: the link to Auschwitz. Life sciences and human experiments at Kaiser-Wilhelm-Instituts. Documentation of a symposium. Wallenstein, Göttingen 2003 series: history of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft IM Nationalsozialismus, 6. ISBN 3-89244-699-7 (interim report see Web links)
  • Hans-Walter Schmuhl: Grenzüberschreitungen. Das Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Anthropologie, menschliche Erblehre und Eugenik 1927–1945. Reihe: Geschichte der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft im Nationalsozialismus, 9. Wallstein, Göttingen 2005, ISBN 3-89244-799-3

References

  1. ^ a b c "Eugenics - Karin Magnussen". Esther M. Zimmer Lederberg Memorial Website.
  2. ^ a b Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich, Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 387
  3. ^ Sascha Hönighaus: Karin Magnussen, Berlin 2007, p. 193f.
  4. ^ Deutsche Verwaltung für Volksbildung in der sowjetischen Besatzungszone, Liste der auszusondernden Literatur, Berlin: Zentralverlag, 1946
  5. ^ From her book Rassen- und bevölkerungspolitisches Rüstzeug. 3. Aufl. Lehmanns, München 1943, p. 201-203. Mit "Schwarze Gefahr" sind vermutlich Afrikaner gemeint, vgl. Rheinlandbastarde, ein beliebtes NS-Feindbild
  6. ^ a b Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich, Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 387.
  7. ^ Wolfgang Schieder, Achim Trunk: Adolf Butenandt und die Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft: Wissenschaft, Industrie und Politik im Dritten Reich, Göttingen 2004, p. 297f.
  8. ^ Sascha Hönighaus: Karin Magnussen, Berlin 2007, p. 195
  9. ^ Hans Hesse: "Ich konnte nicht auf die Auswertung eines so wertvollen Materials verzichten - Augen aus Auschwitz: Das Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Anthropologie und der Fall Karin Magnussen", WeltOnline, 31 August 2001
  10. ^ Hans-Walter Schmuhl: Grenzüberschreitungen. Das Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Anthropologie, menschliche Erblehre und Eugenik 1927–1945. Geschichte der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft im Nationalsozialismus, Vol. 9. Wallstein, Göttingen 2005, p. 370
  11. ^ a b Rolf Winau: Medizinische Exeperimente in Konzentrationslagern, Wolfgang Benz, Barbara Distel (Hrsg.): Der Ort des Terrors – Geschichte der nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslager, Vol. 1: Die Organisation des Terrors, C.H. Beck, München 2005, ISBN 3-406-52961-5, p. 174.
  12. ^ Ilkka Remes: Das Erbe des Bösen, p. 3 (pdf).
  13. ^ Sascha Hönighaus: Karin Magnussen, Berlin 2007, p. 197
  14. ^ Ernst Klee: Auschwitz, die NS-Medizin und ihre Opfer, Frankfurt am Main 1997, p. 486.
  15. ^ Hans-Walter Schmuhl: Grenzüberschreitungen. Das Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Anthropologie, menschliche Erblehre und Eugenik 1927–1945. Geschichte der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft im Nationalsozialismus, Vol. 9 Wallstein, Göttingen 2005, p. 490
  16. ^ Sascha Hönighaus: Karin Magnussen, Berlin 2007, p. 199f.