Bruno Weber (doctor)

This article is about the doctor. For the artist, see Bruno Weber.

Bruno Nikolaus Maria Weber (21 May 1915 in Trier – 23 September 1956 in Homburg) was a German physician, bacteriologist and Hauptsturmführer (1944), at Auschwitz, in the branch of the Hygiene Institute of the Waffen SS. He was chief of the Hygienic Institute. He organized experiments involving the interaction of different human blood types in unwilling prisoner-patients. He also conducted experiments using barbiturates and morphine derivatives for mind-control purposes.[1] [2] He was made Obersturmfuehrer d.res:20.4.43 SS-Sanitatsamt.SS Nr:420759.

After the war, he was charged with murdering prisoners. He is also known to have experimented with the use of psychotropic drugs during interrogation. On the ramp in the Birkenau camp, he took part in the selection of Jews deported to Auschwitz, the majority of whom were murdered by the Nazis in the gas chambers immediately after arrival.

Personal life

Before the start of World War II, Weber (according to the SS doctor Hans Münch) earned his doctorate in medicine in the United States on a scholarship. In 1942 the Wehrmacht transferred him to the Waffen SS, where he reached the rank of Obersturmführer in January 1943, and was promoted to Hauptsturmführer in November 1944.

Professional life

By May 1943, Weber was Head of the Sanitary-bacteriological investigation authority of the Waffen-SS and Police South-East in the central warehouse Rajsko of Auschwitz I. At the instigation of the SS garrison doctor Eduard Wirth, this institute was used for the containment of typhoid and other epidemics. The epidemics at Auschwitz also threatened the camp staff of the SS. The Sanitary-Bacteriological investigation authority of the Waffen SS and Police South East had the following objectives:

Weber's staff included the SS doctors Hans Münch as his deputy and Hans Delmotte. Prisoner doctors were also forced to work in the Institute of Hygiene.

Some of these "special studies" occurred in block 10, where there were held Jewish women. The laboratory was where Weber experimented with blood, which was analyzed by the inmate physician Dr. Slavka Kleinová, among other prisoners, who were bled and injected prisoners with other blood groups, in order to test the compatibility of bloodtypes.[3] This usually produced high fever. After the evacuation of the Auschwitz concentration camp, Dr Weber was used as an SS doctor in the Dachau concentration camp.

After the war

He was arrested in July 1946 by members of the British Army and then transferred to Poland. In October 1946, Weber was questioned by members of the Polish Commission for the Investigation of War Crimes on suspicion of involvement in crimes committed on prisoners in Auschwitz. There he was determined to have had not played a role in Auschwitz concentration camp, "and not been an official" there. Weber was not prosecuted. He died a free man.

References

Literature

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