


DOCUMENTS REVEAL FORD WAS PART OF AUSCHWITZ INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX
JEWISH TELEGRAPHIC AGENCY
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Sunday, 22 August 1999
http://www.jta.org/aug99/22-ford.htm
By Douglas Davis
LONDON, Aug. 22 (JTA) -- While Auschwitz is synonymous with
the Nazi destruction of European Jewry, little attention has been
given to the thriving industrial and commercial complex that was
built adjacent to the camp.
That changed last week, when the Auschwitz archive provided
further evidence last week that the German operation of Ford
Motor Co. was among 400 German enterprises that used slave labor.
The evidence was discovered in a Nazi-era document recently
unearthed from the archive by historians with the Auschwitz
Museum in Poland.
That document, say the researchers, represents just a
fraction of the entire archive, which was removed from Poland by
the postwar Soviet authorities and which lay dormant in the
Soviet Union until recently.
It shows that the Ford operation in Cologne was among 400
German industrial enterprises -- including such giants as
Siemens, Krupp and IG Farben -- that exploited the vast pool of
slave labor the Nazis made available.
The list of companies that exploited Auschwitz slave labor
is the first of its kind to be compiled from original Nazi
sources.
Ford officials insist that the American company did not
control the company's operations in Nazi-occupied Europe.
As millions of Jews were swallowed up by the Auschwitz death
machine, the industrial complex -- with its replenishable supply
of slave labor -- proved to be a significant profit center for
Germany's industrial barons -- and for the Nazi leadership
itself.
The industrial wing of Auschwitz -- known as ``Monowitz" --
was in fact selected as the preferred site of operations for 51
companies that chose to exploit the opportunity of slave labor,
according to the London-based Holocaust Educational Trust.
It is here that one of the most notorious, IG Farben,
manufactured synthetic oil, rubber -- and Zyklon-B gas, which was
used extensively in the Nazi death camps.
At the height of its activity in 1944, IG Farben ran a slave
labor plant at Auschwitz that exploited the efforts of 83,000
people.
IG Farben shareholders, meeting in Frankfurt last week,
voted to establish a $1.5-million fund to compensate the
company's former slave laborers.
The offer, regarded as too little too late, was greeted with
derision by Holocaust survivor groups, which were quick to
describe it as ``ridiculously low."
Survivors are now demanding that the company be disbanded
and that its assets -- estimated to be worth more than $11
million -- be distributed among the victims of its wartime
activities.
After the war, the victorious Allies broke up the company
into several components, but IG Farben remained, dealing mainly
in property.
Auschwitz was not the sole base of operations for companies
that employed slave labor.
In addition to industrial sites throughout Germany where
slave labor was used, a list compiled by the Holocaust
Educational Trust shows that a total of 92 companies used slave
labor at Buchenwald, 52 at Dachau and 57 at Mauthausen.
The recent settlement by the Swiss banks of $1.25 billion
for unreturned Holocaust-era assets has opened a torrent of
claims by former slave laborers against wartime enterprises.
According to one survivors' group, documents that link
German companies to the construction and operation of Auschwitz
are likely to help slave laborers receive compensation.
Jacek Turczynski, head of the Foundation for Polish-German
Reconciliation, said last week that such documents show ``German
industrial companies had close ties with the exceptional crime
that took place there.''
An unpublished report by Nathan Associates, an economic
consulting firm in Arlington, Va., has estimated that of a total
of some 12 million people who were enslaved during the Nazi era,
about 2.3 million are still alive.
The study, which was expected to be used at resumed
reparations talks in Bonn this week, shows that more than one-
half of the slave laborers were women and that most were young
adults who had been born between 1918 and 1925.
The negotiations, co-sponsored by Germany and the United
States, will attempt to create the framework for a new
compensation fund, which 16 German companies decided to establish
last February in the face of billion-dollar lawsuits filed
against them in U.S. courts.
In return for creating the fund, which has been set at $1.7
billion, the firms have demanded a guarantee against further
Holocaust-related claims.
Meanwhile, other recently discovered documents from the
Auschwitz archive provide fresh details of plans for
construction, orders for raw materials and services, as well as
invoices and reports on the progress of work at the death camp
the Nazis built and developed between 1940 and 1945.
The documents also include lists of the workers, including
camp inmates, used by some of the companies.
Copyright 1999 Jewish Telegraphic Agency Inc. All rights
reserved.
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