Nazi Holiday Camp to be auctioned (Agencies) Updated: 2004-08-27 17:22
The German government will try next month to auction off part of a 10,000
room hotel complex built by the Nazis as a holiday resort for soldiers and
workers.
Adolf Hitler commissioned the holiday camp at Prora on the Baltic island of
Ruegen in the 1930s as part of the Nazis' "Kraft durch Freude" ("Strength
Through Joy") program to create a healthy, strong nation capable of conquering
the world.
The outbreak of World War II meant the building was never opened as a hotel.
The eight austere concrete blocks, resembling a government ministry, were used
as a shelter for bombed-out refugees during the war, and as a barracks
afterwards.
"The government is selling Prora off as part of a large-scale national
campaign to release capital," said Martin Kehr of auction house Norddeutsche
Grundstuecksauktionen AG.
The starting price at the auction of a 2.5-km (1.5-mile) stretch of land
including the island's finest sandy beaches, five hotel blocks and forest land,
is just 125,000 euros ($151,000).
Berlin has tried unsuccessfully to sell it for over a decade. Keen to plug
budget holes, it has relaunched the sale, presenting the site as suitable for a
leisure complex.
But the people of Ruegen, who have painstakingly restored the island's
elegant 19th century resorts since communist rule ended in 1990, worry the sale
could hurt their livelihoods.
"Locals fear outside investors could turn the Nazi holiday camp into a
massive hotel with up to 5,000 beds," said Uwe Schwartz, who works at a local
museum about Prora.
"That could put Ruegen's smaller hotel businesses out of business and
overburden the island's infrastructure."
The 8 km stretch of uniform blocks, devoid of balconies and with rows of
small windows, is not an obvious choice for tourists in search of a relaxing
beach holiday.
But Kehr said he was optimistic he would find a buyer for the 76 hectares
(187.8 acres) coming under the hammer on September 23. "Our auction house has a
92 percent success rate and we're confident we will find a buyer for Prora,"
Kehr said.
Hitler's concept behind the Prora project was to provide affordable holidays
for up to 20,000 people at a time in what would have been one of the world's
first mass tourist resorts.
Each room was supposed to be identical offering a sea view. The huge
buildings, designed along utilitarian principles, evoke the Nazis' love of the
bombastic and hatred of individuality.
But museum spokesman Schwartz said the area's Nazi past need not be an
obstacle to future projects.
"It was the Nazi regime that was evil, not the building itself," said
Schwartz. "When visitors look at Prora, they are first impressed by its size,
not haunted by Hitler's specter."
"We must learn to get over the past. This huge expanse of land is there and
available, so why not use it?," Schwartz said.
Whatever the outcome of the sale, Prora's six-story complex will continue to
loom menacingly on the horizon.
"Prora has been declared an official monument and is now protected from
demolition," said Kehr. "It's like any other historically significant building
-- no one can knock it down so it will stand here for centuries to
come."
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