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Nazi collaborator monuments

Nazi collaborator monuments in Mexico

A street named after a Nazi Party member who used slave labor during World War II

This list is part of an ongoing investigative project the Forward first published in January 2021 documenting hundreds of monuments around the world that honor people involved in the Holocaust. We are continuing to update each country’s list; if you know of any not included here, or of statues that have been removed or streets renamed, please email [email protected], subject line: Nazi monument project. 


Left: Max Brose in Nazi uniform (YouTube). Right: Nazi boycott of Jewish-owned store (Meyer Levenbach), Spitgalgasse, Coburg (coburger-juden.de). Image by Lev Golinkin

Colón – There is a street honoring Nazi Party member Max Brose (1884–1968) in the Airtech Industrial Park. Brose’s automotive company in Coburg, Germany used slave labor during World War II; some of the slaves, which included prisoners of war, were used to produce supplies for the German armed forces. Brose himself was appointed Wehrwirtschaftsführer (economic leader), a title given to business tycoons behind the Third Reich war machine. Above left, Brose in Nazi uniform.

The street bearing Brose’s name is located near the Mexico branch of his company, today called Brose Fahrzeuge. The firm has been rehabilitating Brose’s image into that of an industrial titan who deserved to be celebrated. In 2015, Brose’s billionaire grandson, who is the CEO of Brose Fahzeuge, successfully lobbied to have a street named in the company’s global headquarters in Coburg. This was done despite the vociferous protests from Germany’s largest organized Jewish community.

Many countries have legislation forbidding the use of Nazi symbols and glorification of Nazism. It’s unclear whether naming a street for a known Nazi Party member violates any Mexican law.

There are seven Max Brose streets around the world, each one located in a town that houses a Brose Fahrzeuge division. See the Brazil, Canada, Germany and Slovakia sections for more Brose streets. 

See coverage in the Financial Times, Focus Online (Google translation here), inFranken.de (Google translation here) and Süddeutsche Zeitung (Google translation here and here).  See New York Times coverage of an art world scandal regarding the Nazi fortune of Brose’s great-granddaughter.

Nazi march, Coburg, 1933 (Coburg City Archives). Image by Lev Golinkin

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