% IMPORTANT: The following is UTF-8 encoded. This means that in the presence % of non-ASCII characters, it will not work with BibTeX 0.99 or older. % Instead, you should use an up-to-date BibTeX implementation like “bibtex8” or % “biber”. @PHDTHESIS{Ohnhuser:1000477, author = {Ohnhäuser, Tim}, othercontributors = {Groß, Dominik and Möckel, Benjamin}, title = {{V}erfolgungssuizide – {D}ie {S}elbsttötungen im {K}ontext der nationalsozialistischen {D}eportationen und das {L}ebensende von {A}rthur {N}icolaier (1862-1942)}, school = {Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen}, type = {Dissertation}, address = {Aachen}, publisher = {RWTH Aachen University}, reportid = {RWTH-2025-00388}, pages = {1 Online-Ressource : Illustrationen}, year = {2024}, note = {Veröffentlicht auf dem Publikationsserver der RWTH Aachen University 2025; Dissertation, Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen, 2024}, abstract = {Background --- This study examines the suicides of Jewish individuals persecuted during the National Socialist regime, with a focus on the period of nationwide deportations beginning in the fall of 1941. A general analysis of this phenomenon is complemented by an in-depth examination of a specific case: Arthur Nicolaier (1862–1942), the discoverer of the tetanus pathogen, who was persecuted as a Jewish physician and ultimately slated for deportation to Theresienstadt. In August 1942, Nicolaier took his own life to avoid deportation. By adopting this approach, the study bridges statistical reconstruction and individual life stories, illuminating the diverse dimensions of suicide among victims of National Socialist persecution. Persecution suicides in Germany between 1933 and 1945 are presented as a distinct historical phenomenon. The work employs both a chronological division based on predominant threats and an analysis of specific contexts in which suicides occurred. The context examined in detail is defined by the deportations and the role of suicide as an option for escape and defiance. As deportations began, persecuted individuals were left with two means of escaping the totalitarian claims of the Nazi regime over their lives: fleeing underground or fleeing into death. The study addresses contemporary perceptions of this issue as well as its prevalence: How closely were these acts linked to specific deportation dates, and how did individuals prepare for the possibility of escaping through suicide? The analysis of motives and circumstances is based on memoir literature, contemporary documents, letters, and diary entries. For systematic analysis of case numbers, which offer insights into dynamics and other aspects, statistics from the period were evaluated. Special attention is given to Berlin, drawing on local police statistics, burial records from the Weißensee Jewish Cemetery, and records from the Jewish Hospital of Berlin. To provide a deeper understanding of the events, the medical profession is examined in detail. Physicians were uniquely involved in the subject of persecution suicides: offering confidential advice, procuring means in advance, treating failed suicide attempts, or certifying death. Finally, the study addresses the question of how persecution suicides can be situated within the existing research on escape and resistance, with a particular focus on the support networks surrounding Arthur Nicolaier’s final efforts to secure his survival. Results --- The frequency of suicides was closely tied to waves of deportation, as shown by reconstructed, sometimes day-specific, dynamics. In 1942, referred to as the “year of hell”, suicides peaked. In August 1942, when Arthur Nicolaier was slated for deportation, $59\%$ of all suicides in Berlin were committed by persecuted Jews (who constituted approximately $1\%$ of the population). Those unwilling to comply with deportation orders faced a stark choice: flee underground or take their own lives. Both options required similar preparation and external assistance. Aggregating cases of evasion, suicides, and suicide attempts reveals an evasion rate of $12–15\%,$ underscoring the scale of defiance more comprehensively than fragmented perspectives have previously allowed. For many persecuted individuals, the possession of sleeping aids such as Veronal offered a final sense of reassurance, representing a means of maintaining autonomy. This choice of method stood out from other suicides in Berlin, emphasizing the unique nature of persecution suicides during this period. Although suicides did not fundamentally disrupt the deportation process, they posed significant complications for the planned confiscation of property. Alternative legal constructs and regulations had to be developed to maintain the semblance of legality in expropriation. As demonstrated, individuals who escaped through suicide became posthumously labeled as "disturbers of expropriation". Physicians played a crucial role during the deportation period by providing persecuted individuals with medical certificates or even staging sham surgeries to delay deportations. Simultaneously, their actions were monitored, and those who failed to report suicide attempts were punished. The Nazi authorities, for their part, sought to prevent suicides to ensure the smooth execution of deportations. Physicians faced daily ethical dilemmas, balancing acute life-saving measures against the prevention of further suffering. Arthur Nicolaier made extensive preparations for his suicide, particularly to protect his assets from confiscation by the Nazi state. This is evident from numerous documents, especially letters to his relative Carola Ebstein (1891–1973) in Leipzig. However, at the age of 80, Nicolaier would not have taken his own life without the immense persecution he faced. His final hopes for avoiding deportation rested on support from the Schering company and Wolfgang Heubner (1877–1957), professor for pharmacology in Berlin. As the study shows, extensive support networks and connections existed between these two actors, who frequently provided assistance to those in need. Conclusion --- This study demonstrates that persecution suicides were often more than mere acts of desperation: they were deliberate decisions, comparable to other escape options such as going underground. Despite the suffering and despair, these acts could carry elements of agency and self-determination. The study therefore advocates for a more integrated treatment of suicide and clandestine escape in historiographical research, as both forms of defiance and evasion constitute essential elements of resistance and self-assertion. The final years of Arthur Nicolaier's life highlight the importance of examining individual cases: how actions were shaped by hope and despair, and how persecuted individuals remained active agents until the very end.}, cin = {524000-2 ; 921910 / 700000}, ddc = {900}, cid = {$I:(DE-82)524000-2_20140620$ / $I:(DE-82)700000_20140620$}, typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)11}, doi = {10.18154/RWTH-2025-00388}, url = {https://publications.rwth-aachen.de/record/1000477}, }