Eduard Wirths (4 September 1909 – 20 September 1945) was the chief SS doctor (SS-Standortarzt) at the Auschwitz concentration camp from September 1942 to January 1945. Thus, Wirths had formal responsibility for everything undertaken by the nearly twenty SS doctors (including Josef Mengele, Horst Schumann and Carl Clauberg) who worked in the medical sections of Auschwitz between 1942 and 1945.
Wirths was a profound anti-Semite.
Rudolf Höss, the commandant of Auschwitz between 1940 and December 1943, is said to have held Wirths in particularly high regard. He is said to have remarked of Wirths that "During my 10 years of service in concentration-camp affairs, I have never encountered a better one."Lifton: p. 386
In 1943 the impact on inmates of Wirths' actions at Auschwitz resulted in his receiving a Christmas card from Hermann Langbein, a political prisoner who worked with him, which contained the message “In the past year you have saved here the lives of 93,000 people. We do not have the right to tell you our wishes. But we wish for ourselves that you stay here in the coming year.” It was signed: “One speaking for the prisoners of Auschwitz.” The figure of 93,000 was the difference in mortality rate among prisoners from typhus in the year prior to Wirths' arrival.Lifton: p. 389 In 1943-45, Wirths protected the Austrian nurse Maria Stromberger against accusations by several SS men at Auschwitz, as Stromberger took charge of and contained the typhus infections and, working for the Auschwitz resistance, saved many prisoners herself.Walser, Harald. 2021. Ein Engel in der Hölle von Auschwitz: Das Leben der Krankenschwester Maria Stromberger. Vienna: Falter Verlag (in Austrian German) However, Wirths was unaware of Stromberger's clandestine work for the resistance. After the war, Langbein called Wirths an "anständiger Nazi"– a decent Nazi – which must be read from the above statement in relation to Nazi perpetrators of a most extreme category such as Josef Mengele or Odilo Globocnik and excepting the Jewish victims.
Wirths was promoted to SS- Sturmbannführer (major) in September 1944. Following the evacuation of Auschwitz in January 1945 he was transferred, along with many other former Auschwitz personnel, to the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp in Thuringia. Wirths again held the post of chief camp physician until Mittelbau-Dora's evacuation in April 1945.
In 2014 Wirths' son Peter donated his father's photo albums to the USHMM – these contain photos of the Wirths family at the Solahütte, Wirths with Rudolf Höss, pictures of the old village of Birkenau before it was destroyed and pictures of the building of the SS hospital at Auschwitz.
Perhaps illustrative of Wirths' commitment to medical 'leadership' was his tendency while at Auschwitz to drive about in a car flying a Red Cross flag as well as his enthusiasm for acting as a marriage counselor and personal adviser to other SS personnel. According to Helgard Kramer, Wirths
/ref> At Auschwitz, Wirths was known to be protective of "Aryan" prisoner doctors and other prisoners, such as Hermann Langbein, and to have improved conditions on the medical blocks and was remembered favourably by most prisoner doctors and other inmates who had contact with him. At the same time, Wirths approved of harsh treatment of Jewish people and he recommended Josef Mengele for promotion in August 1944. Wirths considered Mengele as of "open, honest, firm … and absolutely dependable" character and "magnificent" intellectual and physical talents; of the "discretion, perseverance, and energy with which he has fulfilled every task … and … shown himself equal to every situation"; of his "valuable contribution to anthropological science by making use of the scientific materials available to him"; of his "absolute ideological firmness" and "faultless conduct as an SS officer"; and personal qualities as "free, unrestrained, persuasive, and lively" discourse that rendered him "especially dear to his comrades".from "Beurteilung des SS Hauptsturmführers (R) Dr. Josef Mengele," 19 August 1944 (Berlin Document Center: Mengele
Prisoner experimentation
Selection of prisoners
Capture and suicide
Summary of SS career
. . . Wirths was significantly immersed in Nazi ideology in three crucial spheres: the claim of revitalizing the German race and Volk; the biomedical path to that revitalization via purification of genes and race; and the focus on the Jews as a threat to this renewal, to the immediate and long-term "health" of the Germanic race. While Wirths did not absolutize these convictions in the manner of Mengele — they were in him combined with a strong current of medical humanism — his commitment to the Nazi cause was probably no less strong . . .Lifton, p. 412
. . . first seized on a career as a military doctor and officer in the German elite troops of the SS, because he desperately wanted to become a member of the upper class; eventually to provide his future wife with a "decent marriage". To reach that goal he had to become a "tough man"...
SS ranks and awards
See also
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