From Yahoo/Insider:
“A twin who survived Auschwitz shares
how a doctor experimented on her and her identical sister — and tried to get
them pregnant with other twins”
(Identical twin sisters Annetta and
Stephanie in their mid-20s, after their liberation from the Nazi death camp.)
Nazis wanted identical twin Annetta
Able to get pregnant by another identical twin at Auschwitz. Dr. Josef Mengele,
known as the "Angel of Death," treated her and her sister as human
guinea pigs. Able's horrific story features in a new book about twins who
survived these Holocaust "experiments." Soon after Annetta Able and
her identical twin sister, Stephanie Heller, were liberated from Auschwitz,
they learned that Dr. Josef Mengele planned to have each of them made pregnant
by identical twin brothers.
They knew the men who'd been selected
for the process because Mengele, the Nazi physician who carried out such
"medical experiments" on prisoners, had already subjected the four
young adults to various blood transfusions. "You don't want to think about
things from the past like that," Able, now 99, told Insider, referring to
Mengele's warped intentions. Documents retrieved from the camp and witness
statements by other Jewish inmates who were forced to work for Mengele confirmed
the proposed "experiment" on the two sets of siblings. "We only
found out afterwards," Able said in an email to Insider that she dictated
to her daughter, Daphna Able. She added, "We never saw the other twins
again after that, but know that one of them died after the
experimentation." Mengele was known as the 'Angel of Death' because of his
power and human experiments at Auschwitz.
Able and her sister's story is
featured in the new book, "The Twin Children of The Holocaust: Stolen
Childhood and the Will to Survive." The book — written by the psychology
professor Nancy Segal, the director of the Twin Studies Center at California
State University, Fullerton — documents Mengele "experiments" using
identical and fraternal twins as human guinea pigs. "It was documented
that that around 1,500 pairs passed through Auschwitz. But another reference
said it was 730," Segal said, adding that the exact number "will
never be known." "Mengele was known as the 'Angel of Death' because
of these unthinkable and horrific experiments to which he subjected the twins
and some of their families," Segal told Insider.
Daphna Able said that her mother and
aunt, known to family and friends as Stepa, who died in 2019, were appalled to
learn that Mengele plotted to have them impregnated and killed at some point
during their pregnancies in order to dissect the fetuses to find out if they
were also identical twins. "He wanted to determine if they would
multiply," Daphna told Insider. But the young women had stopped
menstruating because they were given so little food to eat. "They wouldn't
have been able to conceive anyway," she said.
The identical twins were treated as
guinea pigs
(Annetta Able with her daughter
Daphna, who often helps her mother tell her story about her two-year ordeal in
Auschwitz.)
The sisters were taken by the Nazis
from their home in Prague, now in the Czech Republic, in 1942. They were 19
when they were transferred to Auschwitz a year later. They didn't know it at
the time, but the rest of the family, including their mother and 12-year-old
sister, had been sent to the gas chambers. "When we arrived in the cattle
cars, the Nazi soldiers knew to be on the lookout for twins," Able said in
her email. She said they were taken to barracks where other twins were held. The
women were escorted to Mengele's laboratory at the camp where, Able said, he
asked "so many questions" and recorded their height, weight, and the
color of their eyes and hair. "We were not of any interest to him other
than as human guinea pigs," Able said in the email.
She went on to describe the
conditions at the camp as "vile, freezing, cramped, and exposed to the
elements." She added, "We were always starving. It's what you would
imagine hell to be." Talking directly to Insider, Able said that she and
her sister were determined to "stay alive together." She said,
"We have always been close. I lived her life, and she did mine." Segal
said that many of the subjects of Mengele's experiments knew that if one died,
the other would be killed because he would "compare their organs."
"The bond between the twins in Auschwitz was so important," Segal
said. "Everyone had to be as mindful of their twin as themselves."
Able told Insider that their two-year
ordeal at the camp in occupied Poland was "a hard time" — made even
more painful because they didn't know where their other family members were,
until they discovered they had been killed. In the email, Able said the
siblings tried to cope with the torment by "making up stories to avoid our
reality." "We spoke about how wonderful it will be when we get home
to our family," Able added. "What we would eat, how we would play
with our sister."
(Identical twins Annetta and
Stephanie Heilbrunn, with their mother and younger sister in Prague, before
they were displaced by the Nazis. The girls' mother and sister perished in the
gas chambers.)
Daphna Able said that her mom and her
twin had told her they were terrified when Mengele would order the blood
transfusions between them and the identical brothers. The 67-year-old said that
the sisters got sick from the experiments and Heller had constant issues with
her health after leaving the camp. Segal told Insider that she disagreed with
experts who claimed that Mengele wanted to understand the biological basis of
twins so that he could increase the Aryan race. "It didn't make sense
because he would have studied the parents, not the twins themselves,"
Segal said. "The general consensus is that he was trying to demonstrate a
genetic influence on racial differences and, in that way, prove that the Aryans
were superior to the other races."
Able said in her email that she and
Heller turned 21 during the death march when the SS tried to transfer its
prisoners by foot ahead of the imminent liberation of Auschwitz. They went on
to qualify as nurses in former Czechoslovakia before moving to Israel, then
Australia. "My sister and I were always two bodies and one soul," the
great-grandmother of six said in the email to Insider. "The shared
experience made us even closer if that was possible."
^ I knew about the Nazis’ experiments
on Twins, but it is still sick and sad to hear about. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/twin-survived-auschwitz-shares-doctor-154708961.html
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