Ursula Haverbeck, born on November eighth, nineteen twenty-eight, was a controversial German writer and activist known for her involvement in neo-Nazi movements. She gained notoriety for her persistent Holocaust denial, a criminal offense in Germany, which led to multiple lawsuits and convictions throughout her life.
Haverbeck's activism was deeply intertwined with her late husband, Werner Georg Haverbeck, a prominent figure in the Nazi Party's German Labour Front and a direct subordinate of Rudolf Heß. Together, they engaged in Holocaust denial since the nineteen eighties, with Ursula taking over her husband's ecofascist forum, Collegium Humanum, in nineteen ninety-nine. This platform became a significant part of her activism until its ban in two thousand eight.
Her repeated convictions for defamation and Volksverhetzung culminated in a prison sentence in two thousand fifteen, marking her as a martyr figure within the neo-Nazi community. By the time of her death in two thousand twenty-four, she was presumed to be the oldest Holocaust denier in Germany, having become a prominent and polarizing figure in the right-wing extremist scene.