Wilhelm Reich (* 24. März 1897 in Dobzau, Galizien, Österreich-Ungarn; † 3. November 1957 in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, USA [1]) war ein österreichisch-US-amerikanischer Psychiater, Psychoanalytiker, Sexualforscher und Soziologe. Mit der von ihm ab 1934 entwickelten Vegetotherapie war er einer der wesentlichen Begründer der Körperpsychotherapie. Nach seiner „Entdeckung des Orgons“ 1940 bezeichnete Reich seine Lehre als Orgonomie. ...
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_ReichMassenpsychologie des Faschismus
http://www.conne-island.de/nf/123/10.htmlWilhelm Reich im LSR-Projekt
http://www.lsr-projekt.de/wr.htmlOn March 8, 1957, four days before he was taken to a federal prison, Wilhelm Reich signed his Last Will and Testament. By this time his orgone energy accumulators and many of his publications had already been banned and destroyed by order of a United States Federal Court injunction, starting on June 5, 1956 when three orgone energy accumulators were destroyed outside of Reich's Student Laboratory at Orgonon in Rangeley, Maine.
Three weeks later, several boxes of his publications were burned under the supervision of Food and Drug Administration agents outside the Student Laboratory. A month after that, in July, the panels for about fifty orgone accumulators were dismantled in the town of Rangeley, Maine by the local contractors who had built them.
And exactly one month after that--on August 23, 1956--several tons of Reich's publications, including the titles of 10 hardcover books as well as medical and scientific research bulletins and journals, were burned under FDA supervision at a New York City municipal garbage incinerator on Gansevoort Street.
In his Last Will and Testament, Reich had named his daughter, Dr. Eva Reich, as the sole Trustee of The Wilhelm Reich Infant Trust Fund. She was the individual now charged with carrying out Reich's final wishes as stipulated in his will. And among the will's principal stipulations was this:
"To operate and maintain the property at Orgonon under the name and style of The Wilhelm Reich Museum."
http://www.wilhelmreichtrust.org/http://www.wilhelmreichtrust.org/museum.html