When, scarcely five years after its advent, the movement of aid societies for the relief of soldiers wounded in battle in international wars, set out to examine what should their activities be in peacetime, many debates were opened up as to the feasibility of broadening their field of action to other warlike settings and disasters. The following is an examination of how these debates developed, providing evidence that (a) the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) defended its position not to incorporate civil aims into the humanitarian purposes of the Red Cross international movement until after the First World War; and (b) different national societies and committees of the Red Cross, disagreeing with this position, defended, within the framework of emergent paradigms in hygiene and public health, the care of the sick poor, and were involved as early as the 1870s and 1880s in first-aid to the sick and wounded in everyday life as well as in relief of disasters both natural and caused by famine.
Cuando, apenas cinco años después de su puesta en marcha, el movimiento de sociedades de socorro a los soldados heridos en campaña en caso de guerras internacionales se propuso examinar en qué deberían consistir sus actividades en tiempo de paz, se abrieron los debates sobre la posibilidad de ampliar su campo de actuación a otros escenarios y calamidades. Se analiza cómo fueron esos debates, ofreciendo muestras de cómo (a) el Comité Internacional de la Cruz Roja (CICR) defendió no añadir objetivos civiles entre los propósitos humanitarios del movimiento internacional hasta después de la Primera Guerra Mundial; y (b) diferentes sociedades nacionales y comités de la Cruz Roja, discrepando de esa posición, defendieron, en el marco de los paradigmas emergentes en la higiene y la salud pública, la asistencia a pobres enfermos y se implicaron, tan pronto como en las décadas de 1870 y 1880, tanto en la intervención rutinaria en socorro de enfermos y heridos en la vida diaria, como en la atención a catástrofes naturales y producidas por el hombre.
It was not until after the First World War that the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) agreed to extend its original relief activities –aid to wounded soldiers in international wars– to other causes, related to violent conflict or even beyond them. However, early on, national Red Cross societies had undertaken humanitarian aid in other types of conflict such as insurrections, or civil and colonial wars. Furthermore, despite Hutchinson’s claims (Hutchinson,
This article focuses on the earliest debates in the international Red Cross movement about these new areas of intervention in peacetime. The new proposals put forward by its national societies as well as the ICRC’s reactions will be analysed, with particular attention to the rationale and meaning of their conflicting narratives, and to the actors involved in them. The high point of these debates was the occasion of the second International Conference of National Aid Societies held in Berlin in 1869 (Boissier
The first reflections on the convenience of exploring whether aid societies might be involved in the above-mentioned activities in peacetime, came from outside, just after the approval of the Geneva Convention, on the occasion of the third congress of the
The earliest formal debates inside the international movement of the Red Cross to define its peacetime activities, took place on the occasion of the second “International Conference of Aid Societies” –the first had been held in Paris in August, 1867–, Berlin 22 to 27 April, 1869. There were one hundred and sixty participants, including the representatives of seventeen governments. It was organised by the Prussian central committee, in accordance with rules laid down by the Geneva Committee. On the eve of the conference, the
When, some months before, in October 1868, the Geneva Committee learned that aid societies’ activities in peacetime was planned as one the major issues to be debated in Berlin, their first reaction, apparently led by Gustave Moynier, was to oppose it (Boissier,
In any case, the Prussian committee pursued its plan to pay major attention to specifying the action of aid societies in the relief of wounded and sick soldiers in peacetime, on the occasion of the Berlin Conference, and prepared a report on the issue with the purpose of articulating the debate and agreements about which activities should be prioritised. The report was accompanied by twenty resolution proposals, the presentation of which was put in the charge of Wilhem Brinkmann,
The report began with a hymn of praise to cosmopolitanism as a sign of the times, considering that, beyond differences of opinion and party, there was then a “remarkable tendency to union” aiming to “contribute to the progress of human welfare”, which was manifested through the “universal will to alleviate misfortune” wherever it occurred and whatever its causes. After recalling that aid societies’ contribution to this task was basically focused on the “help and attendance to wounded and sick soldiers”, it went on to emphasise that it was crucial for these societies to reach a “perfect agreement” about their peacetime activities, in spite of the huge variety of proposals being presented. It also stressed that the selection of activities should be guided by a basic principle of human action, namely that efforts and tasks should be oriented towards “feasible and not too remote aim[s]” (CIACR,
Finally, no action by aid societies in peacetime should be left to the fate of improvisation or individual enthusiasm without any previous training, and that every action be based on the advancements of modern medical science. While essential conditions for success in their preparatory tasks for war were synthesised as “knowing how to make the best of resources in the area of hospital administration, hygiene and service”, the success of their actions in peacetime was described as being dependent upon the concurrence of three pairs of conditions, namely, science and work, reflection and activity, intelligence and experience (CIACR,
Three demands were particularly emphasised, namely, to use the experience gained in recent wars, to spread, through different means, the measures to be taken in wartime; to keep in contact with the military administration in order to grant a basis as solid as possible to aid societies’ efforts; and to have a “complete and detailed plan” for material help (CIARC,
Particular attention was paid to the establishment of reserve hospitals in case of war, in those “cities favourably placed” that the corresponding military authorities had previously designated for this purpose. The efforts of the aid societies at this point should be addressed to choosing the most suitable emplacements as much as to preparing their organisation and direction, and to committing the personnel –physicians and nurses– prepared to voluntarily work at them. The importance of lazarettos was underlined, those establishments ready for use, where infectious patients could be isolated in case of epidemics. There, “salubrious conditions for patients’ isolation” should be provided by means of a prompt application of “all the essential improvements of hygiene”, in order to stop the spread of epidemics. This also applied to barracks and tents whose utility for treating serious wounds and contagious diseases had been already proved.
These preparations should allow the aid societies not only to provide “the military authorities with a regular administration of hospitals in wartime”, but also that a “well organised corps of first aid” made up of “active and vigorous men” who had been conscientiously chosen, could give help under the most strict discipline in the theatre of war and on the battlefield by counting on the “first aid and rescue devices”. The activity of these men should be extended to the transportation of wounded and sick soldiers, and to their transfer at railways stations. It was considered as essential that these teams were convened and trained in peacetime according to specific circumstances in such a way as to qualify them to accomplish their tasks in wartime.
For the Prussian committee, the “works of humanity” of aid societies in peacetime should be focused on taking care of the sick poor, and on helping people on the occasion of “public calamities”, since both activities would result in benefits for war relief: the former would make it possible for a wide contingent of voluntary health care personnel to be trained, while one outstanding advantage of the latter was that it instructed the provision of a “prompt and organised aid” (CIACR Berlin,
Brinkmann particularly stressed the feasibility of “perfecting and improving all the aid organisations of the sick poor”. If, up to then, the supply of material aid had had to be very selective due to the “actual impossibility of choosing and training, after the outbreak of a war, any suitable hospital personnel”, he considered that it was right for the aid societies to take responsibility in peacetime for reinforcing their civilian health care resources by increasing their forces and improving their training (CIACR,
Yet, as the Prussian central committee did not hide the fact that it preferred the practice of these functions not to be subject to a “vote of piety”, Brinkmann proposed that nurses be trained by the initiative of the aid societies as a way to better face the new challenges. After describing the positive experience –despite their lack of training and practice– of the mobilisation of “women and young women” of every social class, who had voluntarily thrown themselves into the care of patients during the recent Austro-Prussian war (1866), he defended opening up the field of work to all women, arguing not only that it perfectly fitted “their aptitudes of heart and spirit, their forces, and their inclinations”, but also that it would allow a great number of women to escape from “an existence lacking of joy and satisfactions”, and introduce them “into a sphere of action suitable for educating their heart and intelligence”. And further to acknowledging nurses’ elevated place in the universal esteem, he asked for “full protection and complete security” for the new female profession.
This proposal was justified by reasons of convenience as much as the certainty that the care of patients was a line of priority action “in the universal task of the humanity and love for fellow people”. In this task women should play a key role, by virtue of not only the alleged constitutional condition of female religiosity and piety, but also of the fact that up to now, the “valuable talents” of those women of “most distinguished education” bearing “in their hearts the most profound feelings of religion and morality” and being “full of devotion for humankind” could only have been used in wartime and in an imperfect way as a result of their lack of training. The Prussian committee accepted the training of professional nurses –a challenge that had great social prestige among “distinguished women and men”–, and emphasised that its implementation demanded from aid societies the capacity to offer women guarantees similar to those of the houses managed by the Sisters of Charity and Deaconesses, as much as to “employ the energies of these caregivers and ensure their morality and ability” to regularly perform the care of the sick poor.
It was also proposed that aid societies gave the requested experience as voluntary nurses to those women who, although unable to devote themselves professionally to the care of patients, would like to help their fellow man by looking after the sick poor “in time of exceptional misfortune, in time of war and of epidemic”, and it was believed that this would counter the dangerous error concerning the care of patients, of “believing that enthusiasm in itself can bring about great things” (CIACR,
Regarding assistance in public disasters –among which epidemics, floods, fires, railway and mining disasters, starvation and famine were enumerated– the Prussian committee’s report proposed that aid societies should fight with the same means and the same energy against the destructive forces –calamities and other exceptional circumstances– in war as in peace, claiming that charitable efforts in both, fed back on each other. Resting on the assumption that each action of dedication contributed to the spreading of the “laws of humanity” throughout the world, they claimed that only in this way would it be possible to accomplish their mission “to spread everywhere the charitable thought on which the Geneva Convention was based, and to guarantee its public approval, so that it entered people’s hearts and sowed its seeds for the future” (CIACR,
In his interventions as the Prussian speaker, Brinkmann stood up for the establishment of a school in peacetime to train “exercised and well-tried forces” to perform voluntary aid action during war; and he reiterated that the best training for this purpose consisted of fighting against analogous circumstances to those of war, namely, disease, destitution, hunger and the “devastating force of the elements”. To him, all these voluntary aid activities would secure the mission of the societies under the Geneva Convention “by means of the exhilarating example of action, by means of that love of humankind that surely continues to be felt amidst the all too numerous calamities of peacetime” (CIACR,
Brinkmann justified this way of acting by the existence of a single “law of charity” the implementation of which to distinct “faces of human misfortune” required the combination of the most diverse efforts, forces, means and institutions. However, in order to make an exercise of charity to be truly beneficial he considered that it should have a clearly scientific basis on “precise knowledge, training and special studies”, and a methodical implementation, avoiding random interventions encouraged by vague sentimentality or “being moved simply by the heart” (CIACR,
Attention to “the misfortunes of poverty and disease at the bedsides of helpless people” would also offer the advantage of exercising “pure charity and the spirit of sacrifice” without the disturbing influence of the aggravations of war. So, aid committees’ preventive efforts in the middle of the “terror caused by pestilential and contagious diseases” would be a valuable training for hospital service in peace as much as in war. Furthermore, “sudden disasters, so numerous as a result of the tempestuous agitations of our time” would allow the identification of those “men of heart and action” called to perform the role of “rescuers” in the battlefields (CIACR,
After two shorter speeches by delegates of the French and Hessian committees that will be referred to further on (CIACR,
Schmidt highlighted the nobility of the proposed new tasks, qualifying them as an “important link in the chain of works of great love to humankind” that the international association of aid societies should develop along with the preparations for war “in all the great, civilised states of the present times”. To him, with these tasks, this international association established on the basis of the Geneva Convention, would enter a new and extremely important stage of its development, in which temporary utility would be replaced by a “complex aim” and “a permanent utility”. Moreover, these activities would be the best guarantee that aid societies could enjoy a lasting influence and maintain the benefits of a “national sympathy” that –he reminded the delegates– was subjected, like any other human endeavour, to “general laws based on the nature of things of men” and, therefore, always in direct relation to “the closeness or distance of its object and its utility”. To Schmidt, in short, if it could count on the “willpower” of the international association and the support of the “public spirit”, the Berlin Conference would pass “into the history of aid societies in the same way as Geneva on the day the Convention was approved” because of the relevance of its resolutions (CIACR,
Schmidt formulated three practical and versatile proposals:
1) To create a transportable barrack-hospital system that in case of war would relieve overcrowding in military hospitals, and to establish “systems of pavilions”, while in peacetime, installed in convenient places, they would be useful in facing extraordinary calamities (epidemics, fires, floods, and so on) and in rural areas even in ordinary circumstances (CIACR,
2) To establish “reserve ambulances” consisting of “houses of convalescence” to be erected in capitals and big provincial cities, that might be used for attending in peacetime to the demands of the population, living in overcrowded conditions as a result of the development of modern industry allegedly, “one of the glories and, at the same time, one of the great dangers of our century”. These houses of convalescence could also be transformed into reserve hospitals in case of war.
3) To distribute voluntary tasks among the members of the aid societies in peacetime in such a way that the “care of sick people” would be assigned to women’s committees while the “organisation in support of public hygiene”, to the men’s (CIACR,
The theoretical bases of Schmidt´s proposals were indebted to an organicism that was very influential in European social science at the time. To him, the “physical perfection of the nation and, therefore, of its army” depended –irrespective of the geographical position of a country or of the nature of its land – upon the “general life conditions” of its population (namely, air, water, food, clothing, housing, personal care and hygiene, and work); thus the integrity of that set of “primary conditions of physical life” was the main determinant of “the health and strength of a nation”. Moreover, Schmidt maintained that there was an absolute mutual dependence among all social classes, so that when a member of the social body suffered, all the rest suffered with it. From this perspective, disease and mortality among “the inferior classes” greatly determined those of the “superior and middle social spheres”, so that the better off were “continuously exposed to the same dangers as the poor classes” despite their relatively superior living conditions (CIACR,
From his Arcadian view of an ancient civilisation whose fall had for centuries had serious consequences for the “European race” because of the lack of a wide-ranging, reliable and state-organised hygiene, Schmidt saw as a sign of the return to “more healthy visions of the conditions of public prosperity” that modern natural science was promoting “a movement towards re-establishing the importance of public hygiene” and as an example of this he spoke of the institutionalisation process of public health in England led by John Simon (1816-1904) and the public attention it had attracted over the past ten years.
Without denying that in Germany there was in fact a theoretical interest in the legal development of public hygiene, he requested the introduction of radical remedies –by multiplying “official preventive measures”– instead of only palliative ones –increasing the number of hospitals – in the face of such a crucial public health issue as the increasing overcrowding of the sick poor in German hospitals. And more generally speaking, he claimed that the state should take, by right and duty, the initiative in all public hygiene matters, on the assumption that it was an issue of public and incontestable interest, and that the health, strength, and life of a nation was actually at stake.
On the basis of this, Schmidt suggested that the Prussian aid society may be the “perfect organ” to solve the serious public health problem derived from hospital overcrowding of the sick poor, by virtue of its hierarchical organisation and interconnection, both internal and with the official administrations. To him this aid society counted, in the major cities, on a number of voluntary workers large enough to undertake such an “endeavour of public utility concerning the common good” and, at the same time, this activity would contribute to its social reinforcement. Moreover, reflecting on the Prussian aid society’s patriotic agenda, he remarked that there was no better leverage aid committees could activate in peacetime than this, in order to “increase public prosperity and national power”. Thus, Schmidt closed this part of his speech by recalling that the proposals of well understood public hygiene made by the Prussian committee concerning the care of the poor would also increase, particularly in the industrial areas, the “availability” of “the poor classes” for work and military service (CIACR,
Schmidt placed (CIACR,
Among the “most precious and important” results of this alleged civilising development, there was an “increasingly visible approach between the rich and middle classes, on the one side, and the inferior classes on the other” as well as a “pronounced tendency to establish warm relationships in the most extreme conditions, under the influence of the true charity that reminds men of the beneficial principle of equality”. Schmidt drew a parallel of the abolition of slavery in the USA and of serfdom in Russia, with a movement –allegedly increasing in Europe– in favour of suppressing extreme poverty –pauperism–, and pointed to the need to destroy this internal enemy, so dangerous as “unworthy of civilisation”, and which he perceived as a constant threat to social prosperity, with its “sinister entourage of hunger, destitution, disease, ignorance, and bitterness”. After noting that in Europe there were numerous associations devoted to “relieving the major misfortunes of sick and poor people unable to earn a living”, and operating from the most disparate perspectives with no previous agreement or any unity of action, Schmidt proposed the adoption of a peace programme working on the perspective of an aid organisation that accompanied “as much as was necessary, the poor and destitute from their birth, throughout all the stages of their lives, under every form of suffering …, until the return of their remains to the earth”. To him aid societies should contribute to the achievement of this ambitious aim by three means, namely, by showing their sympathy for the always pressing needs, by establishing mobile hospitals and houses of convalescence to care for them, and by improving the public health to the benefit, mostly, of the “inferior classes”.
In his effort to prove that these tasks did not in any way distract the aid societies from their essential aim, Schmidt emphasised the usefulness of exchanging experiences between civil and military health services as a way of boosting innovations in health care, by resorting, once again, to the Anglo-American reformist image, this time the outstanding studies on hospital hygiene by James Young Simpson (1811-1870) in Edinburgh, and William Alexander Hammond (1828-1900) during the long American civil war, as well as to diverse novel hospital experiences in Rome and Paris. Through these, he was able to point out the proven decrease in the highest mortality and morbidity rates of infectious diseases that were so common in great old hospitals, as a result of changes recently introduced in hospital architecture –e.g., replacement of stone by iron and other materials lightening the buildings and making them “more aerial”– as well as in the management of hospital inmates –separation of sick and convalescent patients in different pavilions, and continuous evacuation of the latter from the major hospitals.
The solid coherence of the report elaborated by the Prussian committee plus the determined gloss added by Schmidt, caused the debate to develop as an ebb and flow of resistance. On the one side, the will of the Prussian representatives was that all national societies supported the report as a whole, and wanted it to be broken down as little as possible, because it perfectly fitted the specific model of aid societies adopted in Prussia, where they meshed perfectly with the machinery of the Prussian state. On the other side, there were other speakers who were less in favour of such strictly prefigured scopes for action, and proposed other options to be implemented in contexts with very different socio-political models. This fruitless debate around an unmoveable block meant that at the close of the conference, neither sides’ resolutions on action in peacetime had been approved in their entirety, so that the spirit of the whole was maintained as before; that, in general terms, aid societies would keep within the bounds of service to the armies and only occasionally act on their own. Actually, the Prussian proposals approved almost word for word by the assembly were the most programmatic ones, those postulating the aid societies’ priority attention in peacetime to the care of the sick poor and to giving rapid and organized help to the victims of public disasters, by stressing the particular usefulness of such help in order to achieve a “vigorous development” of these societies.
There were three issues, however, that opened a way through the impasse by producing an open debate. Although they did not result in any specific programmatic resolutions, they did actually fix the limits of Prussian ambition. They also permit us to characterise the range of sensibilities and the concerns of different aid societies by showing rather more diverse perspectives on what should be the nature of these societies. These issues dealt with management –the request for more autonomy for local committees to organise their activities–, with a perspective more social than administrative –the prioritisation of activities to promote public hygiene–, and along with the control of the aid societies’ own efficiency –the need for the aid societies to also take charge of training male nurses.
With regard to the management model, a great many of the delegates, including those of other German states, considered that the Prussian committee’s proposals were excessively centralist, and restricted the autonomy of action that national and local committees demanded for themselves. The intention of the Conference secretary himself –the Regency Counsellor Hass– to support Brinkmann’s speech, by emphasising the importance of the aid committees’ activities in peacetime covering “a field as wide as possible” –which implied not only taking advantage of them as valuable resources not be duplicated in other administrative spheres, but also sanctioning the new roles and functions assigned to them from outside– only served to increase the other committees’ susceptibilities (CIACR,
Very illustrative in this respect was the speech given by Léonce de Cazenove, lawyer, active member of the central committee of the French aid society, and secretary of the local committee of Lyon, who that year would publish a monograph mostly to reflect the organisation and activities of “the work” (
The intervention of the two delegates from Hesse –one of the German States then still resisting the pretentions of Prussian supremacy–, ran along similar lines. They were two members of Hessian court of appelation, namely the lawyer Büchner and the advisor Weber. In fact, this committee had sent to the Conference a resolution proposal in which the local committees were given autonomy to develop their “own activity regarding the administration and use of the resources” except for the part of their dues that contributed to the central committee’s account in each country. So, without denying the need for the different aid societies to keep themselves active in peacetime and preserve their unity of action, Büchner opposed the excess of “centralisation”, claiming that local committees enjoyed a certain freedom in their movements and objects of action at that time. And Weber went even further in claiming that local committees’ autonomy of action should be extended in a general sense, i.e., that it be applicable “in periods of peace as much as in circumstances of war”. In the face of this resistance, the Prussian representative, Brinkmann, adopted the position of making concessions but maintaining the limits. For instance, he proposed giving the local committees greater independence in their peacetime action within their relevant spheres, albeit respecting their subordination to a particular centre that would not impose “a rigid and inflexible centralisation” –which would allow no central committees even to “act on their own in multitude of essential things” in wartime. These concessions did not please Weber who responded by recalling that the recently signed agreement on a general organisation of the German committees had assigned the central direction in case of war, an influence “purely consultative as regards indicating extant needs”, and highlighted the difference between the army’s functions and those of the committees’ central direction. Thus he insisted on keeping as much as possible the freedom of action of the committees of relief.
The interventions of the committees’ delegates from Catholic Bavaria and Austria, and Russia, also revealed anxiety in the face of the overwhelming agenda of the Prussian central committee. For instance, Dr. Held, representative of the Bavarian central committee, having emphasised the convenience of always distinguishing between possibility and opportunity, suggested re-writing the Prussian proposal. He proposed moderating its tone by diluting its aims as well as its idea of unity of action, in order to avoid the misunderstanding that it aimed to impose an exaggerated centralisation on the committees’ agenda in peacetime (CIACR,
The representative of the Russian committee, the physician and state counsellor De Hubbenet –most probably Anton Christian August von Hübbenet (1822-1873), professor of surgical clinics in the University of Kiev and at some point Chief Physician of the Russian Army–,
Similar caution was shown by another French delegate, the Count of Beaufort (Beaufort
Faced with so much opposition, the Prussian delegate took a step back in order to smooth ruffled feathers, arguing that the sphere of aid societies’ activities in peacetime could not be “subjected to international resolutions”, so that the Prussian committee was pleased to accept that the action of the different committees in peacetime was related to the circumstances of the country and, at the same time, subject to the way those committees organized their action in wartime. In practice, it merely implied that the exportation of the Prussian model was not recommended, although this model remained protected and recognized by the international conference –a feature that was in the practical interest of the Prussian committee with regards to its relationships with the remaining committees of the German confederation (CIACR,
Schmidt had already made some general references to the aim of placing the aid societies’ activities in the sphere of public hygiene, but two responses to the Prussian official report presented by Brinkmann went beyond that, arguing why it should be so and how it should be carried out. They were that of Virchow, and the response of the Hessian delegation in defence of their resolution proposal on the issue.
Virchow started to address the public hygiene issue by asking rhetorically why the key question in most discussions was to what extent the aid committees could be forced to fill the gaps left by the military health services in wartime. Embarking on a series of reflections in which he set out to criticise the view that subordinated the aid societies’ activities in peacetime to the perspective of war, he wondered at the value of that forced connection –as if “war were in Europe the natural state” and “peace only existed to prepare ourselves for war”. He asked himself whether the many activities and devoted and trained people whose natural place was in civil life, should be subjected and subordinated to the needs of wartime.
However, although arguing that the aid committees should first develop pilot projects to provide practical examples in that area, and recognising the great difficulties involved in obtaining the needed support of the population, Virchow refrained from making any specific proposal on the issue. Yet, he suggested that a new conference of aid societies should undertake as its main task discussion on the “means of breaking the narrow circle exclusively restricting our work to the case of war”, in order to ensure that the care of the sick in ordinary times was not a mere “means of education within the perspective of war”, but an “end sufficiently considerable in itself as to legally demand everybody’s attention” (CIACR,
On their side, the delegates from Hesse were insistent that the action in peacetime should be toward the sphere of hygiene, on the assumption that the aid societies’ organisation and activity should be “directly and effectively practical in peacetime”. Thus, they proposed that public hygiene be favoured through scientific works –with a specific emphasis on statistical studies and, again, on British sanitary science– and activities contributing to its theoretical diffusion and its practical application, above all in barracks, hospitals, prisons and schools (CIACR,
Trying to redirect the debate, Brinkmann centred his answer to both Virchow and the Count of Beaufort –the French delegate– on reiterating the official Prussian position, which was to consider, for the moment, the “needs of peacetime only as a school for the needs of war”, with the hope that someday “in a distant future”, war relief would be nothing more than a “reflection of the general activity of humankind” (CIACR,
The debates went back and forth and various discrepancies eventually meant that the discussion about training nurses turned into one specifically about the training of male nurses. The official Prussian committee hoped that this debate would quickly skim the surface, and stressed the need for male nurses to become accustomed to operating as a disciplined body in order to achieve that spirit –linked to military instruction– that only the State could offer. However, underneath there was another debate going on about seeking other qualifications on the assumption that the aims were also different.
The official position considered any involvement of aid societies in training male nurses as inappropriate “in the present circumstances” by virtue of the nature and aims of these societies, and was assessed by Virchow –this time without caution!– as narrow-minded. Far from underestimating the indispensable role of women in this task in wartime, Virchow defended the need for aid committees to also be in charge of the education of male personnel in order to avoid leaving it exclusively in the hands of the military administration, on the assumption that male nurses were the indispensable element for the reserve ambulances –a service that was one of the main tasks of the aid committees because of its work in picking up the wounded and sick removed from the battlefield and to prevent contagion of diseases on a larger scale. Moreover, in this way the aid committees would also have the chance to choose a more qualified personnel than that available among the military bodies in campaign (CIACR,
Virchow’s speech was followed by the sculptor and member of the Berliner local committee Alexander Gilli (1823-1880)
Thus, in contrast to what had happened with the earlier attempt to place aid societies’ activities in the wider context of improving public hygiene, in this case the generalised refusal forced the Prussian committee to withdraw their proposal that young men should be excluded from the aid societies’ training programs for nurses (CIACR,
Yet, there was one last debate on the issue when the assembly went on to discuss another proposal of the Prussian committee, suggesting that a “health care corps” (
Perhaps having a premonition of what was about to fall apart –hardly fifteen months later the Franco-Prussian War broke out– De Cazenove concluded his speech with an emotive encomium to what he claimed to be another major aim of the Berlin Conference, namely, “a moral proximity among peoples” thanks to great progress in different means of communication:
Being in daily communication through the electric telegraph, the railways, the sciences and the arts, showing themselves more accessible to each other through the study of languages that is now an important part of the education of the next generation, people may enter, so to speak, into each other´s hearts, establish a kind of communal solidarity, and form a vast network, so interconnected that it cannot henceforth be easily broken (CIACR,
In fact, the Franco-Prussian war (1870-1871) abruptly terminated the debate on whether aid societies’ peacetime activities should be opened up to new objectives, or rather restrict themselves to the relief of invalid soldiers. The resumption of the debate after the war was greatly conditioned by its aftermath as well as by the new actors and priorities in civilian health policies.
Prussia’s military victory was so overwhelming that the Prussian army became in Europe, the pattern for organising armies and recruiting their soldiers (conscription system) as well as for regulating the functioning of relief societies for wounded soldiers. This model stressed the subordination of the aid societies to military commanders. During the war there were innumerable ambulances on the battlefield either managed by the national aid societies of the contenders –very efficient on the Prussian side, and rather chaotic on the French– or foreign aid services, mostly coming from England, Ireland, the Netherlands and Belgium. These tended to act apart from the national societies and armies of both contenders, sometimes even being protected by the national societies of third countries, and always felt themselves to be legitimate in undertaking their relief action in an autonomous way. The war experience had raised many criticisms by the commanders of the European armies and of their military health services, like those of Thomas Longmore, responsible for British military health services, and even by the Prussian national aid society itself (Longmore,
The resumed debate on humanitarian action in peacetime during the 1870s, was very much within a new framework of new public health views and practices dominant in Europe at the time. Significantly, after a failed international conference of aid societies to be held in Vienna in 1873, the Red Cross societies met again with a much lower profile in Brussels in 1876, on the occasion of a wider conference –the 1st
However, new developments in relief action in civil disasters (fires, floods, railways crashes, etc.), even in daily life, were being promoted throughout the 1870s by voluntary aid societies either within the framework of the Red Cross movement or separately though in conjunction with specific Red Cross societies. These developments went on from the earliest establishment of ambulances –in the sense of first-aid dispensaries– in Algeria to the foundation of St John Ambulance in England. The
At the time the 1869 Berlin Conference closed, there was no clear response to the question of whether peacetime action of the international association of aid societies should be opened up to new projects, because their delegates had no powers in terms of public health policy, their potential agreements could be not imposed to any country, and the national aid societies could not force individuals or collectives to act in any particular way. The variety of their responses needs to be seen as yet another expression of the emergence of distinct public health views and practices. Thus, around 1880, different national Red Cross societies appear to have given very disparate responses, for instance, in the area of civil disasters, as is obvious from the proceedings of the Third International Conference of Red Cross Societies held in Geneva in 1884 (CIACR,
While according to the Prussian-led German central committee on that occasion, giving relief to the victims of disasters in peacetime was not, in principle, useful “despite the resolutions of the Berlin international conference”,
On the other hand, the Russian Red Cross society assumed the obligation to fight “public calamities” by giving different kinds of humanitarian relief (money, medical help and the provision of basic necessities on various occasions during the 1870s, namely food in a famine at Samara, house disinfection measures to fight diphtheria in Vetlianka, Poltava, Novdorg, and other places, and money to help different populations after fires, as well as other interventions (CIACR,
Furthermore, the vice-president of the Athens central committee claimed that “inertia and indifference in the face of civil calamities” would be the “most certain path towards lassitude and even the death of Red Cross societies” because these were mostly “national and humanitarian”. Indeed, in 1878 the Greek Red Cross had not only given relief to the wounded in the Russian-Turkish war, but also sustained for a year 32,000 refugees displaced as a result of that war, while in subsequent years it would give relief on the occasion of such various “civil calamities” as an earthquake on the island of Chio, a typhus epidemic in Athens, or the evacuation of refugees after the bombing of Alexandria by the British fleet (CIACR,
Last but not least, a delegate from the recently founded American Red Cross (1881) claimed that “the great disasters in peacetime required, equally as in wartime, personnel well trained, experienced and able to work in harmony as well as a large, prompt and organized private charity”. He also claimed that the Red Cross was acting in the United States on the clear assumption that “many terrible calamities will hit our people in peacetime” in contrast to the great improbability of a war in the future –a view that might recall that of Virchow in the previous conference at Berlin in 1869. Yet, he insisted that according to the American Red Cross’ action plan, its sphere of action in peacetime would be rigorously limited to the “greatest national calamities” (CIACR,
During the first twenty years of the Red Cross international movement, the action of the distinct relief societies in peacetime went ahead, at a different pace and on different fronts, far beyond its original
1) Human and material resources were being adapted to humanitarian activities which went beyond the legal technology of the 1864 Geneva Convention, on the basis of a moral interest irrespective of other potential concerns (political, social, economic, cultural,..).
2) Relief activities were becoming part of the mainstream hygiene movement, by understanding prophylaxis as risk prevention, and by moving health care from mere individual rescue in disasters to a continued action on public health and welfare on the basis of increasingly systematic health policies and philanthropic practices.
3) Disasters of natural, technological or human origin were being perceived as equal in their effect, so that they could be dealt with under a common pattern of scientific analysis and prevision in order to eliminate risk factors and to provide aid as promptly and efficiently as possible.
In 1882 Gustave Moynier –who had been openly opposed, at least since 1865, to the idea that aid societies in their peacetime activities went beyond preparing themselves for wartime (AIPSS,
This contribution is the result of ongoing research within the framework of a project funded by the Dirección General de Investigación (Spanish Government), “Sanidad militar, medicina de guerra y humanitarismo en la España del siglo XIX” (HAR2011-24134). A first approach was presented in the EAHMH Conference “Risk and disaster in medicine and health” (Lisbon, 4-7 Sep 2013).
The proceedings of the Berlin Conference were separately published in German and French. All quotations from these proceedings will refer to the French version: CIACR,
In the third edition of his
Brinkmann was the author, among other works, of a monograph on voluntary war nurses in Germany with particular attention to their services on the occasion of the Austro-Prussian war of 1866 (Brinkmann,
“Propositions du Comité central prussien” (CIACR,
“En temps de paix, les Comités et les Sections s’occupent des moyens de se rendre véritablement utiles en temps de guerre, spécialement en préparant des secours matériels de tout genre, et en cherchant à former et à instruire des infirmiers volontaires.” (CIACR,
Since 1867 an innovative model of hospital-barrack had been developed as an annex to the Charité Hospital in Berlin by Dr. Esse, director of this hospital. On this and other hospital-barracks, see Demoget (
For overviews on public health and industrialisation in France and Germany, the main actors at the Berlin Conference, see Rosen (
“Dans cette classe nous trouvons, en général, sous tous les rapports, l’idéal des infirmiers et des infirmières et les qualités indispensables aux garde-malades, le dévouement parfait au devoir, avec abnégation complète de soi-même, la renonciation à toutes les habitudes et à toutes les aises de la vie, et avec tout cela une amabilité joyeuse en toute occupation, la sérénité d’âme à la vue de tout spectacle si terrible qu’il soit, enfin la soumission et l’obéissance absolues” (CIACR,
(CIACR,
(CIACR,
(CIACR,
Schmidt’s observations on the impact of this urban overpopulation on the traditional hospital system are remarkable: “La proportion ascendante des malades par suite des conditions hygiéniques insuffisantes des ateliers, des habitations, etc., réagit d’une manière désastreuse sur le régime des hôpitaux et en rend partout l’agrandissement nécessaire. Mais cet agrandissement rencontré presque partout aussi des obstacles, faute de place ou pour des raisons hygiéniques, ainsi qu’en ont fait l’expérience la plupart des hôpitaux qui, par suite de l’extension des villes, ont fini par se trouver au centre, tandis qu’auparavant ils se trouvaient placés à l’extérieur” (CIACR, Berlin,
For a comparative approach to the urban sanitary movement in England and in Germany, see Hennock (
On health care and poor relief in Germany during this period, see Sachsse & Tennstedt (
On the medical reform of US and Scottish hospitals at the time, see Risse (1999, pp 361-398); and Rosenberg, (1987), respectively. On the new tendencies in hospital building, see Demoget (
These were the propositions no. 20 and 21 in the summary of the Conference’s results (CIACR,
(CIACR,
Von Hübbenet (1822-1873) wrote, among other works, a monograph on the sanitary conditions of the Russian soldiers wounded in the Crimean War (Von Hübbenet,
(CIACR,
(CIACR,
“… il est à désirer que l’activité volontaire reste libre, afin que le succès ne soit pas trop toujours composé d’une manière convenable pour le but qu’on se propose” (CIACR,
In the middle of the Franco-Prussian war, Virchow persisted in claiming that it was crazy to prepare themselves for war as if it were the natural state of Europe. See Virchow (
On Rudolf Virchow’s reformist concerns in public health, and his involvement in the 1848 liberal revolution and other political activities, see Ackerknecht (
This speech by Virchow and the briefer one, already mentioned, reported on pp. 195-195, were reproduced in German along with his final commentary in Virchow (
(CIACR,
(CIACR,
Gilli served as a sculptor in marble, designer of murals, and restorer of antiques at the court of Prince Karl of Prussia, Grand Master of the Order of Saint John.
Berliner physician of Jewish family who was very active in making proposals of reform in health care and welfare.
For “relief in wartime” (
Founded in Alger in 1871, and presided by the physician and publicist Émile Bertherand (1821-1890), the
On the British case, see, e.g., Cooter (1997) and Gill (
On the history of the ARC see, e.g., Jones (
The fifth point at that conference was devoted to the role of the Red Cross in non-wartime disasters: “La Croix-Rouge dans les calamités publiques autres que la guerre” (CIACR,
“Fidele au principe consacré par l’expérience, que la concurrence, quelque utile et avantageuse qu’elle soit pour d’autres choses, ne doit pas être considérée comme désirable quand il s’agit d‘efforts humanitaires et que, sur ce terrain, un travail unifié et des forces combinées sont préférables à une activité partielle et divisée, quelque grande qu’on la suppose, ..., le Comité central allemand n’a pas trouvé utile de s’occuper à adoucir le sort des victimes dans les calamités publiques en temps de paix, malgré les résolutions de la Conférence internationale de Berlin” (CIACR,
After the defeat of 1866 by Prussia, the Austrian Empire became the Austro-Hungarian Empire, each country with its own institutions.
“… les secours ne consistaient pas toujours en offrandes pécuniaires, mais souvent en objets dont les malheureux avaient un besoin pressant, soit pour le secours médical, soit pour les nécessités quotidiennes de la vie. En conséquence, dans certains cas, on envoyait un personnel médical avec tout le nécessaire, ainsi que des habillements et des aliments, dans d’autres, le secours se bornait à la distribution d’effets et d’argent” (CR-CIAC,