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A Microhistory of Rurality, Nazism, and Youth Sexuality. Romanian Reports of a Medical Examination Conducted on the German Youth of Orţişoara (1942) Cover

A Microhistory of Rurality, Nazism, and Youth Sexuality. Romanian Reports of a Medical Examination Conducted on the German Youth of Orţişoara (1942)

By: David Borchin  
Open Access
|Feb 2026

Abstract

As part of a pronatalist propaganda campaign taken by the German Ethnic Group of Romania in 1942, two members of the organization, a doctor and a woman, went to the predominantly German village known as Orţişoara in Romanian and Orzydorf in German under the guise of conducting a medical examination for the German girls aged 16 and boys aged 18. Upon arrival, they had the participants undress and stand naked during the examination. After the examination ended, the woman delivered a speech in which she urged the girls to have children, regardless of who the father was, and that there was no shame for girls so young to be pregnant. After her oration, a majority of the teenagers allegedly went to the backyard of the community center where they engaged in sexual intercourse. The only sources that mention this event are the reports of the local gendarmes and the testimonies given by four Romanian villagers. Using discourse analysis as an approach, this paper argues that the German Ethnic Group of Romania instrumentalized sexuality as a means by which to distance the youth from the Roman-Catholic Church and make them more committed National Socialists.

Language: English
Page range: 167 - 184
Published on: Feb 5, 2026
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2026 David Borchin, published by Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.