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Large wall chart with 16 photos of races from Europe and border regions to teach racial hygiene

Object | Accession Number: 2014.325.1

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    Large wall chart with 16 photos of races from Europe and border regions to teach racial hygiene
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    Overview

    Brief Narrative
    Large wall panel lithograph featuring 16 headshots of eight racial/ethnic types from Europe and neighboring countries. Nazi racial policy makers idealized the Nordic race and considered other racial groups to be inferior. It was produced by The Race and Settlement Main Office (RuSHA) and edited by Dr. Bruno K. Schultz, a race specialist and SS and Nazi Party member, as a teaching tool for racial hygiene instruction. Nazi ideology sought to create a racially pure German nation. All those who did not belong to the Nordic race were to be excluded from the community. Thus citizens had to be educated to recognize the physical characteristics that revealed the racially undesirable.
    Artwork Title
    Rassen der Erde I: Europa und seine Grenzgebiete
    Alternate Title
    Races of the Earth I: Europe and its Borderlands
    Date
    publication/distribution:  approximately 1935
    Geography
    publication: Munich (Germany)
    Credit Line
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, The Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Acquisition Fund
    Markings
    front, top center, black ink : Rassen der Erde I / Europa und seine Grenzgebiete [Races of the Earth I / Europe and its Border areas]
    front, top row, image caption, black ink : Nördisch / (Niederdeutcher] Ausn. L.F. Clauss / Fälisch / Aus Westfalen Ausn. W. Schäfer
    front, second row, image caption, black ink : Ostisch / (Aus Ostdeutchland) Ausn. J. Cleve / Ostbaltisch / (Lette) Ausn. Pöch-Weninger
    front, third row, image caption, black ink : Mittelländisch (Westisch) / (Aus Südwestdeutschland) Ausn. / Orientalisch / (Araber) Ausn. Pöch-Weninger
    front, fourth row, image caption, black ink : Dinarisch / (Aus Oberbayern) Ausn. E. Retzlaff / Vorderasiatisch / (Armenier) Ausn. Pöch-Weninger
    front, bottom, black ink : Wandtafeln für den rassen - und vererbungskundlichen Unterrich, I. Reihe, Tafel I. J.F. Lehmanns Verlag, München I. Reihe, herausgegeben von Dr. Bruno K. Schultz, Berlin [Wall panels and scientific inheritance lessons, Series I, Panel 1 J.F. Lehmanns Publisher, Munich Series I, edited by Dr. Bruno K. Schultz, Berlin]
    Contributor
    Editor: Bruno K. Schultz
    Publisher: J. F. Lehmanns Verlag
    Distributor: Rasse--und Siedlungshauptamt-SS. Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei
    Biography
    Dr. Bruno Kurt Schultz (1901-1997) was born in Sitzenberg, Austria-Hungary (now Sitzenberg-Reidling, Austria). He earned a doctorate in physical anthropology and his work extended into the fields of heredity, ethnology, and anthropometry. He was the author of several books and many articles about anthropometry and racial hygiene. He lectured on these topics in Vienna, Austria, and in Munich and Berlin, Germany. In 1929, Dr. Schultz became a German citizen, and began working as editor at the J. F. Lehmann publishing house in Munich, which was known for producing medical literature, charts, and material about eugenics. In 1932, Dr. Schultz joined the Nazi Party. He was in the Schutzstaffel (SS), and worked in the Rasse- und Siedlungshauptamt-SS (SS Race and Settlement Main Office; RuSHA). While working there, Dr. Schultz developed the criteria that defined the physical characteristics that determined who in German society was considered “racially pure” and “Nordic.” His model was also used to determine who was eligible to join the SS based on their ancestry, the color of their hair, eyes, and skin, and other aspects deemed “racially pure.”

    Following the German invasion and occupation of other nations just before and during World War II (1939-1945), the same general model was used to analyze populations for resettlement and Germanization within those territories. In February 1942, Dr. Schultz was appointed Chief of the Race Office (RuSHa), a position he held until the end of the war in May 1945. Dr. Schultz went through what the allied powers called denazification: the effort to remove all traces of Nazi ideology, institutions, influence, and laws from Germany, as well as Nazi party members from offices or positions of responsibility. He was not prosecuted as a war criminal. In the Nuremburg Doctors’ Trial (1946), other doctors were presented as manipulated by the SS and various Nazis, and were not considered affiliated with the concentration camps or killing centers. Instead, the SS and medical personnel, such as Dr. Mengele, who were directly involved with the camps and centers, were identified as those most responsible for the atrocities.

    Physical Details

    Language
    German
    Classification
    Posters
    Category
    Nazi propaganda
    Physical Description
    Large, rectangular, mechanical lithographic wall chart printed in black ink on offwhite paper with plastic laminate backing. The title is printed in large fraktur font across the top center. Printed on the front are 16 black and white photographic reproductions, nearly one foot square, featuring headshots of 8 males of different ethnicities in front and right profile headshots, arranged in 4 horizontal rows of 4. Centered beneath the images are German captions in fraktur font stating their ethnicity and geographic region; the photgrapher's name is under the right image corner. The top and bottom edges are adhered to circular wooden dowels with flat backs to which a strip of cardboard is nailed and stapled. Attached to the center of the top dowel is a triangular, metal hanger. A publisher's label is adhered on the back lower right corner.
    Dimensions
    overall: Height: 56.625 inches (143.828 cm) | Width: 41.000 inches (104.14 cm) | Depth: 0.625 inches (1.588 cm)
    Materials
    overall : paper, plastic laminate, wood, ink, cardboard, metal, adhesive
    Inscription
    back, on label, preprinted, black ink : Wandtafeln für den rassen- und vererbungskundlichen Unterricht / Reihe 1 / Tafel 1: Rassentupen Europa und seiner Grenzgebiete / J.F. Lehmanns Verlag / München

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    No restrictions on access
    Conditions on Use
    No restrictions on use

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Provenance
    The racial science wall chart was acquired by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2014.
    Funding Note
    The acquisition of this artifact was made possible by the Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Acquisition Fund.
    Record last modified:
    2022-07-28 17:55:05
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn90092

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