|
|
Gunther von Hagens—A modern Leonardo da Vinci
Gunther von Hagens' life reads like an archetypal scientist's
resume — distinguished by early precocity, scholarship, discovery,
experimentation, and invention. It is also the profile of a man shaped by
extraordinary events, and marked by defiance and daring.
Von Hagens' two-year imprisonment by East German authorities for
political reasons, his release after a $20,000 payment by the West German
government, his pioneering invention that halts decomposition of the body
after death and preserves it for didactic eternity, his collaboration with
donors including his best friend, who willed and entrusted their bodies to him
for dissection and public display, and his role as a teacher carrying on the
tradition of Renaissance anatomists, make his a remarkable life in
science.
Anatomist, inventor of plastination, and creator of BODY
WORLDS 3: The Original Exhibition of Real Human Bodies, von
Hagens (christened Gunther Gerhard Liebchen) was born in 1945, in
Alt-Skalden, Posen, Poland — then part of Germany. To escape
the imminent and eventual Russian occupation of their homeland,
his parents placed the five-day-old infant in a laundry basket and
began a six-month trek west by horse wagon. The family lived
briefly in Berlin and its vicinity, before finally settling in
Greiz, a small town where von Hagens remained until the age of
19.
As a child, he was diagnosed with a rare bleeding disorder that restricted
his activities and required long bouts of hospitalization that he says
fostered in him a sense of alienation and nonconformity. At age 6, von Hagens
nearly died and was in intensive care for many months. His daily encounters
there with doctors and nurses left an indelible impression on him and ignited
in him a desire to become a physician. He also showed an interest in science
from an early age, reportedly "freaking out" at the age of twelve
during the Russian launch of Sputnik into space. "I was the school
authority and archivist on Sputnik," he said.
In 1965, von Hagens entered medical school at the University of Jena, south
of Leipzig, and the birthplace of writers Schiller and Goethe. His unorthodox
methods and flamboyant personality were remarkable enough to be noted on
academic reports from the university. "Gunther Liebchen is a personality
who does not approach tasks systematically. This characteristic and his
imaginativeness, that sometimes let him forget about reality, occasionally led
to the development of very willful and unusual ways of working — but
never in a manner that would have harmed the collective of his seminary group.
On the contrary, his ways often encouraged his fellow students to critically
review their own work."
While at the university, von Hagens began to question Communism and
Socialism, and widened his knowledge of politics by gathering information from
Western news sources. He later participated in student protests against the
invasion of Czechoslovakia by Warsaw Pact troops. In January, 1969, in the
guise of a vacationing student, von Hagens made his way across Bulgaria and
Hungary, and on January 7th, attempted to cross the Czechoslovakian border
into Austria and freedom. He failed, but made a second attempt the very next
day, at another location along the border. This time the authorities detained
him. "While I was in detention, a sympathetic guard left a window open
for me so that I could escape. I hesitated and couldn't make up my mind,
and that decision cost me a great deal," he says. Gunther von Hagens was
arrested, extradited to East Germany, and imprisoned for two years. Only 23
years old at the time, the iconoclastic von Hagens was viewed as a threat to
the socialist way of life, and therefore in need of rehabilitation and
citizenship education. According to the prison records for Gunther Liebchen,
"The prisoner is to be trained to develop an appropriate class
consciousness so that in his future life, he will follow the standards and
regulations of our society. The prisoner is to be made aware of the
dangerousness of his way of behaving, and in doing so, the prisoner's
conclusions of his future behavior as a citizen of the social state need to be
established."
Thirty-six years after his incarceration, Gunther von Hagens finds meaning
and even redemption in his lost years. "The deep friendships I formed
there with other prisoners, and the terrible aspects of captivity that I was
forced to overcome through my fantasy life, helped shape my sense of
solidarity with others, my reliance on my own mind and body when denied
freedom, and my capacity for endurance. All that I learned in prison helped me
later in my life as a scientist."
In 1970, after West Germany's purchase of his freedom, von Hagens
enrolled at the University of Lubeck to complete his medical studies. Upon
graduation in 1973, he took up residency at a hospital on Heligoland-a duty
free island where the access to cheap liquor resulted in a substantial
population of alcoholics. A year later, after obtaining his medical degree, he
joined the Department of Anesthesiology and Emergency Medicine at Heidelberg
University, where he came to a realization that his pensive mind was
unsuitable for the tedious routines demanded of an anesthesiologist. In June
1975, he married Dr. Cornelia von Hagens, a former classmate, and adopted her
last name. The couple had three children, Rurik, Bera, and Tona.
In 1975, while serving as a resident and lecturer — the start of an
18-year career at the university's Institute of Pathology and Anatomy
— von Hagens invented plastination, his groundbreaking technology for
preserving anatomical specimens with the use of reactive polymers. "I was
looking at a collection of specimens embedded in plastic. It was the most
advanced preservation technique then, where the specimens rested deep inside a
transparent plastic block. I wondered why the plastic was poured and then
cured around the specimens rather than pushed into the cells, which would
stabilize the specimens from within and literally allow you to grasp
it."
He patented the method and over the next six years, von Hagens spent all
his energies refining his invention. In plastination, the first step is to
halt decomposition. "The deceased body is embalmed with a formalin
injection to the arteries, while smaller specimens are immersed in formalin.
After dissection, all bodily fluids and soluble fat in the specimens are then
extracted and replaced through vacuum-forced impregnation with reactive resins
and elastomers such as silicon rubber and epoxy," he says. After posing
of the specimens for optimal teaching value, they are cured with light, heat,
or certain gases. The resulting specimens or plastinates assume rigidity and
permanence. “I am still developing my invention further, even today, as
it is not yet perfect,” he says.
During this time, von Hagens started his own company, BIODUR Products, to
distribute the special polymers, equipment, and technology used for
plastination to medical institutions around the globe. Currently, more than
400 institutions in 40 countries worldwide use Gunther von Hagens'
invention to preserve anatomical specimens for medical instruction. In 1983,
Catholic Church figures asked Dr. von Hagens to plastinate the heel bone of
St. Hildegard of Bingen, (1090-1179), a beatified mystic, theologian, and
writer revered in Germany. His later offer to perform plastination on Pope
John Paul II foundered before serious discussions.
In 1992, von Hagens married Dr. Angelina Whalley, a physician who serves as
his business manager as well as the designer of the BODY WORLDS exhibitions. A
year later, Dr. von Hagens founded the Heidelberg-based Institute for
Plastination, which offers plastinated specimens for educational use and for
BODY WORLDS, which premiered in Japan in 1995. To date, the exhibitions have
been viewed by more than 25 million people, in cities countries across Europe,
Asia, and North America. His continued efforts to present the exhibitions,
even in the face of opposition and often blistering attacks are, he says, the
burden he must bear as a public anatomist and teacher. "The anatomist
alone is assigned a specific role — he is forced in his daily work to
reject the taboos and convictions that people have about death and the dead. I
myself am not controversial, but my exhibitions are, because I am asking
viewers to transcend their fundamental beliefs and convictions about our joint
and inescapable fate."
Apparently determined to exhaust the limits of living in freedom, Dr. von
Hagens has made a concerted effort to travel and propagate his interests
around the globe. He accepted a visiting professorship at Dalian Medical
University in China in 1996, and became director of the plastination research
center at the State Medical Academy in Bishkek/Kyrgyzstan. In 2001, he founded
a private company, the Von Hagens Dalian Plastination Ltd., in Dalian, China,
which currently employs a staff of 250. In 2004, Dr. von Hagens began a
visiting professorship at the New York University College of Dentistry. He is
currently in the process of designing the first anatomy curriculum in the
United States that will use plastinated specimens in lieu of dissection.
Gunther von Hagens' BODY WORLDS exhibitions are currently showing in
North America. "The human body is the last remaining nature in a man made
environment," he says. "I hope for the exhibitions to be places of
enlightenment and contemplation, even of philosophical and religious self
recognition, and open to interpretation regardless of the background and
philosophy of life of the viewer."
Visit Gunther von
Hagens’ Plastinarium in Germany or the BODY WORLDS website for more information.
|