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Saving the Ludwig von Mises Papers:

How the Holocaust Museum Helped


Uncover a Nazi Treasure Trove in
Moscow
BY STEVE MARIOTTI
As I reported in The Economic Philosopher's Outcast: Mises, the great Austrian economist
Ludwig von Mises narrowly escaped capture by the Gestapo after the Nazis occupied Vienna in
March 1938. What I didn't mention is that he was forced to leave his voluminous papers behind
-- a painful experience for any writer!

(Wikipedia)
Although the Gestapo failed to nab Mises, who had escaped to Switzerland, they ransacked his
apartment at 24 Wollseile, confiscating his manuscripts, articles, university lectures and
extensive correspondence with many of the greatest thinkers of his time.
The Nazis were after Mises not only because he was Jewish, but because he was a brilliant,
outspoken opponent of social engineering and central planning. Mises championed a free-
market economy as the best way to protect individual liberties, spur innovation and raise living
standards. He argued that Germany's spiraling inflation was a result of government
mismanagement of monetary and banking systems. As a result, Ebeling notes, "both fascists and
communists hated him."
Mises founded the Austrian Institute for Business Cycle Research in 1926, with a young
Friedrich A. Hayek as its first director. As a senior economic analyst for Vienna's Chamber of
Commerce, Mises railed against waves of interventionist and socialist legislation implemented
by the Austrian parliament. Mises held salons at his home that brought together the best young
minds in Vienna to discuss the dangers of socialism for European economies and for human
liberty. Mises was an advocate of entrepreneurship who argued that entrepreneurs created
much of society's wealth. No wonder Hitler was threatened by him!
In 1940, Professor Mises emigrated to the United States, where he taught at New York
University until age 87 and wrote many influential articles and books, including his masterpiece
Human Action: A Treatise on Economics. Sadly, Mises died believing his papers had been
destroyed by the Nazis.

(Wikipedia)
Miraculously, though, his long-lost papers were discovered in a secret Moscow archive in 1996
by American economist and Mises scholar Richard Ebeling -- who has been my friend for 30
years.
During World War II, the Nazis stored literally tons of art, musical scores, manuscripts and
other intellectual property on boxcars. According to Ebeling, 24 boxcars packed with documents
were moved to Bohemia in western Czechoslovakia. When Bohemia was "liberated" by the
Soviets in 1945, soldiers who came across the boxcars contacted Stalin's secret service.
The agents quickly grasped the incredible value of what they'd found and informed Stalin, who
ordered the boxcars brought to Moscow. Over "20 million pages of captured documents, from
20 Nazi-occupied countries" were stored in a nondescript building called the Center for the
Preservation of Historical Documentary Collections that Stalin had built on the outskirts of
town. For decades, only the KGB and Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs had access to this top-
secret archive, which included papers by Mises, Albert Einstein and Immanuel Kant -- even
original scores by Wolfgang Mozart.
After hearing rumors that Mises's papers might have survived the war, Ebeling made inquiries
at the Holocaust Museum in D.C. The museum researchers found no mention of Mises in their
database, but on a hunch Ebeling asked if there could possibly be anything related to Mises in
Moscow.
Museum staff member Karl Modek came over to talk to Ebeling. Modek was looking into a
Soviet archive of documents that had recently been declassified, and had just received an index
of the archive. In the index, Ebeling and Modek found the name "Ludwig Mises," with "Fund
#623" printed next to it.
Thrilled by this discovery, Ebeling returned to Hillsdale College, where he was Ludwig von
Mises Professor of Economics, and raised funds from the school to travel to Moscow to explore
mysterious Fund #623.
At the Center for the Preservation of Historical Documentary Collections, Ebeling and his
Russian-born wife, Anna, found Fund #623. It contained over 10,000 pages that took them 10
days to go through and photocopy. They wore out the Center's copier!
The papers prove, Ebeling says, that "Ludwig von Mises was one of the most important free-
market economists and philosophers of freedom in our time."
According to Ebeling:
These thousands of pages of archival material bring to light a new side of Ludwig von Mises.
Here we see Mises as more than just the brilliant economic theorist demonstrating the
unworkability of socialist central planning and the inherent contradictions of the interventionist
state, or as the grand expositor of a universal theory of human action and the market process.
We see Mises as serious and methodical policy analyst in the twenty years between the two
World Wars -- one who explains how to save a society facing a hyperinflation by introducing an
alternative currency in place of the debased government money; how to bring an economy out of
a great depression; how to rein in an interventionist bureaucracy that is strangling a market
economy; how to end foreign exchange controls that are distorting and hindering international
trade; or how to construct a fiscal policy so it no longer stifles investment and capital formation.
Ebeling supervised and edited the translations of Mises papers, which have been published in
the three-volume Selected Writings of Ludwig von Mises (Liberty Fund). He is currently a
professor of economics at Northwood University in Midland, Michigan.
Source: Richard M. Ebeling, "Mission to Moscow: The Mystery of the 'Lost Papers' of Ludwig
von Mises," Notes from FEE (Irvington-on-Hudson, NY: Foundation for Economic Education,
July 2004).

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