Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Ravensbrück Rabbits

On July 22nd 1942, seventy-five women were called to the Ravensbrück Appellplatz. These women had just arrived from Lublin, all young and fit. The women were inspected by Ravenbrück doctors, Rolf Rosenthal, Gerhard Schiedlausky and Herta Oberheuser, along with Karl Gerbhardt (Himmler's top surgeon) and his assistant, Fritz Fischer. Ernst Grawitz, head of the German Red Cross and an SS physician was also present for parts of the experiments.

Four days later, the group of seventy-five Lublin women were called to the Revier. They were once again inspected by the same group of doctors, eventually selecting only ten for further inspection. From the group of ten, only six were selected for the first round of experiments.

About four days later, the six women who were selected were prepared for experimentation. They were bathed, shaven, given beds and put under anesthetic. In the following hours, the women woke up with hallucinations. Their legs were wrapped in plaster and labelled.

In the following days, the six women were locked into the Revier while their legs swelled and the plaster cut into the wound. Flies were swarming around the rotting flesh while the women drifted in and out of consciousness.  Only three weeks later was the plaster and their bed sheets changed. At the same time, nine new Rabbits were selected and given surgery . By this point, the first round of experiments had proved inconclusive.

In the second round of experiments, it was believed that the tests turned up inconclusive because not enough was done to mimic a battle wound. Therefore, wooden splinters and glass were inserted into the Rabbit's wounds. Larger amounts of bacteria were also used so the infection could spread further. Each new wound was treated with a series of different drugs, sulphonamide drugs or nothing at all.

Although this round of tests proved to also be inconclusive, Ernst Grawitz thought that the injuries of the patients and the drugs used weren't enough. Grawitz was advocating for the next group of women to be shot in the leg.

On September 20th, several other Lublin women were called to the Revier. These women were not shot in the leg, however, they were injected with larger amounts of bacteria and more foreign objects (ex: glass, wood). After several days of leaving the current wounds rotting and undressed, the Rabbits were taken to the operating theater. Over the coarse of the following five days, each Rabbit was injected with several more rounds of various types of bacteria. By that point, the remaining Rabbits experienced excruciating pain in their legs and a terrible thirst.

After the final round of injections, the Ravenbrück Rabbits began to heal or die.

Alfreda Prus, a former student at the University of Zamość was given the label K1. Many suspected Alfreda had gangrene. For days she hiccuped and swore she was going to die. On her final day of life, a new incision was made in her leg. When she returned to her bed, she bled profusely.  She was taken away on a stretcher, only to be heard screaming moments later.

Weronika Kraska was believed to be injected with tetanus. Complaining of a stiff neck, she was forced to drink water due to a locked jaw. While speaking of her two children, Weronika gave out a scream. As her condition worsened, Gerda Quernheim (a prisoner who worked alongside the camp doctors) injects her with a needle.

By the time the first four groups were healing from their wounds, another new group of women were called up to the Revier. On October 7th, 1942, the new group of Rabbits were bathed, inspected by a group of doctors  and injected with various types of bacteria and foreign objects. The women awoke, several days later, with hallucinations, hiccups and stiff necks. A couple days after their injections,  nine out of the original twelve were left.

Alfreda and Kazimiera Kurowska died from an extensive gangrene infection. The bacteria quantities were so large that their bodies couldn't put up a defense. Kazimiera's right leg was completely destroyed. Once the infection began to spread to the right side of her body, she was given a massive dose of morphine. Another Rabbit, Weronika Kraska was injected with tetanus, which killed her.

After the sulphonamide experiments, the surviving Rabbits were left to fend for themselves. The women were left in beds that were grey and sticky, while flies and maggots fed on the puss oozing from their wounds.

In the end, each round of the sulphonamide experiments proved to be inconclusive. Heinrich Himmler, by the end of October, had moved on to new interests.

Himmler believed that Karl Gerbhardt and Ludwig Stumpfegger (Adolf Hitler's future personal surgeon) should investigate the mending of broken bones. On November 2nd, a new group of Rabbits were called to the Revier. The incoming women were subjected to various types of operations: bone grafts, bone splinters, bone breaking and operations on muscles.

In the name of curiousity, dozens of Polish women and eventually women of various other nationalities were mutilated and abandoned. In 1946, four of the Ravensbrück Rabbits were able to give evidence at the Nuremburg Doctor's Trial.


Clandestine photograph of a Polish political prisoner and medical experimentation victim in the Ravensbrueck concentration camp.

Pictured is Maria Kusmierczuk. 
Maria Kusmierczuk showing her mutilated leg. On October 7th, 1942, Maria was infected with tetanus bacteria as a part of the Ravensbrück sulfanilamide experiments. Her wound did not heal, leaving the bone exposed and her unable to walk. 

Clandestine photograph of a Polish political prisoner and medical experimentation victim in the Ravensbrueck concentration camp.

Pictured is Bogumila Babinska (Jasiuk).

Bogumila Babinska survived two operations on the muscles of her thigh. The operations were performed in November and December of 1942. In 1943, another operation was performed on her shin bone. Bogumila was one of the Ravensbrück Rabbits to write secret messages in urine.  She passed in 1980. 

Clandestine photograph of a Polish political prisoner and medical experimentation victim in the Ravensbrueck concentration camp.

Pictured is Barbara Pietrzyk.  Her prisoner number is visible on the sleeve of her coat.  Maria Kusmierczuk is standing in the back.

Barbara Pietrzyk survived bone operations on each leg at the age of 16. Unfortunately, Barbara passed in 1949 at the age of 21. A factor in the cause of her death being the operations she forcibly underwent  at Ravensbrück. 


Jadwiga Dzido. 
 
A war crimes investigation photo of Wladislava Karolewska, a survivor from Ravensbrueck, who was subjected to medical experiments with sulphonamide drugs in 1942. 

The experiments were conducted by Dr. Fritz Fischer, Prof. Karl Gebhardt, Dr. Stumpfegger and Ravensbrueck camp doctor, Herta Oberheuser.  This photograph was entered as evidence for the prosecution at the Medical Trial in Nuremberg.

The disfiguring scars on the woman's right leg resulted from incisions made by medical personnel that were purposely infected with bacteria, dirt and slivers of glass, in order to simulate the combat wounds of German soldiers fighting in the war.  The inflamed area was then treated with sulphonamide drugs.  Many of the prisoners subjected to these treatments died from their wounds.
 
Wladislava Karolewska


Links for further research: 
1. Information about Maria Kusmierczuk:

2. Information pertaining to Bogumila Babinska: 

3. Further information about Barbara Pietrzyk: 
 
4. Further reading about Jadwiga Dzido:
 
5. More information about Wladislava Karolewska:

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Welcome to my Holocaust History Blog!

In June of 2013, I posted my first article or post on this blog. It was then that I decided to dedicate my life to studying the Holocaust.

Several years before my first post, the Hübener group is what started my initial study. After reading a fictional depiction of Helmuth Hübener's life, "The Boy Who Dared" by Susan Campbell Bartoletti,  I spent my entire summer taking notes from books that I read from a local library. Eventually, I began to build my own library of Holocaust memoirs and historical texts which provided me with first-hand accounts by survivors and the historical perspective of scholars and historians. In 2013, I decided that it was important to continue gaining my knowledge of the Holocaust and to share it. Therefore, I started writing on this blog whenever I found the time in my busy schedule and I talked about the Holocaust in countless projects throughout high school. There was a time that I was actually organizing an assembly with a teacher who's mother immigrated to the USA after experiencing Kristallnacht.

Now, I have recently rediscovered the things in my life that I am passionate about. Five years after my first blog post, writing about the events and individuals of the Holocaust is what I am passionate about. I find it fulfilling to research the lives of individuals who are remembered little or if at all. I find it fulfilling to provide them with a voice and to recognize them as human beings and not as a part of a statistic. I feel accomplished knowing that I work hard on all of my articles. Most of all, it comforts me to know that I do not stand alone in my study of the Holocaust and events of injustice throughout this world's history. I feel comforted knowing that there are others hard at work in giving victims a voice, in providing factual information about places and events and in helping the future and present generations to never forget.

Through my rediscovery and evaluation of my passions, I noticed that I really neglected this blog. It being the New Year, I decided that I want to challenge myself to study, learn and share more. Therefore, I am hoping to post a new article each week. The funny thing is, I have absolutely no problem finding topics, it's the discipline and time that needs some work.

I hope everyone has had a wonderful holiday season and they have an eventful year to look forward too. Wishing everyone luck in accomplishing their goals!

- Danielle Hellmuth.