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Freedom Rider: Medical Apartheid
Margaret Kimberley, BAR editor and senior columnist
14 Feb 2007
🖨️ Print Article

Freedom Rider: Medical Apartheid

by Margaret
Kimberley 

"There isn't a better
candidate for torture than a person who isn't really considered a person."

TuskegeeStudyDocument The name Josef Mengele is so infamous that it needs no
introduction. Mengele was the German doctor who performed medical experiments
on prisoners at Auschwitz, the Nazi death camp. An American doctor, James Marion Sims was
equally monstrous, but his name is less well known.

Sims was a doctor who routinely performed unnecessary and
sadistic surgeries on slaves in Alabama. He opened the skulls of babies and
performed gynecological surgeries on women. They were forced to endure
unimaginable treatments, all without the ether that had by then become
available as an anesthetic. Of course, being enslaved people, they had no
choice in any decisions that Sims made about their bodies or their lives.

Sims allegedly sought to treat vaginal fistulas caused by complications
of child birth. One woman underwent this treatment, without anesthesia, 30
times. He obviously didn't cure her of anything.

Because Sims' victims were black Americans their stories
remained largely untold. They were not the first or the last black Americans to
be subjected to what can only be called torture in the name of scientific
investigation. Sims is called "the father of gynecology" and eventually became
president of the American Medical Association. He has been immortalized in a
monument that still stands in New York's Central Park. 

"Sims' victims were not the
first or the last black Americans to be subjected to what can only be called
torture in the name of scientific investigation."

Of course, there has been a memorial to the Jewish Holocaust
on the Washington Mall for more than ten years. There is still no monument to
American slaves who built all of the capitol monuments. Sadistic torture can be
condemned as long as it didn't happen here.SimsStatue

A newly published book Medical
Apartheid
: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans
from Colonial Times to the Present,
is a comprehensive chronicle of
surgeries performed without anesthesia, the notorious Tuskegee experiments that
prevented 400 men from being treated for syphilis over a 40 year period, and
forced sterilizations.

Harriet
Washington
, the author of Medical Apartheid, has performed an
invaluable service. White Americans love to point fingers at Germans who won't
apologize for Hitler, or Japanese who claim that the rape of Nanking didn't
take place. There is little interest in acknowledging, much less apologizing
for atrocities that took place on American soil.

History tells us that torture and murder are considered
acceptable if the perpetrators are white and the victims aren't. The population
of American Indians was decimated
from an estimated 15 million before European occupation to 200,000 in 1890.
Simply put, they were murdered. They were shot and scalped and infected with
disease. Millions of Africans taken into slavery in Africa perished before
reaching the western hemisphere where they faced the prospect of being the
property of Dr. Sims and his ilk.

The litany of atrocities documented in Medical Apartheid shocks the soul and the senses. Yet it must be
pointed out that those atrocities are all logical results of the white
supremacy that was manifested in chattel slavery, and the terror that followed
it. There isn't a better candidate for torture than a person who isn't really
considered a person.

It is indeed valuable that some of the most racist crimes
committed in this country have finally been exposed. But it will be of little
use if this history is dismissed as vestiges of another time instead of
revealing an ideology that has never disappeared from the American
consciousness. The use of black Americans as guinea pigs didn't end with the
slavery era and wasn't confined to the South.

"It is unclear if the children died because of the
effects of HIV or from side effects of the medications they were given."

The same sickness that permitted slaves to be the subject of
cruel experiments puts foster children in the same danger. From 1988 to 2001,
465 children in New York City's foster care system were subjected to experiments
with AZT and other toxic HIV drugs.

The state acting in loco parentis, gave itself
permission to test drugs on children as young as six months of age. Fifteen
percent of the children died, but it is unclear if they died because of the
effects of HIV or from side effects of the medications they were given.

Again in New York City in the 1990s, 100 boys, all African
American or Latino who were diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder, were used to test the now banned drug
fenfluramine
. They were chosen because they all had older brothers in the
juvenile justice system. The tests were conducted to detect biological markers
for "anti-social" behavior. It is a question never posed about white people,
who are capable of being quite anti-social.

If New York at the end of the 20th century
offered the same treatment as Alabama in the 19th century, then
white supremacist ideology, and medical apartheid, are alive and well. We can
add health care to the long list of items that are ordinarily beneficial but
may not be for people of color. Take a dose of paranoia and call your lawyer in
the morning.

Margaret Kimberley's Freedom Rider column
appears weekly in BA
R. Ms. Kimberley lives in New York City,
and can be reached via e-Mail at Margaret.Kimberley(at)BlackAgandaReport.Com.
When sending email, please remember to replace the (at) with @.

Ms. Kimberley' maintains an
edifying and frequently updated blog at 
freedomrider.blogspot.com. 
More of her work is also available at her Black Agenda Report
archive page. 

TO COMMENT on this week's Freedom Rider, click here to visit the Black Agenda Blog 

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