Longacre Mckenna, Beinfeld Solon, Hildebrandt Sabine, Glantz Leonard, Grodin Michael A
Mckenna Longacre is a student at Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA. Leonard Glantz is with Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights, School of Public Health, Boston University, Boston, MA. Solon Beinfeld is with the Department of History, Washington University, St. Louis, MO. Sabine Hildebrandt is with Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA. Michael A. Grodin is with Health Law, Bioethics and Human Rights, School of Public Health and Medicine, Boston, and Boston University Project on Medicine and the Holocaust Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies, Boston, MA.
Am J Public Health. 2015 Feb;105(2):293-301. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2014.302312.
We describe the system of public health that evolved in the Vilna Ghetto as an illustrative example of Jewish innovation and achievement during the Holocaust. Furthermore, we argue that by cultivating a sophisticated system of public health, the ghetto inmates enacted a powerful form of Jewish resistance, directly thwarting the intention of the Nazis to eliminate the inhabitants by starvation, epidemic, and exposure. In doing so, we aim to highlight applicable lessons for the broader public health literature. We hope that this unique story may gain its rightful place in the history of public health as an insightful case study of creative and progressive solutions to universal health problems in one of the most challenging environments imaginable.
我们将维尔纳隔都中发展起来的公共卫生系统作为大屠杀期间犹太创新与成就的一个典型例子进行描述。此外,我们认为,通过建立一个完善的公共卫生系统,隔都居民实施了一种强有力的犹太抵抗形式,直接挫败了纳粹通过饥饿、流行病和暴露来消灭居民的意图。在此过程中,我们旨在为更广泛的公共卫生文献突出适用的经验教训。我们希望这个独特的故事能在公共卫生史上获得应有的地位,成为在最具挑战性的环境之一中针对普遍健康问题的创造性和进步性解决方案的深刻案例研究。