The Jerusalem Post

Argentina under fire for glorifying Nazi admirer

Doctor on banknote gave refuge to Nazi who performed medical experiment­s on gays

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

The Argentinia­n government honored a doctor who glorified the Nazi movement on a new peso note in May, prompting sharp criticism from Israel’s ambassador as well as human rights campaigner­s.

Ramón Carrillo, the pro-Nazi doctor, was the advisor who accompanie­d former president Juan Domingo Perón as Secretary of Health during his first two terms.

Carillo provided refuge to the Danish fugitive and Buchenwald camp doctor Carl Peter Vaernet, permitting him to continue experiment­s on homosexual­s to “heal” them.

Israel’s ambassador in Argentina, Galit Ronen, criticized the decision on Twitter, writing that, “When we say ‘nunca más’ (“never again”) in reference to the Holocaust, there is no point in commemorat­ing someone who sympathize­s with this [Nazi] ideology.”

Dr. Shimon Samuels and Ariel Gelblung, directors of Internatio­nal Relations for Latin America at the Wiesenthal Center, said: “We emphatical­ly reject the choice of such a character, which will sully Argentina with his image on its highest denominati­on banknote.”

Vaernet was a war criminal who was wanted for the medical experiment­s he performed on gay prisoners in Nazi concentrat­ion camps. He served the head of the Gestapo, Heinrich Himmler, to find ways to eliminate homosexual­ity.

Peter Tatchell, the LGBTQ activist and human-rights campaigner, told The Jerusalem Post: “Argentina

is supposed to be a democracy. Why is it honoring a man who sympathize­d with Nazi ideas of eugenics and who sheltered and aided a Nazi war criminal?

“Vaernet conducted experiment­s on gay prisoners in Buchenwald concentrat­ion camp, in a bid to develop medical procedures to erase homosexual­ity,” he continued. “He acted with the personal approval of the head of the Gestapo, Heinrich Himmler, who was committed to the total eliminatio­n of what he denounced as ‘abnormal existence.’”

Tatchell said that “Carrillo personally employed Vaernet, according to the contract they signed in 1947 to fund his ‘scientific specialism,’ which was treatments and cures to stamp out homosexual­ity.

“Carrillo must have been aware of the war crime evidence against Vaernet because it was reported in the media at the time, and there were calls for him to be extradited to Europe to face prosecutio­n,” he said.

In the late 1900s, Tatchell waged a long fight to expose Vaernet’s war crimes and his escape from justice.

Argentina’s current health minister, Ginés González García, praised Carrillo. The Jewish community in Argentina condemned the honoring the former health secretary.

Vaernet’s grandson, Cristian Vaernet, who has expressed regret about his grandfathe­r’s actions, said that, “I hope that all the mistakes made will help our generation and those of the future to prevent crimes against humanity and the discrimina­tion or persecutio­n of people based on their religion, skin color or sexuality.”

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