Who exactly were Dr. Josef Mengele
and Dr. Shiro Ishii? Why aren’t their names heard of all that much? Why is it
that these men almost go unknown in some textbooks that we learn from this day
and age? Well, let me tell you this, these men may be the most sadistic people
during World War II. Let’s start with probably the more well known of the two,
Dr. Joseph Mengele.
Dr.
Josef Mengele, also known as “the angel of death”, was a German Schutzstaffel guard
and doctor at Auschwitz concentration camp during World War II. He entered the
Nazi Party in 1937 and went to the SS in 1938. In 1942 he was wounded in battle
and was said to be unfit for war. So he then volunteered to be sent to a
concentration camp in Auschwitz Germany. Here he became the last surviving symbol
of Adolph Hitler’s “Final Solution”. Dr. Mengele was fascinated with his
experiments that he performed on identical twins. When the trains would unload,
the prisoners would be forced to stand in line and Dr. Josef would walk the
lines looking for twins or any other people with hereditary disfigurements. When
a pair of twins was found, he’d take them to be processed. They would be led to
a shower room and were given special care and treated better than others
because Mengele considered them to be his “children” from that moment on. After
they would shower, they were then given a special number to be tattooed on them,
and then sent to the twin’s barracks. Each morning Mengele would come in and
inspect the children, but to the children, Mengele was a good man. He would
come in with his pockets full of candy; he would talk to them, and even
sometimes play with them. Almost every day, they would have blood drawn, often
in large quantities. They would then be taken to laboratories and have things
injected into them, or would have their bodies experimented on. They would have
chemicals injected into their eyes to change the eye color, would have mass
blood transfusions between twins, they would have organs switched, and body
parts amputated. If one twin were to die, the other would be killed shortly
after.
Surgeon General Dr. Shiro Ishii was
a Japanese medical officer during WWII and was involved in Unit 731, a
biological warfare unit of the Japanese army. He was also known for his
frequent lethal human experiments. When countries would start experimenting
with biological weapons, they would try to be somewhat ethical about it and
test these things out on animals. But not,
Shiro Ishii; this man had no cares about the humans that he tested on. He would
unleash some of the deadliest pathogens in history on humans, and study the
results of what was left of the people. He would forcibly make people become his
little guinea pigs. He would make then breathe, eat, and take injections of
deadly diseases and pathogens. He would often have the people killed before the
disease would take its effect on the humans so that he could examine their body’s
reaction to it. In 1945, Unit 731 was forced to be shut down, and because of it
being shut down, the Japanese destroyed many of the records so that no one
could know much of what happened.
So as you can tell, these men were
horrible people. But you tell me why we don’t
hear as much about these two men as we should. I feel that these two men did
worse things than that of what Hitler did. I also feel that the reason why more
Germans were sentenced to jail or death than that of Japanese is because I feel
that the Japanese did everything in their power to cover their tracks, and
destroy any evidence that they could. I also feel that the Japanese worked
behind the scenes. While the Germans attracted all the attention, the Japanese felt
that they could get away with just about anything they wanted.
I believe that what both the Germans
and Japanese did during the holocaust were wrong. But I feel that what the
Japanese were doing almost goes un-noticed.
Things such as the Rape of Nanking, need to be brought out more in
textbooks and in history lessons. And I would like to know why is it that
things like that isn’t taught or learned as often as they should be. These tragic
events are major parts of our world’s history, and they need to be more
commonly well known.