BMW's Quandt Family Faces Its Nazi Past

Big Daddy

Senior Member
Messages
10,446
Likes
5
Location
PNW (Left) Coast
#1
A shocking documentary aired on German TV exposes the family's shameful history of Nazi profiteering and use of slave labor

Automaker BMW is Germany's most admired employer and a pioneer in profit sharing. So it came as a shock Sept. 30 when an investigative television documentary exposed the Nazi-era misdeeds of BMW's controlling shareholder family, the Quandts. The Silence of the Quandt Family highlighted how patriarch Günther Quandt, grandfather to the generation now controlling BMW (BMWG.DE), built a blood-stained wartime fortune on the back of slave labor and how he sidestepped postwar recrimination.

The reclusive Quandt family responded to the documentary five days later, on Oct. 5, pledging to back a research project into the family's Nazi past and its role under the Third Reich, opening family archives and documents to an independent historian.

Testimony from Former Slave Laborers
"The accusations that have been raised against our family have moved us," said the family in a statement. "We recognize that in our history as a German business family, the years 1933 to 1945 have not been sufficiently cleared up." BMW, which was taken over by the Quandts after the war, was not implicated in the documentary and made no comment about the allegations.

The program stunned Germany and triggered a raft of newspaper stories with headlines such as "The Quandts' Bloody Billions" and "A Fortune Stained in Blood." The hour-long documentary included interviews with former slave laborers who testified to the devastating conditions and atrocities which took place at Günther Quandt's battery company, Accumulatorenfabrik AG (Afa). Afa produced highly specialized batteries for the Nazi war machine, used in U-boats and V-2 rockets. It also produced munitions. "We were treated terribly and had to drink water from the toilets. We were also whipped," said Takis Mylopoulos, a forced laborer who worked in Quandt's Hannover plant.

Based on documents unearthed by the filmmakers, Quandt estimated a "fluctuation of 80 prisoners per month," in his battery factory—a likely reference to expected deaths per month, the film claims. It also says that Quandt, who joined the Nazi party in 1933, wielded close family ties to the Nazi elite to grow his battery business. Sven Quandt, a grandson of Günther and the only family member to appear in the documentary, says that he and his siblings cannot be held responsible for their grandfather's activities.

Quandts Rejected Pleas for Reparations
Afa had factories in Hannover, Berlin, and Vienna and was supplied with slave laborers from concentration camps who died by the hundreds, according to the documentary. One former Danish slave laborer testified in the film that he and other survivors, who were deported to a German concentration camp and sent to work at Afa, returned to Germany in 1972 to plead for financial support from the Quandts, since the harsh working conditions at Afa had resulted in lifelong ailments.

The Quandts turned them away, the film says. "It's for me a step in the right direction that the Quandt family, after so many decades, finally is willing to face its history," says Carl-Adolf Sörensen, a former Danish resistance fighter who was sent to the Hannover-Stöcken concentration camp in 1943. Sörensen wants the Quandts to admit that Afa relied on slave labor from the camp.

Escaping Justice
The Silence of the Quandt Family was broadcast by Norddeutsche Runkfunk (NDR), an affiliate of the national ARD network, and was based on five years of research by authors Eric Friedler and Barbara Siebert. It premiered at the Hamburg Film Festival on Sept. 30 and was aired without notice on television later that night, at 11:30 p.m., reaching an estimated audience of 1.3 million. Some German commentators surmise the broadcast was not announced in advance for fear of legal interference from the Quandts to block the program. ARD officials denied the speculation and said they decided to air the program only after the Film Festival premiere.

Despite his Nazi membership—and, as it now appears, his use of slave labor—Günther Quandt was deemed after the war to have been more of a "passive follower" than a convinced Nazi. But Benjamin Ferencz, a prosecutor from the Nuremberg Trials interviewed in the documentary, said that the facts revealed today likely would have led to Quandt's conviction for war crimes—similar to those meted out to members of the Krupp and Flick families.

"Quandt escaped justice," Ferencz told the filmmakers. Industrialist Friederich Flick, by contrast, received a prison sentence of seven years at the Nuremberg Trials for deploying slave labor and for serving the Nazi war machine, but was freed in 1950.

After the war, Quandt received his company, later renamed Varta (VARGK.F), back from the government and continued to build his industrial wealth—the fortune eventually wielded by his son Herbert in 1959 to buy BMW. Herbert's heirs, including wife Johanna, daughter Susanna Klatten, and son Stefan, today own a controlling 47% stake in BMW, which has a market capitalization of $42 billion. The Quandts also own a controlling stake in pharmaceutical giant Altana (ALTG.DE). The family's holdings are worth an estimated $34 billion.

Damage Control
Despite its acknowledgement that the family's ties to the Nazis have been played down, the Quandt family members insist the details of Günther Quandt's past are not entirely new. A 2002 biography covered much of the same ground. It's also been known that Quandt's wife Magda Ritschel, whom he divorced in 1929, remarried Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels in 1931 and that Goebbels adopted Quandt's son Harald. Adolf Hitler acted as witness at the wedding.

Many German companies including Volkswagen (VOWG.DE) and Deutsche Bank (DB) already have explored their own wartime collaboration and misdeeds during the Nazi era, publishing books, turning over documentation to experts, and paying millions of dollars into funds distributed to forced-labor survivors. Volkswagen's book documents its deployment of 20,000 slave laborers during the Third Reich.

The Quandts, by contrast, have remained silent about their past, perhaps fearing a global public backlash against the BMW brand. Until now, the family has refused historians access to its Nazi-era historical archives and papers—and it still has not acknowledged that Afa factories made use of slave labor from concentration camps.

The Oct. 5 statement by the family noted that Quandt-owned companies BMW, Varta, and Altana, as well as individual family members, contributed to national funds established to compensate former slave laborers but did not mention the sums contributed.

From Business Week
 
Messages
4,412
Likes
5
Location
Wayzata, MN
#2
my dad has sat down with the Quandt family for dinner several times back in the mid 90s. I thought that was kind of cool, said eldest son came to the US and drove really sweet old BMW motorcycle, and lived in a small one room apartment. It's nice to see 17billion or so look like that
 
Messages
4,917
Likes
18
Location
Reading,PA
#3
I find it a bit unsettling regarding the extent to which they try to hold later generations accountable for their grandparents/great grandparents involvement in now unacceptable social behavior - Nazi Germany, US Slavery, etc. I'm not trying to downplay the seriousness of the offenses committed - I have been to the concentration camp/museum in Dachau twice.

How long are people/companies responsible for the bad social behavior of their ancestors when the behavior was acceptable to their peers at that time in history?
 
Messages
160
Likes
0
Location
San Francisco Bay Area
#5
If you're looking for bloody hands, perhaps a documentary on the Presidents grandfather, Prescott Bush and the Union Bank laundering Nazi money is in order. Or Standard Oil suppling the German Luftwaffe with fuel and petrochemicals. There plenty of blame to go around.

The war, horrific as it was, is starting to be a very long time ago. Those in charge at the time are very old men or dead. Perhaps focusing on the future would be more productive.
 

Big Daddy

Senior Member
Messages
10,446
Likes
5
Location
PNW (Left) Coast
#6
No I was not "looking for bloody hands", I was simply sharing an article from the Business Week that I thought may interest some members here.

And so after reading about the Union Bank, of which Prescott Bush owned one share, I discovered that six days after the attack on Pear Harbor The President ordered the seizure of all German banking operations in the US, including the UB! After the war the property was released. It all ties back to Fritz Thyssen who was a former backer of the Nazi party, denounced Hitler, was captured and his banking interests, including those that tied him to the UB were in the control of the Nazi party. So, sounds like someone doing business with a guy who denounced Hitler and the Nazi's unfortunately his business was related to a German business. It was not a case of "laundering Nazi money."
 
Messages
160
Likes
0
Location
San Francisco Bay Area
#7
Big Daddy, that wasn't directed at you personally nor was it meant as personal attack. It was meant as a general statement that there was a lot profiteering and other questionable moral and ethical as well as illegal activities during WWII on both sides of the pond.

As for Prescott, he was a Vice President of the Union Bank, and there alleged activities contented until 1951. Though, like the Quandts, their family history has some black holes.
 
Messages
910
Likes
1
Location
Atlanta, GA
#8
I find it a bit unsettling regarding the extent to which they try to hold later generations accountable for their grandparents/great grandparents involvement in now unacceptable social behavior - Nazi Germany, US Slavery, etc. I'm not trying to downplay the seriousness of the offenses committed - I have been to the concentration camp/museum in Dachau twice.

How long are people/companies responsible for the bad social behavior of their ancestors when the behavior was acceptable to their peers at that time in history?

Something the current generations of our time should sit down and resolve, so that 300 years from now, we aren't revolving around these sort of issues still.

And it's not an easy answer to give. 'yes they (BMW) should not be held accountable for activities of it's owners 70 years ago' can be refuted by people living still today, that have not received a penny for the slave labor they gave to the old blue and white props.

I'd say, when no one is left alive, or still suffering (families of those directly impacted by a slave-labor living) would be the end. Can you put a # on that, to say a # of years must pass? I dunno, people live an awful long time, and memories (when you feel wronged) can go generations. One only has to look at Jeruselem to see that humanity does not have a thick skin, and still can't to this day settle old differences.

Humanity has it's good points. But our bad points are really, really bad.
 

Big Daddy

Senior Member
Messages
10,446
Likes
5
Location
PNW (Left) Coast
#9
Big Daddy, that wasn't directed at you personally nor was it meant as personal attack. It was meant as a general statement that there was a lot profiteering and other questionable moral and ethical as well as illegal activities during WWII on both sides of the pond.

As for Prescott, he was a Vice President of the Union Bank, and there alleged activities contented until 1951. Though, like the Quandts, their family history has some black holes.

my apologies to you, I did take it personal but after reading and re-reading you are correct and I understand your point. Thanks for clearing that up for me.
 
Messages
405
Likes
4
Location
Los Angeles, CA
#10
ok, that does it... everyone either burn or push your cars off the nearest cliff today after work in protest... lol (j/k)

well, there's no statutue of limitations for murder... i think that if the Quandt family is willing to take responsibility, apologize, and provide restitution of some kind to the descendants of the victims of the crimes, then that at least would be a step in the right direction. on the same note, there should be some sort of formal apology acceptance as well, so that this issue can be put behind- but not forgotten. maybe they can build a memorial or something?

anyways, it's a tough thing to sort out no doubt. still, the human capacity to forgive is also one of our best qualities- along with our strength, perseverance, and sense of justice.
 
Messages
793
Likes
4
Location
Bay Of Islands, NZ
#11
Something the current generations of our time should sit down and resolve, so that 300 years from now, we aren't revolving around these sort of issues still.

And it's not an easy answer to give. 'yes they (BMW) should not be held accountable for activities of it's owners 70 years ago' can be refuted by people living still today, that have not received a penny for the slave labor they gave to the old blue and white props.

I'd say, when no one is left alive, or still suffering (families of those directly impacted by a slave-labor living) would be the end. Can you put a # on that, to say a # of years must pass? I dunno, people live an awful long time, and memories (when you feel wronged) can go generations. One only has to look at Jeruselem to see that humanity does not have a thick skin, and still can't to this day settle old differences.

Humanity has it's good points. But our bad points are really, really bad.
I agree (to a point) There must be a line drawn that says - this is the limit of reparations and claims. But I'm not going to say where that line should be. The present-day Quandts are profiting off the money their ancestors made, and surely there are families suffering poverty or other losses as a direct result of the treatment thir ancestors received from the Quandts.

Just because the first affected generation is dead doesn't mean there are no on-going effects.
 


Top