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1.
Harefuah ; 163(8): 533-535, 2024 Aug.
Artículo en Hebreo | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39115007

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Letter about JEWISH MEDICAL STUDENTS FROM BRITISH MANDATE PALESTINE/ERETZ ISRAEL -THEIR FINAL MD EXAMINATION IN BERLIN DURING THE THIRD REICH, by Uri Freund Letter about JEWISH MEDICAL STUDENTS FROM BRITISH MANDATE PALESTINE/ERETZ ISRAEL -THEIR FINAL MD EXAMINATION IN BERLIN DURING THE THIRD REICH, by Gideon Eshel Letter about THE UNACCEPTED RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE EDUCATIONAL MEDICAL SYSTEM IN GERMANY AND THE JEWISH PHYSICIANS DURING THE NAZI REGIME, by Gideon Eshel.


Asunto(s)
Judíos , Nacionalsocialismo , Estudiantes de Medicina , Humanos , Judíos/historia , Nacionalsocialismo/historia , Alemania , Educación Médica/historia , Educación Médica/métodos , Israel , Médicos/historia
2.
Pathologica ; 116(3): 186-188, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38979594

RESUMEN

In 2023 an important anniversary took place. It regards Virchow's report on the Upper Silesia epidemic typhus, which was associated with the death of numerous Polish peasants. It is also the starting point of Virchow's political career and fight against antisemitism, which has reached fearful levels in academia. Antisemitism is not new, but the recrudescence following the October 7th massacre of Jewish and not-Jewish people is appalling and recalls Virchow's vehemence of the past a few decades before the Nazi extermination of the Shoah during the World War II.


Asunto(s)
Salud Pública , Humanos , Salud Pública/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Polonia , Tifus Epidémico Transmitido por Piojos/historia , Judíos/historia
3.
Endeavour ; 48(2): 100941, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39079369

RESUMEN

This paper deals with agricultural training for Jewish women settlers in Palestine, and focuses on the first school established by the Jewish botanist and settler Hannah Meisel in 1911. The school was modeled after European schools for horticulture, but grew to serve the settler community and students' need to overcome financial challenges as well as the gendered structure of the labor force. As they pursued agricultural work, proximity to the land, and native status, the women taking part in the training program ultimately combined ideas about scientific progress and European theoretical foundations with Palestinian indigenous knowledge and practices. By appropriating Palestinian agricultural techniques and adopting vegetables as the main sphere of work and production, women settlers both struggled to shift gendered social hierarchies and became deeply involved in the settler-colonial project.


Asunto(s)
Agricultura , Humanos , Agricultura/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Femenino , Verduras/historia , Medio Oriente , Árabes/historia , Judíos/historia , Colonialismo/historia
4.
Dan Med J ; 71(6)2024 May 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38847414

RESUMEN

This essay is dedicated to the memory of my father David Sompolinsky. As a medical student in Veterinary Medicine in Copenhagen, with the support of his professors and the Danish Resistance, David organised the rescue of 700 Danish Jews in October 1943, helping them escape Nazi persecution and find safety in Sweden.


Asunto(s)
Nacionalsocialismo , Humanos , Historia del Siglo XX , Dinamarca , Animales , Nacionalsocialismo/historia , Judíos/historia
5.
Harefuah ; 163(5): 321-322, 2024 May.
Artículo en Hebreo | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38734947

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: In his important article, Prof. G. Eshel describes the story of three Jewish physicians who returned to Nazi Germany to complete their MD thesis despite laws prohibiting Jewish students from German Universities. The three physicians completed their MD thesis examination with the help of three German Professors who supported them regardless of the laws banning Jewish students. The three physicians risked their lives by returning to Nazi Germany, as did the three professors who supported them. The three physicians returned to Palestine upon completion of the requirement for their medical licensing and continued to contribute to the medical system for many years in the State of Israel. The determination of the three Jewish physicians and their courage teaches us an important lesson on the motivation of young doctors to complete their education and practice medicine. The support of the German professors created some lights in the great darkness of the Nazi regime. Generations of physicians took a stand on non-medical issues and contributed to social justice and the wellbeing of individuals beyond medical care. We should all continue this legacy.


Asunto(s)
Educación Médica , Judíos , Nacionalsocialismo , Médicos , Nacionalsocialismo/historia , Judíos/historia , Humanos , Alemania , Historia del Siglo XX , Médicos/historia , Educación Médica/historia , Israel
6.
Med Humanit ; 50(2): 254-265, 2024 Aug 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38802248

RESUMEN

The Society for the Preservation of the Health of the Jewish Population (OZE) was an organisation dedicated to providing medical aid to Eastern European Jews ravaged by war, revolution, poverty and disease during and after World War I. The OZE's top priority was addressing the health needs of Jewish children and teaching mothers how to 'properly' raise their infants, as children were believed to be the backbone and future of the Jewish nation. Analysing the OZE's public-facing newspaper Folksgezunt (People's Health), this paper examines how the OZE used reigning ideas in the Western European and North American scientific community around race and hygiene packaged in Yiddish to transform Jewish women into 'modern mothers'. Modernising maternity required Jewish women to be completely reliant on medical authority and relinquish traditional forms of childcare. At a time when Jews lived in different newly established nation-states of Eastern Europe, transforming maternity practices was part of a larger project started by Jewish physicians in the Russian Empire to unite Jews by defining them in national terms, replacing religious and parochial definitions. This paper uses discursive and gender analysis to explore how the OZE saw women's abilities (or not) to raise a healthy Jewish nation as a crucial part of Jewish national diaspora politics. Hence, this paper emphasises the political nature of a seemingly apolitical humanitarian project by uncovering how the image of a modern Jewish mother facilitated a vision of Jewish cohesion and perseverance through health.


Asunto(s)
Judíos , Madres , Humanos , Judíos/historia , Femenino , Europa Oriental/etnología , Historia del Siglo XX , Judaísmo/historia
7.
Ambix ; 71(2): 141-171, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38660777

RESUMEN

This article presents the results of a survey and a first assessment of the corpus of alchemical manuscripts retrieved from the Cairo Genizah, a storage room mainly intended for sacred writings that is attached to the Ben Ezra synagogue of Old Cairo. The alchemical manuscripts are described in their codicological and palaeographic features; their content is analysed in the context of the medieval production of alchemical texts in the surrounding Islamic world. The alchemical corpus of the Genizah represents a unique and widely unstudied source for our understanding of the relationship between Jews and alchemy in the medieval Mediterranean World.


Asunto(s)
Alquimia , Historia Medieval , Antiguo Egipto , Manuscritos como Asunto/historia , Judíos/historia , Islamismo/historia , Humanos
8.
Med Hist ; 68(1): 60-85, 2024 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38505944

RESUMEN

This article is the first scholarly research focusing exclusively on the history of Jews with disabilities in the Kingdom of Poland from the 1860s to 1914. It analyses sources drawn from the Jewish press in Yiddish, Polish, and Hebrew. Areas of investigation include the hierarchy of attitudes towards different categories of individuals with disabilities, spiritual perspectives on disability, and the portrayal of disabilities within Jewish literature. The study places particular emphasis on the Jewish deaf community, given the proliferation of available source material. Drawing on the broad conceptual framework of disability studies, the authors examine the phenomenon of medicalisation, tracing its influence on Jewish public discourse over the latter half of the nineteenth century and the early decades of the twentieth.


Asunto(s)
Personas con Discapacidad , Judíos , Humanos , Judíos/historia , Polonia
9.
Clin Dermatol ; 42(3): 299-312, 2024.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38340908

RESUMEN

Part III of this contribution continues to celebrate the many contributions that Jewish physicians have made to advance the specialty of dermatology, as reflected by eponyms that honor their names. Part I covered the years before 1933, a highly productive period of creativity by Jewish dermatologists, especially in Germany and Austria. The lives of 17 Jewish physicians and their eponyms were described in Part I. Part II focused on the years of 1933 to 1945, when the Nazis rose to power in Europe, and how their anti-Semitic genocidal policies affected leading Jewish dermatologists caught within the Third Reich. Fourteen Jewish physicians and their eponyms are discussed in Part II. Part III continues the remembrance of the Holocaust era by looking at the careers and eponyms of an additional 13 Jewish physicians who contributed to dermatology during the period of 1933 to 1945. Two of these 13 physicians, pathologist Ludwig Pick (1868-1944) and neurologist Arthur Simons (1877-1942), perished in the Holocaust. They are remembered by the following eponyms of interest to dermatologists: Lubarsch-Pick syndrome, Niemann-Pick disease, and Barraquer-Simons syndrome. Four of the 13 Jewish physicians escaped the Nazis: Felix Pinkus (1868-1947), Herman Pinkus (1905-1985), Arnault Tzanck (1886-1954), and Erich Urbach (1893-1946). Eponyms that honor their names include nitidus Pinkus, fibroepithelioma of Pinkus, Tzanck test, Urbach-Wiethe disease, Urbach-Koningstein technique, Oppenheim-Urbach disease, and extracellular cholesterinosis of Karl-Urbach. The other seven Jewish physicians lived outside the reach of the Nazis, in either Canada, the United States, or Israel. Their eponyms are discussed in this contribution. Part III also discusses eponyms that honor seven contemporary Jewish dermatologists who practiced dermatology after 1945 and who continue the nearly 200 years of Jewish contribution to the development of the specialty. They are A. Bernard Ackerman (1936-2008), Irwin M. Braverman, Sarah Brenner, Israel Chanarin, Maurice L. Dorfman, Dan Lipsker, and Ronni Wolf. Their eponyms are Ackerman syndrome, Braverman sign, Brenner sign, Chanarin-Dorfman syndrome, Lipsker criteria of the Schnitzler syndrome, and Wolf's isotopic response.


Asunto(s)
Dermatólogos , Dermatología , Epónimos , Holocausto , Judíos , Historia del Siglo XX , Judíos/historia , Holocausto/historia , Dermatología/historia , Humanos , Dermatólogos/historia , Nacionalsocialismo/historia , Alemania
10.
Harefuah ; 162(4): 252-256, 2023 Apr.
Artículo en Hebreo | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37120747

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: This year marks the anniversary of the 80th year of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (1943 -2023), a very important and significant turning point in the history of the Holocaust. The Uprising is not the only demonstration of courage and strength, in rebelling against the brutal Nazi oppressor: there was another form of intellectual and spiritual resistance in the ghetto - medical resistance. Physicians, nurses, and other healthcare professionals resisted. Not only did they provide very diverse and dedicated medical assistance to the ghetto residents, but they went beyond their professional duties in initiating research on Hunger Diseases and in founding a clandestine medical school. The medical work in the Warsaw Ghetto is a symbol of the victory of the human spirit.


Asunto(s)
Holocausto , Medicina , Humanos , Historia del Siglo XX , Áreas de Pobreza , Holocausto/historia , Nacionalsocialismo , Hambre , Judíos/historia
11.
Acta Ophthalmol ; 101(2): 236-241, 2023 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35934882

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: During World War II, scientific studies were conducted in the Jewish ghetto of Warsaw (Poland). This research, focusing on hunger-induced disease, was embedded in circumstances of omnipresent hunger and starvation. Ophthalmologist Szymon Fajgenblat (1900-1944) was one of the involved physicians and wrote a manuscript about ophthalmological changes during starvation. The background and the findings of his research are discussed in this article. METHODS: Literature and archival research. RESULTS: The Warsaw ghetto existed from 1941 to 1943 until it was destroyed, just like most of its inhabitants. Before destruction took place, the Nazis tried to kill the residents-almost half a million Jews-by means of starvation. Led by dermatologist Israel Milejkowski, a group of Jewish physicians decided to study the physical effects of hunger on human beings. Twenty-eight physicians would participate in the Hunger Disease Studies, including Fajgenblat. He linked cataracts to serious undernourishment and observed scleral thinning as another sign in hunger disease; the latter likely responsible for the low intraocular pressure found in the study population. Surprisingly, no complaints of night blindness or ophthalmological findings, characteristic of vitamin A deficiency, were observed in the study population. CONCLUSION: The Hunger Disease Studies are a unique written medical and historical monument of the Jewish physicians of the Warsaw ghetto. Ophthalmologist Szymon Fajgenblat was one of them and left behind an ophthalmological study as his legacy.


Asunto(s)
Oftalmología , Inanición , Humanos , Historia del Siglo XX , Hambre , Judíos/historia , Áreas de Pobreza , Polonia/epidemiología
12.
Clin Dermatol ; 41(1): 159-165, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36450309

RESUMEN

Izrael Milejkowski (1887-1943), dermatologist and venerologist, and his research team conducted research starvation in the ghetto. The patients were taken to hospital wards, where they were monitored and subjected to various medical procedures. In meetings of the research team, the physicians reported their observations. This research led to a series of medical contributions that included descriptions of changes in diseases of hunger-starvation, anatomy, biochemistry, skin, cardiovascular, ocular, and blood morphology. We describe this unique study in the Warsaw Ghetto, which took place during World War II.


Asunto(s)
Médicos , Inanición , Humanos , Hambre , Judíos/historia , Áreas de Pobreza , Inanición/historia , Polonia
13.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 29(3): 751-761, 2022.
Artículo en Español | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36074360

RESUMEN

This article attempts to hypothetically reflect on how historians of science will write their research on the development of the covid-19 pandemic in Israel in the future, within a context that includes: the political crisis experienced by the country at that time; the history of the public health institutions established from the time of the first Jewish settlers in Palestine, at the beginning of the twentieth century, and slightly modified by a law of 1994; the conceptual schemes developed during the last decades by historians of public health and pandemics in general.


El presente artículo representa un intento de reflexionar hipotéticamente sobre la manera en que los historiadores de la ciencia escribirán en el futuro sus investigaciones sobre el desarrollo de la pandemia de la covid-19 en Israel, dentro de un contexto que incluye: la crisis política que vivió el país en esos momentos; la historia de las instituciones de salud pública establecidas desde la época de los primeros colonos judíos en Palestina, a principios del siglo XX, y modificadas ligeramente por una ley de 1994; los esquemas conceptuales desarrollados durante las últimas décadas por historiadores de la salud pública y las pandemias en general.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19 , Nombres , COVID-19/epidemiología , Humanos , Israel/epidemiología , Judíos/historia , Pandemias
14.
Curr Biol ; 32(20): 4350-4359.e6, 2022 10 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36044903

RESUMEN

We report genome sequence data from six individuals excavated from the base of a medieval well at a site in Norwich, UK. A revised radiocarbon analysis of the assemblage is consistent with these individuals being part of a historically attested episode of antisemitic violence on 6 February 1190 CE. We find that four of these individuals were closely related and all six have strong genetic affinities with modern Ashkenazi Jews. We identify four alleles associated with genetic disease in Ashkenazi Jewish populations and infer variation in pigmentation traits, including the presence of red hair. Simulations indicate that Ashkenazi-associated genetic disease alleles were already at appreciable frequencies, centuries earlier than previously hypothesized. These findings provide new insights into a significant historical crime, into Ashkenazi population history, and into the origins of genetic diseases associated with modern Jewish populations.


Asunto(s)
Entierro , Judíos , Humanos , Frecuencia de los Genes , Judíos/genética , Judíos/historia , Alelos
15.
Isr Med Assoc J ; 24(7): 429-432, 2022 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35819207

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Dr. Joseph Weill was a French Jewish doctor who made significant contributions to the knowledge of hunger disease in the refugee camps in southern France during World War II. He was involved with the clandestine network of escape routes for Jewish children from Nazi-occupied France to Switzerland. Take home messages • During the Holocaust, in the ghettoes and death camps, a few research projects, mainly on hunger and infectious diseases, were performed by Jewish physicians and scientists • Jewish and non-Jewish prisoners were incarcerated within the notorious system of internment camps in southern France • Dr. Joseph Weill (1902-1988), a French Jewish physician and a distinguished member of the Résistance managed to enter the internment camps and medically assist the inmates in addition to performing systematic research and follow-up of those who presented with hunger disease.


Asunto(s)
Campos de Concentración , Holocausto , Niño , Campos de Concentración/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Holocausto/historia , Humanos , Hambre , Judíos/historia , Masculino , Segunda Guerra Mundial
16.
Isr Med Assoc J ; 24(4): 207-209, 2022 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35415975

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Extermination via starvation was described in detail as an alternative or precursor to the final solution during the Holocaust in World War II. The main causes of death in the ghettos were exhaustion, environmental conditions (inadequate protection in extreme climates), infectious diseases, or starvation. In previous studies on the Lodz Ghetto, the causes of death via typhus exantematicus, tuberculosis, and heart failure were investigated [1,2]. In this article, we introduce the topic of diabetes in the presence of starvation and assess the incidence of malignancies in the years 1941-1944. The findings from the Lodz Ghetto would retroactively support the Warburg theory.


Asunto(s)
Diabetes Mellitus , Genocidio , Holocausto , Neoplasias , Inanición , Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiología , Holocausto/historia , Humanos , Judíos/historia , Neoplasias/epidemiología , Áreas de Pobreza
17.
Pathol Res Pract ; 231: 153776, 2022 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35091178

RESUMEN

The Jewish pathologist Herman Medak (1914-1991) went down in medical history as a pioneer in the early detection of oral carcinomas. As a longtime full professor of oral pathology at the University of Illinois, he influenced several generations of students and young researchers. His many experimental studies attracted special attention, as did his "Atlas of Oral Cytology" (1970). Largely unknown, however, is the fact that the Viennese-born scientist had to flee from the Nazi regime immediately before his medical state examination and thus arrived in the United States without a qualifying professional degree. This article attempts to fill the existing research gaps and to reconstruct Medak's life and work. It sheds light on Medak's years of study in Vienna, his forced emigration from Austria, his restart in the U.S. and his path to becoming a full professor of oral pathology. It also addresses the question of why Medak remained in Chicago until the end of his life and how the University of Vienna later dealt with its expelled students. The analysis is based on a large number of documents from archives in Austria and the U.S., but also on transcripts and other material from the private collection of the Medak family. These documents were supplemented and compared with the relevant secondary literature. It can be shown that Medak had to overcome considerable setbacks not only in Vienna, but also in the U.S., before he got on the road to professional success. Five factors ultimately proved to be career-enhancing: the Nimbus of the "Vienna School", Medak's unconditional striving for education, his deliberate specialization in oral pathology, his early international contacts and his willingness to adapt and acculturate. Like most other displaced scholars, Medak was widely ignored in postwar Austria. Today, the University of Vienna maintains an online memorial book that also provides information about Medak - albeit still rudimentary.


Asunto(s)
Patólogos/historia , Anciano , Austria , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Judíos/historia , Masculino , Neoplasias de la Boca/diagnóstico , Neoplasias de la Boca/genética , Neoplasias de la Boca/historia , Nacionalsocialismo/historia , Estados Unidos
18.
Pathol Res Pract ; 227: 153633, 2021 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34607158

RESUMEN

Given his seminal scientific oeuvre, Joseph P. Weinmann (1896-1960) is considered a pioneer of oral pathology. He also paved the way for generations of scientists and physicians with the standard work "Bone and Bones", his textbook on oral pathology and histology, and the "Oral Pathology Program" at the University of Illinois. Far less well known is the fact that Weinmann, as a Jew, was disenfranchised by the Nazis in Vienna in 1938. Against this background, this study aims to shed light on the circumstances of Weinmann's persecution and subsequent forced emigration, as well as the further development of his career in the United States. This includes the question of which factors were decisive for Weinmann's scientific breakthrough in Chicago. The analysis draws on a variety of archival sources and contemporary printed writings. What at first glance looks like the impressive curriculum vitae of a successful scientist turns out to be a story of loss, violence, and a difficult new beginning. Joseph Weinmann first had to overcome several setbacks - disenfranchisement and expropriation by the National Socialists, a brief imprisonment before his planned escape from Vienna, and a failed immigration attempt in Great Britain - before he succeeded in an international career in the USA, which brought him, among other things, a chair and the presidency of the "American Academy of Oral Pathology". From the results, it can be concluded that Weinmann's success was not due to one specific reason, but based on many mutually beneficial factors (personal relationships, scientific prominence, favorable research environment, fortitude, adaptability, highly sought-after professional specialization).


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica/historia , Judíos/historia , Enfermedades de la Boca/historia , Nacionalsocialismo/historia , Patología/historia , Refugiados/historia , Austria , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Enfermedades de la Boca/patología , Estados Unidos
19.
Genome Biol ; 22(1): 200, 2021 08 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34353344

RESUMEN

Six million Jews were killed by Nazi Germany and its collaborators during World War II. Archaeological excavations in the area of the death camp in Sobibór, Poland, revealed ten sets of human skeletal remains presumptively assigned to Polish victims of the totalitarian regimes. However, their genetic analyses indicate that the remains are of Ashkenazi Jews murdered as part of the mass extermination of European Jews by the Nazi regime and not of otherwise hypothesised non-Jewish partisan combatants. In accordance with traditional Jewish rite, the remains were reburied in the presence of a Rabbi at the place of their discovery.


Asunto(s)
Campos de Concentración/historia , ADN Mitocondrial/genética , Holocausto/historia , Judíos/genética , Nacionalsocialismo/historia , Filogeografía/historia , Restos Mortales/química , ADN Mitocondrial/clasificación , Genética de Población/historia , Haplotipos , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Judíos/historia , Masculino , Polonia , Segunda Guerra Mundial
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