In a time when
innocent people were brutally murdered only for their nationality and religion,
one soldier stands out among the rest.
He defied the
Germans, repeatedly risking his life to save the lives of thousands. Dr. Eugene
Lazowski is considered a hero to many people, but for him, saving others was
his only option—it was simply the right thing to do.
In German-occupied Poland in 1942, Lazowski was a
29-year-old doctor, somewhat soft-spoken, working for the Polish Red Cross in
the tiny village of Rozwadow. The Gestapo was terrorizing the
countryside--committing random murders, seizing young Polish men and women to
work as slave laborers, and dispatching Jews to death camps.
Lazowski was deeply distressed. As a doctor, he felt he
could not pick up a weapon and kill another man. However, as a Polish patriot
and man of conscience, he could not stand by and do nothing. So, when a fellow
doctor, Matulewicz, told him he had discovered a way to make healthy people
test positive for typhus, Lazowski was delighted--and immediately knew what his
role in the war would be.
"I was not able to fight with a gun or a
sword," he said, "but I found a way to scare the Germans."
Typhus is an infectious disease spread by body lice that
is often fatal, and at that time there was no cure and vaccinations were
scarce. The German army dreaded the disease because in unsanitary wartime
conditions, it could race through a regiment. So doctors who suspected that a
patient had typhus were required to submit blood samples to German-controlled
laboratories for testing.
Jews who tested positive were shot, and their houses
burned. Non-Jews were quarantined or sent to special hospitals.
Matulewicz desperately wanted to bypass the German labs.
He dared not send the labs blood samples from Jewish patients--it would mean
their deaths. He had to figure out a way to perform the typhus test on his own.
"It was very important for us to make a final
diagnosis for people who were hiding from the Germans or who were Jews because
it could be very dangerous to send their blood for examination," Lazowski
explained.
The accepted test for typhus at that time consisted of
mixing a certain strain of killed bacteria with a blood sample from the
patient. Under proper laboratory conditions, if the patient had typhus, the
blood sample would turn cloudy.
Matulewicz did manage to devise a way to do the test on
his own, and in the process he stumbled upon a curious discovery--if a healthy
person were injected with the bacteria, that person would suffer no harm but
would test positive for typhus.
When Matulewicz told Lazowski of his discovery, Lazowski
immediately proposed that the two doctors secretly create a fake typhus
epidemic to frighten the Germans into quarantining the area. A typhus scare
could hold off the German army as effectively as a line of tanks.
From that day on, Lazowski and Matulewicz injected the
killed bacteria into every non-Jewish patient who suffered from a fever or
exhibited other typhuslike symptoms. They sent blood samples from the patients
to the German-controlled lab. And, sure enough, every patient tested positive
for typhus.
So, as not to draw suspicion to themselves, the two
doctors referred many of their patients--after injecting them with the
bacteria--to other doctors who weren't in on the ruse. These doctors would
"discover" the typhus on their own and report it separately. Better
yet, when a patient really did have typhus, Lazowski and Matulewicz publicized
the case as much as possible--but only if the patient was not Jewish.
Within a few months, the Germans became alarmed.
One by one, "Achtung, Fleckfieber!" (Warning,
Typhus!) signs went up in surrounding villages, until a dozen towns with a
total of about 8,000 people were under quarantine.
The deportation of workers to Germany from these areas
was stopped. German troops kept their distance. Villagers began to feel more
relaxed. And only Lazowski and Matulewicz knew there was no epidemic.
They told no one, not even their wives.
It looked promising for the young doctor Lazowsky until
the Germans sent a medical inspection team into the region to verify the
“disease.” The team, comprised of a few doctors and several armed soldiers, met
Dr. Lazowski just outside the city, where a hot meal awaited the team. They
started eating and drinking with the young doctor. The lead doctor was having
fun drinking, and thereby sent the younger two doctors to the hospital. Fearing
for their own safety, they only drew blood samples and left. Dr. Lazowski knew
he had succeeded.
Close to the end of World War II, Eugene Lazowski was
warned that the Gestapo was after him by a soldier whom he had secretly treated
for a venereal disease. The soldier told him that they were aware of him treating
members of the resistance and had known for some time. Eugene later speculated
that they had known about him, but had allowed him to live so that he may
contain the ‘epidemic.’ So, in a way, Eugene had not only saved an estimated
8,000 people with the ‘epidemic,’ but he had also saved himself from execution.
When the doctor heard that he was being sought by the
Gestapo, he grabbed his wife and daughter and fled the city. He moved to the
United States in 1958 and became a professor at the University of Illinois
Medical Center. Dr. Eugene Lazowski passed away in Oregon in December of 2006.
He saved 8,000 people from certain death in Nazi
concentration camps. It was his private war—a war of intellect, not weapons.
Dr. Lazowski followed in his parents’ footsteps, who helped save the lives of
Jewish people during the holocaust. His parents, later named Righteous
Gentiles, hid two Jewish families in their home. While Dr. Lazowski did not
hide families, he did help many Jews medically against German orders.
A documentary about Dr. Eugene Lazowski entitled "A
Private War" was made by a television producer Ryan Bank who followed
Lazowski back to Poland and recorded testimonies of people whose families were
saved by the fake epidemic.
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1 comment:
Is this a Hoax or what ?
Germans were so stupid ???
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