Abstract
Friedrich von Bodelschwingh (1877-1946) was a Protestant theologian
and the son of the founder of the “v. Bodelschwinghsche Anstalten
Bethel” [v. Bodelschwingh Foundation Bethel], a charitable institution
for the mentally ill in Bielefeld. In Addition to medical and social
care, the institution, which exists to this day, also offers education
and professional training to people with disabilities. He assumed the
directorship after the death of his father in 1910 and expanded the
institute to care for orphaned children. Although he professed concern
for the rising numbers of physically and mentally handicapped among the
German population, he rejected the “life unworthy of life”
[lebensunwertes Leben] arguments of
the eugenicists who advocated forced sterilization and euthanasia.
Later, in the early 1940s, Bodelschwingh made some efforts to protect
the residents of his institute from Nazi sterilization and euthanasia
policies, but he never engaged in outright resistance to the regime.