Haris brothers had to do it. It was thought that during the 2nd World War all correspondence, photos and documents were lots related to the Hungarian auto industry.
When István Zsuppán, the Haris brothers and Ferenc Váradi started collecting materials in the 1950s it soon became evident that there are gaping holes in the history. But the Haris brothers wanted international fame and for that they had to have complete stories so they filled out the gaps by making up stories...
I don't want to go into too much details, but there were monetary rewards as well. Arunas mentioned Nándor Hóra, who was a bicycle racer and later a repairman. He also built a few motorized quadricycles in the very early 1900s. Hóra was lucky enough to survive the 2nd World War. Both István Zsuppán and the Haris brothers visited him and took over some of his archive documents. A few years later the Haris brothers "found" a Hora automobile, a car which never existed.
I am a bit emotional on this as a librarian and an avid researcher of this topic for 17 years now, I am fighting an uphill battle to clean up the history of the Hungarian auto industry.
Please don't ask me about the Hungarian Museum of Transport and their role. That'd bring you another tirade
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