Abstract
Action T4 [Aktion T4], named after
its headquarters at Tiergartenstraße 4 in Berlin, started in September
1939. The program was tasked with identifying individuals of all ages
with various mental, physical, and “social” disabilities (alcoholism,
career criminality, homosexuality, etc.). With the help of local
physicians and nurses, the program targeted “Aryans” and non-Germans
alike. Patients selected for Action T4 were transported to a special
facility where they were murdered and cremated. Relatives of victims
were often unaware that their loved ones had been killed by medical
staff—the causes of death were often cited as appendicitis, pneumonia,
and infection.
The program was meant to be secret, but rumours quickly spread.
Public protests led to an official halt to the program on August 24,
1941, though the regime ordered the continuation of the killings in
greater secrecy only a few months later. Historians estimate that more
than 70,000 men, women, and children were murdered through Action
T4.
This registration form shows how patients were selected for the
program. The questions offer a glimpse into how the National Socialists
fused medical knowledge with their racist ideology. Categories of race
and citizenship were added alongside family medical history. Detailed
descriptions of the patient’s labor productivity were required. All of
this constituted an evaluation of a patient’s ability to be an active
and contributing member of the Volk
community.