Home Up One Level What's New? Q & A Short Essays Holocaust Denial Guest Book Donations Multimedia Links

The Holocaust History Project.
The Holocaust History Project.

Porsche Cars

Question

Can you tell me if Porsche cars used slave labor or had anything to do with the Holocaust?

Harry Mazal answers:

I am one of the persons who responds to such questions. I will try to give you some information about Ferdinand Porsche and the company that he created. I have used the following book for source material:

Small Wonder: The Amazing Story of the Volkswagen
Nelson, Walter Henry
c. 1965, Little, Brown and Company
Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 65-10899

From pp. 77ff:

On Ascension Thursday, May 26, 1938, Adolf Hitler laid the cornerstone of the Volkswagen factory near Fallersleben, Lower Saxony. [...]

...Ferdinand Porsche was conspicuous in mufti, wearing a trench coat and no hat. [...]

Porsche commuted between his Bureau in Stutgart and his job in Wolfsburg, overseeing the construction of his plant. [...]

Nazi Germany honored its leading designer [Porsche] in 1938 with its own equivalent of the Nobel Prize. [...]

Orders from Berlin forced the factory to devote part of its capacity to building other war equipment, instead of concentrating on automobiles. Yet another factor may have been a human one. Today [1965] the factory is manned by free men; in World War II, two thirds of its workers were slaves. [...]

The labor force increased more than 600 percent, from 2732 in 1939 to 17,365 in 1944; the vast majority were foreign prisoners. Some were Russian and Polish prisoners of war; most were forced laborers from France, Belgium and Holland, and a few were court-martialled German soldiers sentenced to work at the plant. While treatment of the prisoners at Wolfsburg appears to have been better than elsewhere in Nazi Germany, it is a fact that many of those who arrived there were half-starved. ...Porsche designed a succession of tanks and other military vehicles, for which he was lavishly honored by the Third Reich.

I hope that this material is of some use to you.

Sincerely,

Harry W. Mazal OBE

back to the list of questions

   

Last modified: September 4, 1999
Technical/administrative contact: [email protected]