O Volkswagen Fusca e a Ligação de sua Criação com o Regime Nazista, Alemanha, Artigo
Artigo
The VW Beetle has the Nazis to thank for its existence. Adolf Hitler laid the cornerstone of the Volkswagen factory in Wolfsburg 80 years ago. Here, a critical retrospective of a German success story.
Two men, one huge project: Adolf Hitler and Ferdinand Porsche are the people behind the Volkswagen Beetle. Porsche was the genius engineer, Hitler the sly politician. "These two were made for each other," said Wolfram Pyta, a history professor at the University of Stuttgart.
He, along with
historians Nils Havemann and Jutta Braun, have written Porsche: From design office to global
brand. The book traces the company from its founding in
Stuttgart on April 25, 1931.
Porsche's Volkswagen
project could never have been realized without Hitler's support. "Hitler
needed a creative mind to produce his compact car suitable for mass
production," Pyta said. "And Porsche needed political backing to
enable him to build it without financial pressure."
Hitler
announced a "people's motorization" at the auto show in February
1933, just weeks after he was named Reich Chancellor. In summer 1934, the Reich
Association of the German Automobile Industry gave Porsche the task of coming
up with a car under the motto "strength through pleasure," after the
same name as the Nazi's Organization for Leisure Activities.
Hitler, who
did not have a drivers license, personally approved the prototype of "his
Volkswagen" on December 29, 1935. Not much more than two years later, on
May 26, 1938, the cornerstone was laid for the Volkswagen factory in Wolfsburg,
with the Führer in attendance.
However, the
car built for "strength through pleasure" was foremost intended for
the German army, not the "people's motorization." It was put to
military and all-terrain use on the front. This surprised few. A Porsche
brochure in 1934 said a "car must be suitable not only for personal use,
but also for transport and particular military purposes."
The success of
a small car for the people began only after the war. It was rebranded as the
"Beetle" to distance it from the Nazi period. The first one rolled
off the assembly line in December 1945. The one-millionth Beetle came to be 10
years later. The hunchbacked car with a boxer engine became a symbol of the
German economic miracle, and a global success. In all, nearly 22 million
Beetles were produced and sold.
The Beetle was
able to shake off its Nazi past immediately following the war. Notably,
France's socialist-led ministry for industrial production contacted Porsche in
October 1945.
"Nowhere
is the successful distancing from national socialism clearer than in the French
government's effort to win the Volkswagen designing for itself," said
Pyta.
The French
competition knew how to stop a German "voiture populaire."
"Renault and Peugeot conspired" against it, Pyta told DW.
"Porsche and his son-in-law Anton Piëch were accused of participating in
war crimes."
Despite the
Beetle's global success, Porsche was taken into surprise custody by French
military authorities in December 1945, remaining in jail until August 1947.
Hitler and Porsche's cooperation, however, was not all that unusual, Pyta said.
Authoritarian rulers can lure apolitical actors with the prospect of major
projects: "Porsche was not the only one to push aside moral
considerations when presented with unlimited opportunism," he said.
"Business leaders interested solely in their company's success or in
implementing ambitious technical projects often have no qualms in doing deals
with the devil."
Fonte: https://www.dw.com/en/hitler-and-his-volkswagen-tracing-the-80-year-history-of-the-beetle/a-43942998
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