No Future without Remembrance
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As a responsible company, Bayer wants to foster resilience against antisemitism and other totalitarian ideologies to prevent history from repeating – today and tomorrow. That is why we are driving extensive initiatives for research and remembrance work around the time of I.G. Farben. By consciously reflecting on our role in history, we are working on our ethical framework as a global societal actor and aim to strengthen a corporate culture that lives up to our values and principles.
In 1925, six German companies took the decision to form a community of interests – Interessengemeinschaft Farbenindustrie AG, or I.G. Farben for short. Farbenfabriken vorm. Friedr. Bayer & Co was one of the founding members. Today’s Bayer AG emerged from I.G. Farben in 1952.
The question of how to deal responsibly with one’s own past – in particular the legacy of I.G. Farben during the crimes of the Nazi era and their continuities – is always relevant. Bayer therefore contributes to a new culture of remembrance within the company – and beyond. Several initiatives have started to drive research and remembrance work around the legacy of I.G. Farben during the Second World War.
Shaping Remembrance. Advancing Research. Strengthening Resilience.
The Hans and Berthold Finkelstein Foundation strengthens the culture of remembrance at Bayer and supports research and remembrance projects on the crimes of the National Socialists - in particular on the subject of Nazi forced labor and I.G. Farben. It also develops programs for a corporate and management culture characterized by historical responsibility, for democratic action and promotes dialogue-oriented educational projects to strengthen resilience to hatred and totalitarianism.
Bayer established the independent Hans and Berthold Finkelstein Foundation in 2023.
The Hans and Berthold Finkelstein Foundation is based on three inter-related pillars:
Dealing with the legacy of I.G. Farben, shaping contemporary remembrance and making the stories of victims and perpetrators visible, in particular with regard to Nazi forced labor.
Helping to close gaps in research into the role of companies during the National Socialist regime and making the findings accessible to the public.
Strengthening resilience to anti-Semitism, racism, all forms of hatred, totalitarianism and (digital) violence – in the present and in the future.
The foundation aims to deal with the legacy of I.G. Farben, shape contemporary remembrance and make the stories of victims and perpetrators visible, in particular with regard to Nazi forced labor.
Annette Schavan, former Federal Minister of Education and Research and long-standing member of the German Bundestag, was appointed Chairwoman of the advisory council. Since 2019, Schavan also serves as Chair of the Board of Trustees of the EVZ Foundation.
In the history of the Finkelsteins, we look at Dr. Hans Finkelstein and his son Berthold, who both had connections to I.G. Farben and are representative of the fate of Jewish people at I.G. Farben during National Socialism and the Second World War. Their stories came to light during research activities in the Bayer archives. We know that many more stories like these have remained and will perhaps remain hidden. We can only tell them through extensive and systematic research and a targeted examination of the past. The research is still ongoing and we continue to support it.
By telling stories like these of Hans and Berthold Finkelstein, we are helping to keep their memory alive. We want to ensure that neither their fate nor that of other victims is ever forgotten.
Learn more about the fate of the Finkelstein family.
Further historical background on forced labor and I.G. Farben, the Foundation team, its activities and funding guidelines are available here.
Memorial for the victims of forced labor at the Lower Rhine sites of I.G. Farben
To promote a company culture guided by remembrance and reflection, Bayer has built a memorial for the victims of forced labor at I.G. Farben during the Second World War next to its Headquarters in Leverkusen. The memorial honors the approximately 16,000 forced laborers from numerous occupied countries in Europe who were deployed at the Lower Rhine sites to expand production from 1940 to 1945. According to available documents, approximately one-third of these forced laborers were women. Most were between 17-23 years old when they arrived, and there were also children among them.
The memorial was designed and built by an interdisciplinary group of artists and designers led by Professor Jussi Ängeslevä from ART+COM Studios. The intent was to create a physical and artistic interpretation of an original dataset containing information from the Bayer archives about the approximately 16,000 people. Located at the very heart of the company in Leverkusen, the place is also designed to enable an individual engagement with the past.
The computationally designed sculpture of wood, steel and living plants will intentionally transform over time due to the forces of nature, reminding employees and visitors that remembering the past is imperative when thinking of the future. The physical installation is augmented by a site-specific mobile app that helps visitors decipher its unique form and obtain impressions of various data: from spatial references to demographic details and personnel documents of 26 forced laborers of I.G. Farben who are quoted verbatim. The examples reveal the fates of the forced laborers and make the perspective of those responsible explicitly clear.
Supporting the Pears Jewish Campus in Berlin
To actively promote Jewish life in Germany and further embed the legacy of Hans and Berthold Finkelstein in the company's remembrance culture, Bayer has sponsored three student labs within the Hans-Finkelstein-Wing at the Pears Jewish Campus Berlin.
Four years after construction began, the Jewish Campus (PJC) in Berlin was opened in June 2023. The 8000 m2 interfaith campus is based on three pillars: education, culture and sports. The education facilities now also include Bayer science labs, allowing students to study chemistry in a state-of-the-art setting.
Apart from financial support, Bayer and the Campus will engage in a long-term ideational partnership: Bayer scientists will design additional educational formats to promote science among students.
The wing was named after Dr. Hans Finkelstein, as was the Hans and Berthold Finkelstein Foundation recently established by Bayer.
Open doors to the company archive
The Heritage Communications department – Bayer's historical archive – has been accessible for interested scientists since the 1960s. The first study on the role of industrial companies during National Socialism and the Second World War, in which files from the archive were used, was published in 1972. Since then, several scientific papers have been created based on documents from the archive, which deal with a wide variety of aspects of the company's history - and in particular with the era of I.G. Farbenindustrie AG.
Bayer is one of the founding members of the German “Remembrance, Responsibility and Future” (EVZ) Foundation initiated by the federal government. The primary motive behind its founding in 2000 was the payment of humanitarian compensation to former forced laborers of the Nazi regime. After the end of the payment programs, the foundation’s mission is “to keep the memory of National Socialist persecution alive and to work for human rights and international understanding”.
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