EFEAlejandro Giménez
Vienna The Icy Gaze exhibition exposes Nazi anthropology
Images of Jewish survivors of the Holocaust at the exhibition The Icy Gaze at the Austrian House of History in Vienna, which analyzes the collaboration of two anthropologists with the racist ideas of the Nazi regime. EFE/Maider Gamero
Anthropologist Margarit Berger, curator of The Icy Gaze exhibition in Vienna. EFE/Maider Gamero
Images of Jewish survivors of the Holocaust at the exhibition The Icy Gaze at the Austrian House of History in Vienna, which analyzes the collaboration of two anthropologists with the racist ideas of the Nazi regime. EFE/Maider Gamero
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Alejandro Giménez
Vienna, May 13 (EFE).- The work of anthropologists Maria Kahlich and Elfriede Fliethmann took an ugly turn when they started working for the Nazi regime in Poland in 1942. Sent to Tarnów to carry out “racial research” on the “typical Eastern Jews”, Kahlich and Fliethmann broke into Jewish people’s homes, forced them to undress, measured their noses and photographed them as if they were mere objects for their research.
“The Icy Gaze” photography exhibition, hosted at the House of Austrian History in Vienna, displays over 2,000 photographs of the 565 Jewish women, men and children who were photographed. Only 26 of them survived the Holocaust.
Antropología nazi: deshumanización científica antes del exterminio elcomercio.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from elcomercio.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.