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- MOV:"In favor of" The NAZI view of Abortion
-
- Everything they saw that day, from the vast fields of ripening grain
- to the many children, spoke of fertility. It seemed nothing could
- change the vitality of these people. As Martin and Karl drove from
- village to village their faces grew increasingly grave.
-
- In the evening they returned. Martin talked about all the children
- he had seen and warned that, "someday they may give us a lot of
- trouble" because they were "brought up in a much more rugged way than
- our people." Alarm spread through the group until its leader spoke.
-
- Obviously peeved, he pointed out that someone had suggested that
- abortion and contraceptives should be illegal here. He went on, "If any
- such idiot tried to put into practice such an order ... he would
- personally shoot him up. In view of the large families of the native
- population, it could only suit us if girls and women there had as many
- abortions as possible. Active trade in contraceptives ought to actually
- be encouraged." [1]
-
- The date was 22 July 1942, the same day Nazis began transporting
- Warsaw Jews to the Treblinka death camp. [2] The place was the
- "Werewolf" headquarters in the Soviet Ukraine. The group's leader and
- abortion advocate was Adolf Hitler. The two men were Martin Bormann,
- his Secretary and Karl Brandt, his personal physician.
-
- Operation Blue, the 1942 German offensive in East Europe, had been
- underway for almost a month and already its success was assumed. Nazism
- had reached its high water mark. The swastika flew from the Arctic
- Circle to the sands of Africa and from the Atlantic coast of France to
- Mt. Elbrus, the highest of Russia's Ural Mountains.
-
- At Hitler's headquarters thoughts turned to what should be done with
- the occupied territories. Some wanted a lenient policy to gain
- Ukrainian support in the war against the Soviet Union. Others wanted to
- eliminate Slavs to make room for Germans. [3]
-
- Population Control in the East
-
- As Bormann hoped, that evening Hitler chose the second policy and
- the next day he told Bormann to issue population control measures for
- the occupied territories. Bormann developed an eight-paragraph secret
- order one historian termed "perhaps the most extreme policy statement
- ever issued from the Fuhrerhauptquartier." [4] It included the
- following:
-
- When girls and women in the Occupied Territories of the East have
- abortions, we can only be in favor of it; in any case we should not
- oppose it. The Fuhrer believes that we should authorize the development
- of a thriving trade in contraceptives. We are not interested in seeing
- the non-German population multiply. [5]
-
- This was not the first such statement. On 25 November 1939, shortly
- after the occupation of Poland, a Nazi SS organization called the Reich
- Commission for Strengthening of Germandom (RKFDV) [6] issued this
- decree:
-
- All measures which have the tendency to limit the births are to be
- tolerated or to be supported. Abortion in the remaining area [of
- Poland] must be declared free from punishment. The means for abortion
- and contraceptive means may be offered publicly without police
- restriction. Homosexuality is always to be declared legal. The
- institutions and persons involved professionally in abortion practices
- are not to be interfered with by police. [7]
-
- This policy was confirmed on 27 May 1941 at a Ministry of the
- Interior conference in Berlin. There a group of experts recommended
- population control measures for Poland that included authorization of
- abortion whenever the mother requested it. [8] On 19 October 1941, a
- decree applied the measures to the Polish population. Hitler's 23 July
- 1942 decree extended it to other parts of Eastern Europe. Hitler
- confirmed his order on August 5. [9]
-
- A Propaganda Campaign
-
- German experts developed plans to manipulate people into
- cooperating. On 27 April 1942 in Berlin, Professor Wetzel issued a
- memorandum that included the following:
-
- Every propaganda means, especially the press, radio, and movies, as
- well as pamphlets, booklets, and lectures, must be used to instill in
- the Russian population the idea that it is harmful to have several
- children. We must emphasize the expenses that children cause, the good
- things that people could have had with the money spent on them. We
- could also hint at the dangerous effect of child-bearing on a woman's
- health.
-
- Paralleling such propaganda, a large-scale campaign would be
- launched in favor of contraceptive devices. A contraceptive industry
- must be established. Neither the circulation and sale of contraceptives
- nor abortions must be prosecuted.
-
- It will even be necessary to open special institutions for abortion,
- and to train midwives and nurses for this purpose. The population will
- practice abortion all the more willingly if these institutions are
- competently operated. The doctors must be able to help out there being
- any question of this being a breach of their professional ethics.
- Voluntary sterilization must also be recommended by propaganda. [10]
-
- Local physicians were to be told these abortions were for the
- women's benefit. A decree issued by Himmler in March 1943 stressed this
- point:
-
- The Russian physicians or the Russian Medical Association, which
- must not be informed of this order, are to be told in individual cases
- that the pregnancy is being interrupted for reasons of social distress.
- It must be explained in such a way that no conclusions to the existence
- of a definite order may be drawn. [11]
-
- German authorities were careful to note, however, that as long as
- births could be prevented, "natural" sexual behavior did not have to be
- restricted. A 1944 memorandum said:
-
- In order to round out his propaganda in a practical way
- contraceptives should be quietly distributed (with the Reich bearing
- the cost). There is no harm in leaving a valve open to the natural
- desires of the persons of alien blood as long as this will not
- interfere with cutting off the flow of reproduction among these people
- of alien race. [12]
-
- Nazi Pornography
-
- At times German authorities went beyond "leaving a valve open" and
- deliberately flooded the society with pornography in order to destroy
- it culturally, spiritually, and politically. One historian describes
- the process this way:
-
- The German Propaganda Office ... was supposed to organize or sponsor
- Polish burlesque shows and publish cheap literature, strongly erotic in
- nature ... to keep the masses on a low level and to divert their
- interest from political aspirations. These projects for degeneration
- and moral debasement were actually realized in the larger Polish cities
- ... German success in this effort was significant enough to become a
- target of the Polish Underground. The latter used to dispatch some
- special "punishing squads" which overran some of the ill-famed Variety
- Theatres and took disciplinary measures against the Polish
- collaborators in the programs. [13]
-
- Encouraging promiscuity was an integral part of Nazi plans.
- Referring to Erich Koch, Reich Commissar for the Ukraine, one historian
- noted:
-
- Even after Stalingrad, Koch, as always conscious of the ultimate
- goal of Germanization, told a group of visiting journalists that
- Ukrainian fertility remained a grave danger ... The newsman who
- reported the statement to Goebbels [Propaganda Minister] ... seriously
- doubted whether, in view of the high morals of the population, the
- attainment of 'degeneration by promiscuity' could ever succeed. [14]
-
- Historical Roots
-
- The planning for these policies began some ten years earlier. In the
- summer of 1932, almost a year before the Nazi Party took power in
- Germany, a conference took place at the party headquarters in Munich.
- It discussed Eastern Europe and assumed Germany would someday conquer
- the region.
-
- Agricultural experts pointed out that controlling Eastern Europe
- would make Germany self-sufficient in food but warned that the region's
- "tremendous biological fertility" must be offset by a well-planned
- depopulation policy. Speaking to the assembled experts Hitler warned,
- "what we have discussed here must remain confidential." [15]
-
- Not all Nazi insiders remained silent. Hermann Rauschning, a
- prominent early Nazi, defected in the mid-thirties and warned of
- Hitler's plans. In The Voice of Destruction, he described a 1934
- conversation with Hitler about the Slavs:
-
- "We are obliged to depopulate," he went on emphatically," ... We
- shall have to develop a technique of depopulation ... And by remove I
- don't necessarily mean destroy; I shall simply take systematic measures
- to dam their great natural fertility ... There are many ways,
- systematical and comparatively painless, or any rate bloodless, of
- causing undesirable races to die out."
-
- "... The French complained after the war that there were twenty
- million Germans too many. We accept the criticism. We favor the planned
- control of population movements. But our friends will have to excuse us
- if we subtract the twenty millions elsewhere ... By doing this
- gradually and without bloodshed, we demonstrate our humanity." [16]
-
- Within Nazi ideology, the idea of "lebensraum," the pursuit of
- German "living space" in the East, equaled in importance the
- destruction of Jews. In September 1942, Hitler looked at Germany's
- military conquests and commented:
-
- Our gains in the west may add a measure of charm to our possessions
- and constitute a contribution to our general security, but our Eastern
- conquests are infinitely more precious, for they are the foundation of
- our very existence. [17]
-
- Inside Germany
-
- Within Germany itself, Hitler wanted government-funded birth control
- to weed out the "unfit." In his 1924 Mein Kampf, Hitler wrote that one
- of the seven major responsibilities of government was, "to maintain the
- practice of modern birth control. No diseased or weak person should be
- allowed to have children." [18]
-
- Once in power, Hitler wasted no time legalizing sterilization and
- abortion for the genetically "unfit" (including Jews). Gitta Sereny
- describes it this way:
-
- The 1933 law for compulsory sterilization of those suffering from
- hereditary disease was followed two years later, on October 8, 1935 by
- the Erbgesundheitsgestz -- the law to "safeguard the hereditary health
- of the German people." This expanded the original law by legalizing
- abortion in cases of pregnancy where either of the partners suffered
- from hereditary disease. [19]
-
- Within Germany these "negative eugenic" programs were paralleled by
- positive programs encouraging births among the "fit." Laws limited
- access to birth control and tightened the punishment for abortion for
- the racially wanted.
-
- As Germany conquered other countries, similar positive programs were
- developed for "racially valuable" groups from Nordic and Baltic
- regions. [20] Groups under Nazi domination who were not racially
- Germanic were targeted with only negative programs.
-
- The positive programs at home, along with the need to keep secret
- why Germany was so eager to help Slavs and other minorities limit
- births, created confusion about Nazi policy. This confusion led to
- Hitler's remark about "shooting up" anyone who tried to ban abortions
- in the Ukraine.
-
- For instance, in the Spring of 1942, SS Reichsfuhrer Himmler had to
- get the chief of German police in Poland, SS-General Krueger, to
- intervene so the courts would no longer punish Poles for having
- abortions. Similar court behavior in Byelorussia led SS-General Berger
- to remark that some German administrators, "have no idea what the
- German Eastern policy really means." [21]
-
- Hitler's View of Abortion
-
- Within Germany, Nazis claimed their programs were for the
- "protection of motherhood." Their real purpose, however, was to
- increase the German population and thus strengthen the country's
- military and economic strength. The idea of individual rights were as
- irrelevant here as they were anywhere else in the Nazi dictatorship.
-
- Hitler believed rights belong only to those strong enough to defend
- them. The weak or small had no "inalienable" right to life. In Mein
- Kampf he wrote of those with incurable diseases:
-
- If the power to fight for one's own health is no longer present, the
- right to live in this world of struggle ends. The world belongs only to
- the forceful 'whole' man and not to the weak 'half' man. [22]
-
- Because of this, Hitler felt abortions by the "racially valuable"
- were acceptable when they reduced social problems or prevented family
- embarrassment.
-
- For instance, on 5 November 1941, Hitler told several people that he
- felt the penal system made a mistake exposing young men from
- "respectable families" to "living communally with creatures who are
- utterly rotten." [23]
-
- To prove his point, Hitler told of a young man who'd been in the
- prison with him after his failed 1924 Beer Hall Putsch. Earlier this
- young man had "fruitful relations with a girl" and "advised her to go
- to an abortionist. For that he was given a sentence of eight months."
- Hitler felt this "disgrace" which the family "could never outlive" was
- far too harsh. According to Hitler, such a "nice boy" should simply get
- a "sound licking."
-
- Population Control Inside Germany
-
- Population dislocations caused by the war created a problem. The
- Nazis brought millions of foreigners to Germany to work in factories
- and on farms. Many were women who became pregnant. In their home
- country abortions were encouraged. Within Germany, however, abortion
- was illegal except for Jews and the "unfit."
-
- Under great secrecy during 1943, German authorities legalized
- abortion on demand for these women. Abortion legalization occurred in
- the opposite order as the territories, first for female Eastern workers
- and later for Polish women. A captured Nazi document describes the
- steps:
-
- The Reich Leader of Public Health [Conti], in a directive of 11
- March 1943, decreed that pregnancy of female Eastern workers may be
- interrupted at will. The Reich Leader SS [Himmler], with regard hereto,
- on 9 June 1943, issued a decree of implementation proceedings and
- extended this decree as of 1 August 1943 also to interruptions of
- pregnancy for female Poles. [24]
-
- As in the occupied territories, the campaign was backed by
- propaganda stressing the disadvantages of having children. Emphasis was
- placed on separating the working mother from her child soon after birth
- to make motherhood less rewarding. [25]
-
- This extension of legalized abortion within Germany created
- controversy within German medicine. A Secret Police report dated 25
- October 1943 described objections to the new abortion policy by
- physicians.
-
- "Reactionary" physicians (mostly Catholic) protested "that the
- decree was not in accordance with the moral obligation of a physician
- to preserve life" and that medicine did not permit distinctions based
- on nationality.
-
- On the other hand, many "politically sound" physicians, while
- recognizing "racial ... considerations" still felt the policy was a
- "very dangerous experiment." They pointed out that "if the decree
- becomes known ... encouragement will be given to ... abortions" by
- Germans themselves. [26]
-
- Bringing To Justice
-
- Hitler clung to the idea of building a German "living space" in the
- East until his suicide in a Berlin bunker with Russian soldiers only a
- few blocks away. On 29 April 1945 in his last message to the chief of
- the German general staff, Keitel, he stressed, "the aim must still be
- to win territory in the East for the German people."
-
- After the war the Nuremberg Trials brought to justice many of those
- involved in Nazi crimes against humanity. Because SS Reichfuhrer
- Heinrich Himmler committed suicide, no one involved in RKFDV's
- population control program was tried when the International Military
- Tribunal judged top Nazi leaders.
-
- Between October 1947 and March 1948, however, the U.S. Military
- Tribunal at Nuremberg did try the leadership of the RKFDV in its Case
- 8. Among the charges was one that "protection of the law was denied to
- the unborn children of the Russian and Polish women in Nazi Germany.
- Abortions were encouraged and even forced on these women." [27]
-
- The defense argued that abortions had not been coerced. While this
- was probably true in general, among the Nazi documents was one that
- said:
-
- "It is know that racially inferior offspring of Eastern workers and
- Poles is to be avoided if at all possible. Although pregnancy
- interruptions ought to be carried out on a voluntary basis only,
- pressure is to be applied in each of these cases." [28]
-
- One defendant was SS Lieutenant General Richard Hildebrandt, Chief
- of the RKFDV's Race and Settlement Main Office in Berlin. Under direct
- examination by his attorney, he protested that, "Up to now nobody had
- the idea to see in this interruption of pregnancy a crime against
- humanity." His protest had no effect. In this area like many others the
- Nuremberg Trials broke new ground and he was given a 25 year sentence.
- [29]
-
- Other sentences ranged from a life sentence given Ulrich Griefelt,
- the chief executive officer of the RKFDV, to the ten years given Fritz
- Schwalm, the officer responsible for racial examinations to determine
- if a woman could have an abortion.
-
- The Genocide Convention
-
- After the war, worldwide condemnation of Nazi behavior led to the
- definition of a new crime under international law, that of genocide.
- Article II of the "Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
- Crime of Genocide" defines genocide as "acts committed with intent to
- destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical [ethnic], racial, or
- religious group."
-
- Due to the Nazi experience, Article II defines as a genocidal act
- "imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group." [30]
- Nazi policies in Eastern Europe provide the context for that part of
- the Convention. Any nation or organization using similar tactics is
- guilty of genocide under international law.
-
- Summary
-
- Nazi population control policies had these characteristics: 1.
- Medical and legal policies on contraceptives, abortion, and
- child-rearing were deliberately set up to reduce the birthrate of
- unwanted groups. Contraceptives were freely available and often
- supplied without charge. Abortion was made legal, safe, and
- conveniently available through special clinics or local physicians.
- Mothers were expected to work and were separated from their children at
- an early age to make motherhood less meaningful.
-
- 2. Population control appeared voluntary, but coercion was always
- present at least to the extent that avoiding birth was made easier than
- childbearing. For those living under difficult conditions that itself
- constitutes coercion.
-
- 3. The media stressed the personal disadvantages of having children
- and told how childbirth could be avoided by birth control and abortion.
- Pornography and sex without children were promoted to weaken the
- family, destroy spiritual values, and distract from political activity.
-
- 4. The real purpose of these policies, reducing the population of
- unwanted groups, was a closely guarded secret. This sometimes lead to
- conflict between those who set up the policies and those who carried
- them out without knowing their purpose.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- [ 1]. Alexander Dallin, German Rule in Russia, 1941-1945 (London,
- 1957), 141f. Clarissa Henry and Marc Hillel, Of Pure Blood, Trans. Eric
- Mossbacher (New York, 1976), 148. Ihor Kamenetsky, "German Lebensraum
- Policy in Eastern Europe During World War II" (Ph.D. dissertation,
- Univ. of Ill., 1957) (Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilm, # 25,236),
- 172-73. Ihor Kamenetsky, Secret Nazi Plans for Eastern Europe (New
- York, 1961), 143. Joachim C. Fest, Hitler (New York, 1975), 683-84.
-
- [ 2]. Nora Levin, The Holocaust, The Destruction of European Jewry
- 1933-1945 (New York, 1973), 232-33.
-
- [ 3]. Jochen von Lang with Claus Sibyll, The Secretary, Martin
- Bormann: The Man Who Manipulated Hitler, Trans. Christa Armstrong and
- Peter White, (New York, 1979), 209-11. David Irving, Hitler's War (New
- York, 1977), 402-03. Robert L. Koehl, RKFDV: German Resettlement and
- Population Policy 1939-1945 (Cambridge, 1957), 227. For a book-length
- treatment see: Dallin, German Rule. 4. Dallin, German Rule, 141.
-
- [ 5]. Leon Poliakov, Harvest of Hate (Syracuse, NY, 1954), 272-74.
- Nuremberg: NO-1878. Dallin, German Rule, 457. German text in:
- Kamenetsky, Secret Nazi Plans, 197-99.
-
- [ 6]. For more on RKFDV see: Koehl, RKFDV. Kamenetsky, Secret Nazi
- Plans. Michael R. Marrus, The Unwanted, European Refugees in the
- Twentieth Century (New York, 1985), 219-227.
-
- [ 7]. Kamenetsky, "German Lebensraum Policy," 171.
-
- [ 8]. Raul Hilberg, The Destruction of European Jews (Chicago,
- 1961), 642. Nuremberg: NG-844.
-
- [ 9]. Dallin, German Rule, 457.
-
- [10]. Poliakov, Harvest of Hate, 272-74. Nuremberg: NG-2325.
-
- [11]. Trials of War Criminals Before the Nuremberg Military
- Tribunals [Called NMT below] (Washington, 1949-54) V:109. Russian
- physicians were familiar with changing abortion laws. In November 1920
- Lenin legalized abortion on demand. In 1936, as war tensions grew,
- Stalin had abortion declared illegal. Edward H. Carr, Socialism in One
- Country, 1924-26, 3 vols. (London, 1958), I:28- 29, 33. Richard Stites,
- The Women's Liberation Movement in Russia (Princeton, 1975), 264-65,
- 355, 385-88, 403-05.
-
- [12]. NMT, IV:1122. Nuremberg: NO-5311.
-
- [13]. Kamenetsky, Secret Nazi Plans, 114.
-
- [14]. Dallin, German Rule, 458.
-
- [15]. Hermann Rauschning, The Voice of Destruction (New York, 1940),
- 34-38. Joseph B. Schechtman, European Population Transfers, 1939-1945
- (New York, 1946), 266, 296.
-
- [16]. Rauschning, The Voice, 137-8.
-
- [17]. Kamenetsky, Secret Nazi Plans, 80.
-
- [18]. Louis L. Snyder ed., Hitler's Third Reich: A Documentary
- History (Chicago, 1981), 46. Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, Trans. Ralph
- Manheim (Boston, 1943), 255, 402-05.
-
- [19]. Gitta Sereny, Into That Darkness (New York, 1974), 62.
-
- [20]. Kamenetsky, "German Lebensraum Policy," 175. NMT, IV:1077-79.
- Nuremberg: NO-1803, NO-3520.
-
- [21]. Kamenetsky, "German Lebensraum Policy," 173. From Himmler's
- File #1302, Folder H. 11; Nuremberg: NO-3134.
-
- [22]. Hitler, Mein Kampf, 257.
-
- [23]. Hitler's Table Talk, 1941-44, Trans. Norman Cameron and R. H.
- Stevens (London, n.d.), 112-13.
-
- [24]. NMT, IV:1082. Nuremberg: 1753-PS, NO-3250 (Eastern workers),
- NO-1384 (Polish women).
-
- [25]. NMT, IV:1122-27. Nuremberg: NO-5311.
-
- [26]. NMT, IV:1081-84. Nuremberg: NO-3512.
-
- [27]. NMT, IV:1077.
-
- [28]. NMT, V:112. A German military report of 13 July 1943 referred
- to "an intensification of countermeasures" against Ukrainians including
- the "forcible abortion of pregnant women." In William Manchester, The
- Arms of Krupp (New York, 1964, 1965, 1968), 486. Many forced abortions
- punished women who became pregnant to avoid forced labor in Germany.
- See Dallin, German Rule, 435, 458.
-
- [29]. NMT, IV:1076, 1081, 1090.
-
- [30]. Nehemiah Robinson, The Genocide Convention, A Commentary (New
- York, 1960), 57. Leo Kuper, The Prevention of Genocide (New Haven,
- 1985), 241f. For the origin of the term "genocide" see Raphael Lemkin,
- Axis Rule in Occupied Europe (Washington, 1944), 79f.
-