He Hung 20 Children on Hooks and Called Them “Guinea Pigs” – Execution of a Nazi Doctor at Auschwitz

The dawn of April 21st, 1945. Amidst the ashes of a dying Third Reich, Dr. Alfred Trzebinski indifferently lit a fire to burn a pile of children’s clothes and toys. To him, it was merely the final step in cleaning up an experimental error. But to history, it was an act of erasing the remnants of a horrific crime that had unfolded just hours earlier in the dark basement of Bullenhuser Damm.
Few could have imagined that the man calmly watching those toys turn to ash was, only a few years prior, still hailed by his patients as a benefactor of humanity. Trzebinski’s process of depravity did not begin with bullets, but with a cold betrayal of medical ethics under the guise of racial hygiene.
From the gas chambers at Auschwitz to his position as chief physician at Majdanek, Trzebinski systematically discarded the Hippocratic oath in exchange for the death’s head insignia of the SS. But the pinnacle of loathing lies in the final lie he told to 20 Jewish children on that fateful night. While the hanging hooks already waited on the heating pipes, Trzebinski smiled, holding a syringe and promising the children a vaccine that would help them go home to see their mothers soon.
He personally injected morphine to send the children into a deep sleep, then stood by as his accomplices tightened nooses around tiny throats still breathing steadily in a delirium. So, who was this killer? An intellectual infected by dogma or a demon in the guise of a healer? And why, even when standing before the gallows, could he utter a biblical verse that outraged the entire world? We will not just retell a historical story.
We will dissect the psychology of a butcher, Alfred Trzebinski. Portrait of a benefactor and the seeds of a demon, Alfred Trzebinski. The dark dossier of Alfred Albrecht Josef Trzebinski opens on August 29th, 1902, in Jutrosin, a land in present-day Poland that was then trembling under the rule of the German Empire. He was born into a poor aristocratic family [music] where German identity was worshipped like an extremist religion, and ancestral pride was stifled by poverty.
This was the fertile ground where extremist ideologies would later take root. In 1928, Trzebinski successfully defended his medical doctoral thesis on a deeply humanitarian topic, facial paralysis caused by syphilis. Remember this detail. A man who would later indifferently watch thousands of faces deformed from toxic gas began his career by researching how to salvage the smallest nerves on the human face.
The irony of fate began with his very own stethoscope. After graduation, Trzebinski chose Mühlberg, an ancient town by the Elbe River, to begin his journey of salvation. Throughout the pre-war years, the image of a dedicated young doctor who spared no effort at night to knock on the doors of the poor transformed him into a monument of morality.
The people of Mühlberg honored him as a benefactor of humanity. But behind that pristine white lab coat, Trzebinski was silently preparing for a horrific spiritual coup. In 1932, he officially shed his physician’s coat to don the black uniform of the SS. There is a chilling coincidence recorded by history.
On the exact day of January 30th, 1933, as Adolf Hitler ascended to the highest seat of power as Chancellor, Trzebinski also celebrated his wedding to Käthe, a fanatic member of the National Socialist Women’s League. He turned the happiest day of his life into a blood oath with the darkness. The process of Trzebinski joining the meat grinder took place at a dizzying speed.
In February 1933, he officially joined the ranks of the Nazi Party. And by 1935, he enlisted in the National Socialist German Doctors League. From this moment on, medical ethics completely knelt before dogma. Trzebinski no longer spent time researching cures for facial paralysis. He began learning how to purify faces considered racial waste by the regime.
The once kind doctor was now ready to become a cold [music] link in the largest genocidal project in human history. Gas chambers and the deadly finger point. In September 1939, as the tracks of German tanks crushed the Polish border, Alfred Trzebinski did not go to the front to heal wounded soldiers. A chronic kidney stone condition kept the doctor in the rear, but that was not a release.
It was a ticket into the heart of the genocidal machine. In the spring of 1941, Trzebinski set foot in Auschwitz. Here, the boundary between a healer and a butcher was officially obliterated. The medical stethoscope around his neck was no longer used to seek the rhythm of life, but became a tool for quantifying death. Trzebinski stood there to record precisely every second the chemicals gnawed away at human lungs.
In July 1941, at Sonnenstein Castle, Trzebinski stood by indifferently, watching 575 Polish prisoners deprived of their breath in the chemical steam rooms of the T4 program. But his brutality only truly reached maturity in September of that same year. Standing beside the most bloodthirsty minds like Grabner, Trzebinski directly supervised the first Zyklon B gas trial on 850 Soviet [music] prisoners of war and exhausted Poles.
Under the professional certification of a doctor, a pesticide originally used to kill cockroaches in granaries was officially upgraded into a weapon of mass racial destruction. He did not merely observe an execution. He was standardizing a medical protocol for death. In October 1941, Trzebinski moved to Majdanek and quickly seized the position of chief physician.
His power was now concentrated in a gentle point of a finger during the selections. Prisoners suffering from typhus, instead of receiving treatment, received a ticket to the gas chambers under the guise of maintaining camp hygiene. Trzebinski’s indifference was [music] halted by a taste of his own medicine. In late 1942, he himself contracted typhus and thrombosis.
The dark mockery lay in the fact that the man who had just sent thousands of sick people to mass [music] graves was now being saved by his most elite colleagues at Radebeul Hospital. Trzebinski recovered in August 1943, carrying the breath he had just borrowed from medicine to advance toward Neuengamme, where he would carry out the most cruel massacre in the history of world medicine.
The lazy pig and the shackled angels. In August 1943, Alfred Trzebinski assumed the position of chief physician at Neuengamme, a living hell located right at the gateway to Hamburg. Out of more than 100,000 people driven through the camp gates, nearly 50,000 souls vanished forever into the crematoriums. Here, Trzebinski completely discarded his former mask of artificial diligence.
He was contemptuously nicknamed the lazy pig by prisoners due to his morbid indifference toward the suffering of patients. While thousands of prisoners died a slow death for lack of a basic aspirin, Trzebinski devoted his entire meticulousness to signing orders for the destruction of surplus medical supplies, intentionally driving patients toward death to carry out a policy of silent purification.
Trzebinski’s moral laziness was the fertile ground for the most sinister project in medical history to erupt in late 1944. He directly assisted Dr. Kurt Heissmeyer in converting Hut 4 into a laboratory for tuberculosis on living bodies. To serve his insane doctrine, Heissmeyer required pure specimens.
In November 1944, 20 Jewish children, 10 boys and 10 girls, aged 5 to 12, were plucked from the slaughterhouses of Auschwitz to be transferred to Neuengamme. These children were lured onto the train with a sweet promise from Josef Mengele. “Follow me, and you will see your parents again.” But instead of a warm embrace, what awaited them were syringes filled with live tuberculosis bacteria.
Under Trzebinski’s direct supervision, medicine officially became a tool of direct torture. The experimental process was carried out through specific brutal actions. Doctors cut long gashes on the chests and backs of the children, then rubbed thick sputum [music] containing tuberculosis bacteria into the open wounds.
When the small bodies of the children developed fevers, began coughing up blood, and the lymph nodes under their armpits swelled like eggs, Trzebinski ordered them surgically removed. Each child had to endure this lymph node scraping surgery twice while fully conscious, >> [music] >> with no anesthesia whatsoever, solely so that Heissmeyer could take research photographs of the devastation of the disease on the bodies of Jewish guinea pigs.
Trzebinski did nothing to stop it. On the contrary, he provided all the medical equipment and personnel for Heissmeyer to complete his reports. To him, the heart-wrenching screams of 5-year-old children on the operating table were merely background noise in the laboratory. Their ideology reached a pinnacle of inhumanity >> [music] >> when Heissmeyer bluntly declared, “There is no difference between a Jew and a guinea pig.
” At Neuengamme, the line between a doctor of medicine and a serial killer was officially erased by bloody surgical knives on the bodies of children. Alfred Trzebinski and the final lie in the basement. On the night of April 20th, 1945, when Allied troops were only a few hours march from Hamburg, an urgent telegram from Oswald Pohl, the SS administrative chief in Berlin, triggered the most brutal evidence destruction machine.
The order was brief, “Liquidate everyone connected to the Heißmeyer experiments.” The targets being hunted were not deserters, but 20 Jewish children and their caregivers. Alfred Trzebinski, in his capacity as chief physician, took on the role of the shadow escort. At midnight, he herded the children into an old mail truck heading straight for the Bullenhuser Damm school, which had been prepared to become a silent slaughterhouse.
The moment he stepped into the dark basement of the school, Trzebinski was faced with a horrific scene. SS soldiers were hanging Soviet prisoners directly from the heating pipes running along the ceiling. The moans and the spectre of death caused the children aged 5 to 12 to fall into chaos and scream in terror.
To control the situation, Trzebinski unleashed a final cruel psychological blow under the name of medicine. He smiled, using the gentle tone of a family doctor to reassure them that this was merely a necessary vaccination against typhus so they would be healthy enough to see their parents again. Trzebinski turned his final life-saving skill into a tool of deception, using the innocent trust of small children to lead them to the gallows without needing a single bullet.
Trzebinski personally held the syringe, but inside were not vaccines, but high concentration doses of morphine. He indifferently plunged the needle into small arms already ravaged by previous tuberculosis experiments, pumping the drug until the 20 children fell into a deep sleep in a delirium. When the children were no longer capable of defending themselves, Trzebinski and Johann Frahm began the execution process.
Johann Frahm carried a fast-asleep 12-year-old boy to the hooks fixed on the wall and uttered the demonic words, “Now I’m putting you to sleep.” Trzebinski stood there, not to save them, but to provide medical supervision for each final breath choked by the rope. Exactly at 5:00 a.m. on April 21st, before the first rays of sun could pierce the Hamburg mist, Trzebinski returned to the basement to perform the final step of a professional cleanup procedure.
He coldly confirmed that all 20 small bodies had stopped beating, then ordered all their clothes, dolls, and old toys to be gathered into a large pile. Trzebinski lit the fire to burn these mementos, believing that the ashes of dolls could completely erase the existence of 20 souls [music] from the annals of his crimes.
The entire scene was wiped clean of evidence just hours before British troops entered the city, leaving a horrific void in the human conscience. Justice and the ironic biblical words, After Germany surrendered, Alfred Trzebinski stripped off his SS uniform and hid in the shadows with his wife and children, hoping his bloody past would be buried by the ashes of Bullenhuser Damm.
But the net of justice is vast and inescapable, and on February 2nd, 1946, justice came knocking. He was arrested and brought before the British military court in Hamburg in March of that year. Here, the true face of the former kind doctor was exposed through statements so ruthless they stunned the entire jury.
When asked about the deaths of the 20 children, Trzebinski showed no remorse and nonchalantly declared, “You cannot execute children. You can only murder them. But they were only Jews.” To him, children were not victims. Race was the only measure for the right to live. The defense of only following orders could not save the butcher.
On May 3rd, 1946, the death sentence was pronounced. On the morning of October 8th, 1946, at the age of 44, Trzebinski stepped onto the gallows of the legendary executioner Albert Pierrepoint. An extreme paradox occurred just before the rope tightened as Trzebinski uttered the final words of Jesus on the cross, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.
” The man who had just murdered 20 children with morphine injections saw himself as a saintly victim showing tolerance toward his own executioners. Justice was served, but the psychological aftershocks of a corrupted medical intellectual continue to haunt world medical history to this day. Looking back at the entire file of Alfred Trzebinski, we see a brutal lesson about the fragility of humanity.
Evil does not always appear with a demonic face. Sometimes it wears the mask of a talented doctor, an elite intellectual poisoned by extremist ideologies. Trzebinski’s corruption warns us that when knowledge is detached from morality and when science is used to serve discriminatory dogmas, it becomes the most brutal weapon of destruction.
Today’s younger generation needs to understand that human progress is not measured by technology or clinical research, but by compassion and the courage to say no to inhuman orders. We study the shadows of the past not for resentment, but to build a sustainable system of peaceful values where no child must ever become a guinea pig for any ideology.
Keep your heart warm to empathize, but keep your head cool enough to recognize the seduction of evil hiding under noble titles. In today’s modern world, are we perhaps unintentionally allowing racial prejudices or budding ideologies of hatred to erode our compassion as they once did to Trzebinski? Please subscribe and share to join us in spreading these historical lessons so that the darkness of Bullenhuser Damm never repeats itself again.