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The Jew who created Hitler's people's car

A new book reveals the unexpected origins of the Volkswagen Beetle.

December 1, 2011 12:50
Josef Ganz (left) at the wheel of his “people car” prototype in 1933

By

Jessica Elgot,

Jessica Elgot

3 min read

Everyone thinks they know the story of the Volkswagen Beetle. Created by Ferdinand Porsche, under the guidance of Adolf Hitler, the Beetle is not only the most popular car of all time, it was the most successful project of the Nazis. But practically no one, says Dutch journalist Paul Schilperood, knows that the car was actually the brainchild of a Jewish engineer.

Schilperood has spent six years researching Josef Ganz, an innovative engineer and renegade journalist from Frankfurt, who sat at the wheel of his prototype small car, which he described as a "Volkswagen" ("people's car"), as early as 1931. Schilperood believes Ganz was deliberately erased from history by the Nazis because he was Jewish. "It gripped me, the idea that a Jew could be behind the most long-lasting thing the Nazis ever did. But is no exaggeration to say that the VW Beetle would not have existed without Josef Ganz.

"The actually construction of the VW Beetle is the same as Ganz's design and specifications, but the technical details have been changed, very slightly."

It was in 1923 Ganz, then an engineering student, sketched his first "people's car" design, but he lacked the money to build a prototype. He turned instead to journalism, hoping to influence car-builders. As editor of the controversial motoring magazine, Motor-Kritik, in the late 1920s, he preached his vision of a car for the masses with a rear-mounted engine and a streamlined shape.