were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
I missed your post above slob's Scott, my apologies Sir, also, thank you. I'm grabbing these.Scott wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 11:45 am I'm not sure that I understand what you are asking, Stubble ─ but unless you need a hardcopy, I believe that the 1943 SS textbook on disinfection by SS-Hauptsturmführer (med.) Dr. Dötzer, "Entkeimung, Entseuchung und Entwesung" (trans: Disinfection, Disinfection and Disinfestation) is scanned already in toto, and the URL to the entire book (6 MB) was in my post above.
Perhaps I should have included the citation and metadata and not just relied on the link to the actual scanned book:
(LINK)
https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/71856706
Dötzer, Walter. Entkeimung, Entseuchung und Entwesung (trans: Disinfection, Disinfection and Disinfestation). 2., unveränd. Aufl, Urban & Schwarzenberg, (1943).
Fritz Berg had it saved on his computer. I think Eric Hunt scanned it for him. I was hoping to get it translated into German but never got around to it. Unfortunately, it is not as technically detailed as I would like but it is comprehensive.
(Thanks to slob for posting the image screenshots.)
Here is some further information from a website on "Nazi Science, Technology, and Medicine."
https://academic.schafferlibrarycollections.org/s/nazi-science-technology-medicine/item/7079
Description:
Doetzer, Walter, Entkeimung, Entseuchung und Entwesung (disinfection, decontamination, disinfestation). Instruction booklet from a series published by the HI-WSS. 1943, 177 pages, scan of the cover. Source: archive.org
were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
There was another recent comment on a similar 26 million figure.Scott wrote: ↑Fri Apr 11, 2025 5:18 am Thanks, sorry if I sounded annoyed. The Internet Archive is enormously valuable, especially since the text of the document is available electronically and not just from an image scan. I guess you could plug the German text into an Online translator that way.
I was slightly annoyed when I searched for Dötzer in the Internet Archive and nothing came up, and I saw that the incorrect author "Doetner" is used.
However, that's okay because a search of either "Doetzer" (correct) or "Doetzner" (incorrect) does come up with the publication that we want.
I would also like to point out the obvious about this document, just in case readers might be interested.
What is highly interesting is that in the Foreword (Vorwort) of the 1943 Dötzer textbook, both Dr. Bruno Tesch, and the infamous SS hygiene degreed-engineer expert. SS-Obersturmführer Kurt Gerstein are both acknowledged.
This is highly important to the story, as we know that Dr. Tesch was hanged by the British in 1946, and because Gerstein apparently hanged himself in French captivity in 1945 after giving a weird-beyond-belief series of statements.
A side note also. One of Gerstein's cringey statements was that 25 million people were gassed by the German government during the war.
Gerstein got this factoid from his boss, SS-Standartenführer Dr. Wilhelm Pfannenstiel, a University of Marburg pathologist and professor.
In 1944, Professor Pfannenstiel delivered a boilerpate professional paper on wartime hygiene measures. Pfannenstiel states that up to that time in the war, 25 million travellers have had their belongings gassed to control the spread of diseases and disease vectors. That is a bit in contrast to Gerstein's claim that 25 million were homicidally gassed.
Pfannenstiel, Wilhelm. Der Moderne Krieg Als Lehrmeister Der Hygiene (Modern War as a Master-Teacher of Hygiene). Stalling, (1944).
https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/14727956
I will put Pfanenstiel's essay back up at RODOH soon. I had gotten it professionally translated from the original German.
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*yoink*Scott wrote: ↑Sat Apr 12, 2025 5:33 am Thanks, Archie.
As promised, here are the scanned PDFs for Degesch-Methods ... wartime German fumigation manual (in English).
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Schädlingsbekämpfung m.b.h., Frankfurt a.M., “Degesch”-Methods for Pest Control. Deutsche Gesellschaft für schädlingabekämofung m.b.h., (1937).
https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/71065305
This time the booklet is broken down into PDFs by page ranges, so five files and a metadata text file is within the folder linked to below.
Degesch-Methods_1937
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were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.