One night alone, he killed fourteen children by injecting poison into them and then examined their internal organs. Mengele did not have feelings, he would shoot prisoners for no reason, strike them with iron bars, and even burn babies alive. According to a biography about Josef Mengle, “Mengele also performed experiments on prisoners using electricity, radiation, and other methods. He did not show any remorse for performing these ghastly and inhuman actions. According to Mengele's son, Rolf, even years later, Mengele never expressed any feelings of shame or regret.” (Josef Mengele) This explains that Mengele’s main objective was to destroy the Jewish race, while getting pointless outcomes from his cruel, unexplainable experiments. Although he was a very terrible human being, he still had a life after the war ended. He later became depressed but continued his barbaric experiments. Then he was captured by U.S. forces in Bavaria but escaped by getting someone else’s release papers. In 1979, he died while swimming in the Atlantic Ocean. As a result, Dr. Josef Mengele’s legacy serves as a moving reminder of the devastating consequences of unchecked science
One night alone, he killed fourteen children by injecting poison into them and then examined their internal organs. Mengele did not have feelings, he would shoot prisoners for no reason, strike them with iron bars, and even burn babies alive. According to a biography about Josef Mengle, “Mengele also performed experiments on prisoners using electricity, radiation, and other methods. He did not show any remorse for performing these ghastly and inhuman actions. According to Mengele's son, Rolf, even years later, Mengele never expressed any feelings of shame or regret.” (Josef Mengele) This explains that Mengele’s main objective was to destroy the Jewish race, while getting pointless outcomes from his cruel, unexplainable experiments. Although he was a very terrible human being, he still had a life after the war ended. He later became depressed but continued his barbaric experiments. Then he was captured by U.S. forces in Bavaria but escaped by getting someone else’s release papers. In 1979, he died while swimming in the Atlantic Ocean. As a result, Dr. Josef Mengele’s legacy serves as a moving reminder of the devastating consequences of unchecked science