Angora project
Encyclopedia
The Angora rabbit project was a project administered by the SS for breeding Angora rabbit
Angora rabbit
The Angora rabbit is a variety of domestic rabbit bred for its long, soft wool. The Angora is one of the oldest types of domestic rabbit, originating in Ankara , Turkey, along with the Angora cat and Angora goat. The rabbits were popular pets with French royalty in the mid 18th century, and spread...

s. The objective was to provide fur for the linings
Lining (sewing)
In sewing and tailoring, a lining is an inner layer of fabric, fur, or other material inserted into clothing, hats, luggage, curtains, handbags and similar items....

 of jackets for Luftwaffe pilots. Angora rabbits were raised in Nazi concentration camps, including Auschwitz, Buchenwald and Dachau.

Many of the artifacts left by Nazi Germany could be considered bizarre, as the beautifully bound volume http://wisconsinhistory.org/whi/fullRecord.asp?id=44239 covered in woven gray wool, titled "Angora." It belonged to Heinrich Himmler
Heinrich Himmler
Heinrich Luitpold Himmler was Reichsführer of the SS, a military commander, and a leading member of the Nazi Party. As Chief of the German Police and the Minister of the Interior from 1943, Himmler oversaw all internal and external police and security forces, including the Gestapo...

, the chief of the SS in Nazi Germany and head of its concentration camps. Himmler's "Angora" album, which he hid in a farmhouse with his other papers near the end of World War II, tells the story of the Angora rabbit project that operated in all the Nazi concentration camps, including Auschwitz, Buchenwald and Dachau.

Chicago Tribune war correspondent Sigrid Schultz found the book in its hiding place near Himmler's Alpine villa, and described the significance of the Angora project:
In the same compound where 800 human beings would be packed into barracks that were barely adequate for 200, the rabbits lived in luxury in their own elegant hutches. In Buchenwald, where tens of thousands of human beings starved to death, rabbits enjoyed beautifully prepared meals. The SS men who whipped, tortured, and killed prisoners saw to it that the rabbits enjoyed loving care.


The rabbits were raised for their soft, warm fur, which was shaved and used for, among other things, the linings of jackets for Luftwaffe pilots. Himmler had given speeches bragging that "We Germans are the only people in the world who have a decent attitude towards animals." He also described his prisoners in the camps
as "human animals" but added that "it is a crime against our blood to worry about them."

Few accounts of the Nazi angora rabbit project have survived, though American soldiers at one camp reported that when prisoners were asked to slaughter the rabbits at the end of the war to make stew, they couldn't bear to do it.

Today, the book is housed at the Wisconsin Historical Society. Photographs, charts and maps from Himmler's "Angora" are among the more than 27,000 images available in the Wisconsin Historical Society's digital collections.

"Angora" was featured in a Wisconsin Historical Images http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/whi/ online gallery in March 2007.

External links

  • Angora: Rabbit Raising in German Concentration Camps - The Angora project was an SS-administered program to breed rabbits for their soft fur. Discovered by journalist Sigrid Schultz
    Sigrid Schultz
    Sigrid Schultz was a notable American reporter and war correspondent in an era when women were a rarity in both print and radio journalism.-Background:...

    , the album serves as a stark reminder of a brutal regime that valued animals more than its people. Available on Wisconsin Historical Images, the Wisconsin Historical Society's online image database.


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