"I know no one ever believes us nowadays - everyone thinks we knew everything. We knew nothing, it was all kept well secret," she told the Guardian in a new interview ahead of the release of a film about her life.
Ms Pomsel is unapologetic even as she recalls her work manipulating data about war time casualties and otherwise keeping the wheels spinning in the German propaganda machine.
"It is important for me, when I watch the film, to recognise that mirror image in which I can understand everything I've done wrong," she says of A German Life, the upcoming documentary. "But really, I didn't do anything other than type in Goebbels' office."
She was thrilled to take the job, she says, noting the generous salary and describing the beautiful surroundings at the propaganda ministry.
But she says she was unaware of the mass atrocities being carried out by the regime she served.
"I know no one ever believes us nowadays - everyone thinks we knew everything. We knew nothing, it was all kept well secret," she told the Guardian in a new interview ahead of the release of a film about her life.
Ms Pomsel is unapologetic even as she recalls her work manipulating data about war time casualties and otherwise keeping the wheels spinning in the German propaganda machine.
"It is important for me, when I watch the film, to recognise that mirror image in which I can understand everything I've done wrong," she says of A German Life, the upcoming documentary.
"But really, I didn't do anything other than type in Goebbels' office."
She was thrilled to take the job, she says, noting the generous salary and describing the beautiful surroundings at the propaganda ministry.