Aribert Heim

Doctor

Birthday June 28, 1914

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Bad Radkersburg, Austria-Hungary

DEATH DATE 1992-8-10, Cairo, Egypt (78 years old)

Nationality Hungary

#15867 Most Popular

1914

Aribert Ferdinand Heim (28 June 1914 – 10 August 1992), also known as Dr. Death and Butcher of Mauthausen, was an Austrian Schutzstaffel (SS) doctor.

During World War II, he served at the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp in Mauthausen, killing and torturing inmates using various methods, such as the direct injection of toxic compounds into the hearts of his victims.

After the war, Heim lived in Cairo, Egypt, under the alias of Tarek Farid Hussein after his conversion to Islam.

Heim was born on June 28, 1914, in Bad Radkersburg, Austria-Hungary, the son of a policeman and a housewife.

1940

He studied in Graz, and received his diploma in medicine from the University of Vienna in 1940.

Heim volunteered for the Waffen-SS in April 1940, rising to the rank of Hauptsturmführer (Captain).

1941

Aribert Heim worked in Mauthausen for six weeks as a doctor starting in October 1941 at the age of 27.

Prisoners at Mauthausen called Heim "Dr. Death", or the "Butcher of Mauthausen" for his cruelty.

According to witnesses, Heim worked closely with SS pharmacist Erich Wasicky.

The two performed gruesome experiments together, such as injecting various solutions into the hearts of Jewish prisoners to see which killed them the fastest.

Heim was known for performing operations without anesthesia.

For about two months (October to December 1941), Heim was stationed at the Ebensee concentration camp near Linz, Austria, where he carried out experiments on Jews and others similar to those performed at Auschwitz by Josef Mengele.

According to Holocaust survivors, Jewish prisoners were poisoned with various injections directly into the heart, including petrol, phenol, available poisons, or even water, to induce death.

Heim reportedly removed organs from living prisoners without anesthesia, killing hundreds.

A prisoner by the name of Karl Lotter also worked in the Mauthausen hospital at the time Aribert Heim was there.

Lotter testified that in 1941, he witnessed Aribert Heim butcher a prisoner who came to him with an inflamed foot.

Lotter provided more gruesome details about how Aribert butchered the 18-year-old prisoner, stating that Aribert gave him anesthetic and then proceeded to cut him open, castrate him, and take out one of his kidneys.

The prisoner died, and his head was cut off, boiled and stripped of its flesh.

Heim then allegedly used this young man's skull as a paperweight on his desk.

In a sworn statement that was given eight years after the incident Lotter stated that Heim "needed the head because of its perfect teeth".

Other survivors of the Holocaust referred to Aribert removing tattooed flesh from prisoners and using the skin to make seat coverings, which he gave to the commandant of the camp.

Marcelino Bilbao Bilbao stated that Heim drew blood from him for six weeks and later injected him with a liquid that ended up paralyzing his body.

1942

From February 1942, Heim served in the 6th SS Mountain Division Nord in northern Finland, especially in Oulu's hospitals as an SS doctor.

His service continued until at least October 1942.

1945

On 15 March 1945, Heim was captured by US soldiers and sent to a camp for prisoners of war.

He would remain imprisoned for a two-and-a-half year period.

But while Heim's former colleague, Erich Wasicky, and dozens of others were tried and executed in the Mauthausen-Gusen camp trials, Heim was never prosecuted.

1947

In December 1947, he was released and worked as a gynecologist at Baden-Baden until his disappearance in 1962; he had telephoned his home and was told that the police were waiting for him.

Having been questioned on previous occasions, he surmised the reason (an international warrant for his arrest had been in place since that date) and went into hiding.

According to his son, Rüdiger Heim, he drove through France and Spain onward to Morocco, moving finally to Egypt via Libya.

In the years following his disappearance, Heim was the target of a rapidly escalating manhunt and ever-increasing rewards for his capture.

Following his escape there were reported sightings in Latin America, Spain and Africa, as well as formal investigations aimed at bringing him to justice, some of which took place even after he had apparently died in Egypt.

The German government offered €150,000 for information leading to his arrest, while the Simon Wiesenthal Center launched Operation Last Chance, a project to assist governments in the location and arrest of suspected Nazi war criminals who are still alive.

1992

It was then reported that Heim had died there on 10 August 1992 from complications of rectal cancer, according to testimony by his son Ruediger and lawyer.

This information, though set forth by a German court, was questioned by Efraim Zuroff, a leading Nazi hunter of the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

2001

Tax records prove that, as late as 2001, Heim's lawyer asked the German authorities to refund capital gains taxes levied on him because he was living abroad.

2008

Zuroff stated that on a visit to Puerto Montt, Chile, in July 2008, Heim's daughter told him that Heim had died in 1993 in Argentina.

2009

In February 2009, after years of attempts to locate him, German television network ZDF had found Heim's passport and other documents in Cairo.

2012

In 2012, a court in Baden-Baden confirmed again that Heim had died in 1992 in Egypt, based on new evidence provided by his family and lawyer.

2013

The Wiesenthal Center continued to dispute these findings, and Heim remained on the list of most-wanted Nazi war criminals until 2013.