Wilhelm Pfannenstiel

Wilhelm Pfannenstiel

SS-Standartenführer Wilhelm Pfannenstiel
in postwar custody
Born (1890-02-12)12 February 1890
Breslau
Died 1 November 1982(1982-11-01) (aged 92)
Allegiance Nazi Germany Nazi Germany
Service/branch Schutzstaffel
Years of service until 1945
Rank SS-Standartenführer
Unit Totenkopfverbände

Wilhelm Hermann Pfannenstiel (12 February 1890 – 1 November 1982) was a German physician, member of the Nazi Party from 1933, (NSDAP 2828629), and SS officer from 1934, (SS-Standartenführer, SS-No. 273083). In August 1942 he witnessed, together with Kurt Gerstein, the gassing of Jews in Bełżec extermination camp. He may also share responsibility with other SS officials in criminal medical experimentations on unwilling and uninformed human beings, mainly Jews prisoners in Dachau concentration camp.

Life

Wilhelm Pfannenstiel was born in Breslau, Lower Silesia, the current city of Wrocław in western Poland. He was the son of the gynecologist Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel and Elisabeth Behlendorff, who married in 1889.[1] Pfannenstiel joined the Nazi party in 1933 after Adolf Hitler succeeded in being appointed Chancellor of the Reich.

On November 11, 1933, Pfannenstiel signed the commitment of the professors at German universities and colleges to Hitler and the National Socialist state. Also in 1933, he founded a chapter of the "German Society for Racial Hygiene" in Marburg. In 1934, he joined the SS. Pfannenstiel had five children. One of them was the late professor of medicine and thyroid expert Peter Pfannenstiel (de).

Nazi career

Pfannenstiel was a member of the NS Teacher's Association, the NS Medical Association and the NS Culture Bund. He worked in the Racial policy Office and Deputy Head of training for the Race and Resettlement main Office of the SS. As a Professor of Hygiene at the University of Marburg in Marburg, he headed the Marburg Deutsche Gesellschaft für Rassenhygiene (German Society for Race Hygiene). In 1935 he nominated Paul Uhlenhuth for the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his work in chemotherapy. In 1937, he became lecturer in aviation medicine and SS-doctor of the upper section of Fulda-Werra. In 1939, he became Advisory hygienist at the SS Fü.

Following the invasion of Poland at the onset of World War II he was in Marburg on leave in 1940 and used as a Hygiene Inspector in Berlin, where his duties included also the inspection of concentration camps in the newly formed General Government. In the years 1942 and 1943, he attended the extermination camps of Operation Reinhard including Belzec, where he personally witnessed the undressing of women and the gassing of Hungarian Jews in August 1942.[2]

Belzec camp

Pfannenstiel was with Kurt Gerstein in Belzec concentration camp in August 1942 during which he witnessed the botched gassing of Jews from Lwów, an episode which Gerstein included in the subsequently named Gerstein Report and which is partly corroborated in the report of Wehrmacht NCO Wilhelm Cornides.[3] After 1941, Pfannenstiel held the rank of SS-Obersturmbannführer. He was promoted to SS-Standartenführer in 1944.

Pfannenstiel's independent testimony of what he witnessed differed in some respects from Gerstein's but still added a degree of veracity in that they were both there that day, and did witness the gassing. The deposition of Wilhelm Pfannenstiel before the Darmstadt Court on June 6, 1950 reads:

While the Jews were being taken in, the rooms were lit up with electric light and everything passed off peacefully. But when the lights were turned off, loud cries burst out inside, which then gradually died away. As soon as everything was quiet again, the doors in the outside walls were opened, the corpses were brought out, and, after being searched for gold teeth, they were stacked in a trench. — Wilhelm Pfannenstiel

Pfannenstiel may have also been complicit in the commission of medical experiments. SS-Hauptsturmfuehrer (captain) Sigmund Rascher, a doctor convicted of committing war crimes at Dachau, wrote to him about previous correspondence they had concerning using prisoners as human guinea pigs. The letter was introduced as evidence at the Doctor’s Trial at Nuremberg.

Highly esteemed Professor please I dare to ask if whether you are still interested that we carry out the experiments on human beings on the fostering of altitude resistance by administering vitamins. If so, I would devotedly request you to apply to the Reich Research Council and Chief of the business managing board Standartenführer SS Wolfram Sievers .... so that a mobile low pressure chamber may be obtained through the Luftwaffe for your and my joint experiments... — Sigmund Rascher.[4][5]

Postwar activities

After the war he was interned by the Americans until 1950. Between 1954 and 1959 he directed the vaccines division of the German pharmaceutical company Schaper & Brümmer GmbH & Co.[6] He was a member of the German Association for Focal Infection Research.

Publications

Literature

References

  1. Jensen, A. (1990). "Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel (1862-1909). On the 80th anniversary of his death. A biography of a famous German gynecologist". Geburtshilfe und Frauenheilkunde. 50 (4): 326–34. doi:10.1055/s-2007-1026488. PMID 2192940.
  2. Wilhelm Pfannenstiel, Waffen-SS hygienist (2016). "On a Gassing at Belzec". The Good Old Days by E. Klee, W. Dressen, V. Riess, The Free Press, NY, 1988., p. 238-244. Jewish Virtual Library. Belzec: Testimonies of Belzec SS-Men (May 26, 1945).
  3. http://www.phdn.org/histgen/cornides/facsimcornides.html.
  4. Letter to Professor Pfannenstiel concerning high altitude experiments Nuremberg Trials Project;Harvard Law School
  5. Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: The Operation Reinhard Death Camps By Yitzhak Arad Publisher: Indiana University Press (February 1, 1999) Language: English ISBN 0-253-21305-3, ISBN 978-0-253-21305-1
  6. Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich, Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2005, ISBN 978-3-596-16048-8, S. 458
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