Irish Independent

Child-doctor Asperger ‘aided Nazi euthanasia’

- John von Radowitz

HANS Asperger, the respected Austrian paediatric­ian whose name describes a form of high-functionin­g autism, actively assisted in the murder of disabled children by the Nazis, a new report claims.

Asperger’s Syndrome, marked by an impaired ability to interact socially with others, tends to affect people of average or above average intelligen­ce.

It was first identified by Professor Asperger in 1944 who used the term “autistic psychopath­y” to describe the condition of four children under his care.

In 1981, the British psychiatri­st Lorna Wing, who helped establish the National Autistic Society in the UK, introduced the diagnosis of “Asperger’s Syndrome” in honour of her predecesso­r.

But according to new evidence, the pioneer of autism research whose reputation is that of a strong opponent of Nazi ideology, had a hidden dark past.

Documents uncovered by an Austrian medical historian suggest that Prof Asperger ingratiate­d himself with the Nazi regime to the extent of participat­ing in its murderous euthanasia programme.

Asperger is said to have referred profoundly disabled children to the notorious Am Spiegelgru­nd clinic, where their “unworthy” lives were snuffed out.

An estimated 789 children, many with severe mental problems, were systematic­ally killed at the Vienna clinic, mostly by lethal injection and gassing.

Others died from disease and starvation, or were subjected to harsh medical experiment­s.

“Aktion T4”, the horrific euthanasia programme personally authorised by Adolf Hitler, set out to cull the incurable and severely disabled.

Up to 300,000 victims, including children, were exterminat­ed at clinics in Germany, Austria, Poland and the Czech Republic between 1939 and 1945.

Herwig Czech, from the Medical University of Vienna, set out the claims against Prof Asperger after trawling through previously unexamined documents from the Nazi era including personnel files and patient records.

He said: “What emerges is that Asperger successful­ly sought to accommodat­e himself to the Nazi regime and was rewarded with career opportunit­ies in return.”

The allegation­s are reported in the journal Molecular Autism, whose two editors explained why they believed Prof Asperger to be guilty as charged.

One of them, leading British autism expert Professor Simon Baron-Cohen, from Cambridge University, said: “We believe that it deserves to be published in order to expose the truth about how a medical doctor who, for a long time, was seen as only having made valuable contributi­ons to the field of paediatric­s and child psychiatry, was guilty of actively assisting the Nazis in their abhorrent eugenics and euthanasia policies.”

 ??  ?? Hans Asperger was a pioneer in the study of autism
Hans Asperger was a pioneer in the study of autism

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