WORLD / EUROPE
Nobel-related institute disavows racist past
Published: Nov 03, 2021 05:18 PM
Preparations take place at Stockholm's City Hall to convert the venue for the Nobel Prize banquets into a COVID-19 vaccination centre for a day on February 21 in the capital of Sweden, amid the novel coronavirus. Photo: VCG

Preparations take place at Stockholm's City Hall to convert the venue for the Nobel Prize banquets into a COVID-19 vaccination centre for a day on February 21 in the capital of Sweden, amid the novel coronavirus. Photo: VCG

The Swedish body housing the committee that awards the Nobel Prize in medicine on Tuesday said it will rename some buildings and a street named after racialist or pro-Nazi scientists. 

The rector of the prestigious Karolinska Institute in Stockholm said a room, a building and a street bearing the names of Anders Retzius (1796-1860) and his son Gustaf (1842-1919) would be renamed.

"They espoused values that are not in concordance with the core values that we as a university should adhere to," Ole Petter Ottersen said in an online video. 

The elder Retzius is best known for the "cephalic index," a measure of skull proportions that is a source of racist hierarchies. 

Retzius, whose racially based theories on anatomy were continued by his son, claimed people with "elongated" skulls were superior to those with "short" ones.

These theories, for which the institute houses a large collection of skulls, later fed into the "racial hygiene" promoted by the Nazis. 

The Karolinska Institute is also asking the city of Solna, near Stockholm, to rename "von Euler Street" to "Ulf von Euler Street," the 1970 Nobel Prize winner in chemistry.

This is to distinguish him from his father, Hans von Euler, a 1929 Nobel Prize winner in chemistry who was a member of a Swedish-German organization that became pro-Nazi. 

The decision, expected late Tuesday, is the result of recent debate on the historical legacy of the institute, initiated mostly by students. 

AFP