Quote Originally Posted by Hax View Post
See, I knew we'd all agree.
I hate it when that happens.

All my hope now is with PJ....

Quote Originally Posted by Husar View Post
The clever traitor gets out of the country before he can be caught.
Should that be so? What of people who stay and put up a fight?


Ossietzky was befriended to Tucholsky, another Weimar journalist. Both men full well realised in 1933 what was coming. Ossietzky decided to stay. He died in 1936. Tucholsky (Jewish) went into exile in 1933. He took his own life in 1935. Neither man even reached the age of fifty.
Both men were dead, even before the world had come to understand what both men had been warning about for their last fifteen years. The books of both men were among the first batch of books the Nazis burned.

At the beginning of the 1930s it became clear to Tucholsky that his warnings were falling on deaf ears, and that his actions in favour of the Republic, for democracy and human rights were apparently to no effect. It was a crushing blow to him, as he recognised the danger approaching with Adolf Hitler. "They are preparing to head towards the Third Reich" he wrote, years before Hitler's Machtübernahme in 1933, and was under no deception as to where Hitler's chancellorship would take the country. Erich Kästner, looking back in 1946, described him as the "little fat Berliner" who wanted to "prevent a catastrophe with his typewriter".




Another vile traitor:
The journalist and writer Kurt Tucholsky (1890-1935), who undoubtedly wielded one of the Weimar Republic’s most caustic pens, would have turned 120 this year . He was an outstanding literary critic as well as being an astute observer of contemporary political and social developments.

Born in Berlin on January 9, 1890, Tucholsky remains the archetypal figure of the controversial left-wing intellectual, grappling with his tumultuous epoch while at the same time searching for inner peace. Like Heine, Tucholsky lived in Paris and actively sought to promote understanding between the Germans and the French.

The son of a Jewish banker who died when he was only 15, Tucholsky studied law before being conscripted and sent to the Eastern Front during the First World War. He did his first journalistic work while still a young man, but it wasn’t until 1919, in the Weimar Republic, that he made a name for himself as a politically committed journalist and writer. His name is closely associated with the journal “Die Weltbühne” (The World Stage), to which he was a major contributor, writing under various pseudonyms, and for which he worked as a Paris correspondent in the 1920s.

The author of roughly one hundred books and several thousand newspaper articles, Tucholsky was one of the Weimar Republic’s best-known journalists. He was and remained a fierce advocate of democracy, expressing regret that the revolution failed to materialize, although there were socialists among those in power. In the early 1920s, Tucholsky was one of the defenders of liberal democracy, the foundations of which were repeatedly shaken by political murders.
A pacifist by conviction, who detested the contemporary aristocracy’s militarism and who championed human rights, Tucholsky divided public opinion with his statement “soldiers are murderers”. He presciently denounced the rise of the National Socialists long before Hitler came to power. Deprived of his German citizenship, he was one of the first Germans to go into exile, permanently settling in the Swedish town of Hindas near Gotheburg from 1930 onwards. It was there that he took his own life in 1935, plagued by physical and psychological problems.

http://www.germanyandafrica.diplo.de...Tucholsky.html