SAO PAULO – For more than 30 years, the bones of Josef Mengele, a German doctor who conducted horrific experiments on thousands of Jews at Auschwitz, lay unclaimed inside a blue plastic bag in Sao Paulo's Legal Medical Institute.
Dr. Daniel Romero Munoz, who led the team that identified Mengele's remains in 1985, saw an opportunity to put them to use. Several months ago, the head of the Department of Legal Medicine at the University of Sao Paulo's Medical School obtained permission to use them in his forensic medical courses. Today, his students are now learning their trade studying Mengele's bones and connecting them to the life story of the man called the "Angel of Death."
"The bones will be helpful to teach how to examine the remains of an individual and then match that information with data in documents related to the person," Munoz said recently, flanked by students.
Mengele died nearly four decades ago when he drowned off the coast of the state of Sao Paulo. He had been on the run for years, hiding while being pursued for performing experiments on inmates and sending thousands of them to the gas chambers during World War II.
Mengele's life on the run, and the mystery surrounding his whereabouts, are part of what make his bones a useful teaching tool, Munoz said.
"For example, examining Mengele's remains, we saw a fractured left pelvis," he said, adding that "information found in his army record said that he fractured his pelvis in a motorcycle accident in Auschwitz," the notorious Nazi death camp in Poland.
Holding Mengele's skull, Munoz pointed to a small hole in the left cheek bone, which he said was the result of long-term sinusitis.
Munoz said that a German couple who harbored Mengele in Brazil told police that he often suffered from dental abscesses that he himself would treat with a razor blade.
"I don't know what I feel" about Mengele's bones being studied, said Cyrla Gewertz, a 92-year-old Holocaust survivor. "I already have too many painful memories of him and what he did to me and others at Auschwitz. These are memories I cannot erase from my mind."
After the war, Gewertz, who said she was also interned in other concentration camps like Ravensbruck and Malchow, went to Sweden, where she lived for seven years and where she met and married her husband with whom she came to Brazil in 1952.
Originally from Poland, Gewertz has a tattoo on her left arm identifying her as an Auschwitz prisoner: A24840. She said she came face to face with Mengele on several occasions.
"(Mengele) told me to strip and step inside a large vat with extremely hot water," said Gerwertz during an interview in her Sao Paulo apartment. "I said the water was too hot and he said if I didn't do what he ordered, he would kill me. After that I had to step into a vat with freezing water."
Gewertz said she once saw Mengele kill a newborn baby girl by throwing her off the roof of the camp's barracks.
"He was an evil, perverse man," she said "He was a torturer."
After the war, as leading members of Adolf Hitler's Third Reich were put on trial for war crimes, Mengele fled to Argentina and lived in Buenos Aires for a decade.
He moved to Paraguay after Israeli Mossad agents captured Holocaust mastermind Adolf Eichmann, who was also living in Buenos Aires. In 1960, he arrived in Sao Paulo, where he received shelter from German couple Wolfram and Lisolette Bossert and a family of Hungarian immigrants.
Mengele died in 1979 while swimming in a beach in the coastal town of Bertioga. The Bosserts buried him in Embu on the outskirts of Sao Paulo under the false name of Wolfgang Gerhard. Years later, German authorities intercepted a letter sent by the couple to Mengele's family with news of his death. They alerted Brazilian authorities.
In 1985, his body was exhumed. Teams from Germany, Israel, the United States and Brazil confirmed it was Mengele, using methods including the vetting of personal accounts from people who knew him in Brazil, comparing handwriting in seized letters and analyzing the recovered cranium to see if it matched old photos of Mengele.
Professor Maria Luiza Tucci Carneiro, a historian who coordinates the University of Sao Paulo's Laboratory for the Study of Ethnicity, Racism and Discrimination, said she hopes the classroom learning eventually goes beyond the science to history and ethics.
Students should also learn "how physicians, psychiatrists and other leading scientists were in the service of the Reich, lending their knowledge to exclude the ethnic groups classified as belonging to inferior races," said Carneiro. "An exclusion that culminated in genocide."