Darwin’s bodysnatchers: new horrors

People deliberately killed to provide ‘specimens’ for evolutionary research

by Carl Wieland, M.B., B.S.

Amalie Dietrich

Amalie Dietrich

A gruesome trade in ‘missing link’ specimens began with early evolutionary/racist ideas. But this trade really ‘took off’ with the advent of Darwinism.

In a previous Creation magazine we related evidence that perhaps 10,000 dead bodies of Australia’s Aboriginal people were shipped to British museums in a frenzied attempt to prove the widespread belief that they were the ‘missing link’.1 Now a major item in a leading Australian weekly, The Bulletin, reveals shocking new facts.2 Some of the points covered in the article, written by Australian journalist David Monaghan, include:

Angel of Black Death

Such separation policies continued until the 1960s.

Men of one blood

And where was the church in all this? It was much more influential back then, but it had already begun to be white-anted by the ‘new thinking’ about origins and was not prepared to take a stand on creation issues. However, the Apostle Paul’s ringing declaration, backed up by the facts of human history revealed in Genesis, was that God had ‘made all men of one blood’ (Acts 17:26). This is now reinforced by modern biology as well. See also The Fallacy of Racism.

The issue of these pilfered remains is becoming politically sensitive. There is now much pressure from Aboriginal leaders and others for the remains to be returned.

Aboriginal rage at this desecration of their ancestors would also be appropriately directed at the antibiblical thought patterns of evolution responsible for this outrage.

This phenomenon, of mild-mannered museum officials, respected scientists and mayors, for example, casually going about their daily respectable lives, while they were involved in monstrous acts justified by a scientific doctrine, was unparalleled in history to that point.

A similar horror reappeared in the 1930s, when the blatantly evolutionary doctrines of Nazism allowed the consciences of hundreds of doctors, scientists, psychiatrists and other officials to be seared as they set up the machinery to help nature eliminate the unfit. First, the genetically ‘inferior’—the mentally and physically disabled. Next were gypsies, Jews and others. The rest of the story is well known.

Today, evolutionary thinking enables ordinary, respectable professionals, otherwise dedicated to the saving of life, to justify their involvement in the slaughter of millions of unborn human beings, who, like the Aborigines of earlier Darwinian thinking, are also deemed ‘not yet fully human’.

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Further reading

References

  1. ‘Darwin’s Bodysnatchers’, Creation 12(3):21, June-August 1990. Return to text.
  2. David Monaghan, ‘The body-snatchers’, The Bulletin, November 12. 1991, pp. 30–38. (The article states that journalist Monaghan spent 18 months researching this subject in London, culminating in a television documentary called Darwin’s Body-Snatchers, which was aired in Britain on October 8, 1990.) Return to text.
  3. Monaghan, p. 33. Return to text.
  4. According to the records of the Bowen Shire Council. Return to text.
  5. Same as ref. 3. In The Bulletin article, Monaghan quotes two long paragraphs from Korah Wills’ five-page manuscript. Return to text.
  6. Monaghan, p. 34. Monaghan identifies the student as W.S. Day. Return to text.
  7. Monaghan, p. 33. Monaghan is here quoting Dr Rae Sumner, a lecturer at the Queensland Institute of Technology’s School of Language and Literacy Education. Return to text.
  8. Monaghan, p. 34. Monaghan identifies the missionary as Lancelot Threlkeld. Return to text.
  9. Monaghan, p. 38. Return to text.
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