Heinrich Gross
Heinrich Gross (14 November 1915 – 15 December 2005) was an Austrian psychiatrist, medical doctor and neurologist, a reputed expert as a leading court-appointed psychiatrist, ill-famed for his proven involvement in the killing of at least nine children with physical, mental and/or emotional/behavioral characteristics considered "unclean" by the Nazi regime, under its Euthanasia Program. His role in hundreds of other cases of infanticide is unclear. Gross was head of the Spiegelgrund children's psychiatric clinic for two years during World War II.[1]
A significant element of the controversy surrounding Gross' activities is that after the children had been murdered, parts of their bodies, particularly their brains, were preserved and retained for future study for decades after the murders. It was only on 28 April 2002 that the preserved remains of these murdered children were finally buried.
Euthanasia Program
Euthanasia was commonly practiced long before the infamous Nazi concentration camps. The euthanasia program was introduced to the German people as an efficient manner to obtain a Master Race for the Nazi people and an economic relief to families. As Nazi popularity grew and the economy still struggling these options were widely accepted by the German people. Am Spiegelgrund was a youth care facility on the grounds of a mental institution. From the years of 1940 to 1945 it was used for mentally handicapped adults or children. During their stay they suffered numerous forms of torture and up to 800 people were murdered there. Heinrich Gross began in pavilion 15 in November of 1940. By 1942 he had killed more children than any other doctor in the hospital. He became the leading psychiatrist and began studying the neurology of mentally handicapped children. With the passing of Aktion T4 the killings increased and Dr. Gross began to harvest the brains of his victims for further study. In 1943 the doctor was called for military service returning pretty regularly for research until his capture in 1945.
Post World War II
In the same year of his overturned manslaughter case Dr. Gross was allowed to resume his research at Rose Hill. In 1955, he completed his training as a specialist in nervous and mental diseases became the head prison doctor or physician in the former Hospital and nursing home Am Steinhof. In 1957 he became the Chief court psychiatrist for men's mental institutions. Here he worked with the justice system in insanity cases and was the main decision maker in all sterilization cases as well. He got promoted to the management of the "Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for the study of the abnormalities of the nervous system" created specially for him in 1968. Dr. Gross worked as a reviewer and for years was considered the most busy court experts of in Austria. In 1975 the Republic of Austria awarded him the medal für Wissenschaft und Kunst 1. In January 1979, Dr. Heinrich Gross was invited as a speaker at a Conference on "Killings by mentally ill" at the University of Salzburg where the hosts put "in the killing of hundreds of allegedly mentally ill children" was accused in a pamphlet. In 1975 it was realized that he had partaken in illegal killings during the Nazi occupation of Austria. Dr. Gross was stripped of many awards but continued serving as a court expert until he came under investigation in 1997 for 9 counts of murder.
Legal Actions
After 4 years as a POW he hid from authorities for two years finally being caught in 1950. He was taken to court and convicted of manslaughter. Sentenced to two years he only served a little more than a year due to a Supreme Court ruling stating no insidious or unintentional death could occur to a mentally handicapped person. He later was accused for the murder of nine children but was deemed unfit for trial. After a doctor testifying that he was in the early stages of dementia the judged decided he could not understand the questions or the court process.
References
- ↑ Unquiet Grave for Nazi Child Victims, Guardian (World News), 4/28/2002
External links
- Gross symbolises Austria's past
- BBC News Online: World: Europe
- Life unworthy of life and other Medical Killing Programmes
- Doc accused of Nazi clinic atrocities dies
- Florian P. Thomas, Alana Beres, and Michael I. Shevell "A Cold Wind Coming": Heinrich Gross and Child Euthanasia in Vienna. J Child Neurol 2006 21: 342-348, PubMed.
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