Klaus Bonhoeffer

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Klaus Bonhoeffer (born 5 January 1901 in Breslau, now Wrocław, Poland; died 23 April 1945 in Berlin) was a German jurist and resistance fighter against the Nazi régime.

Klaus Bonhoeffer's parents were professor of psychiatry and neurology Karl Bonhoeffer and his wife Paula (née von Hase).

Klaus Bonhoeffer, Dietrich Bonhoeffer's elder brother and later Hans von Dohnanyi's brother-in-law, with whom he went to the Grunewald-Gymnasium in Berlin, studied law in Heidelberg.

He received a doctorate for his thesis "Workers' Committees as an Organ of the Workers' Coöperative" (Die Betriebsräte als Organ der Betriebsgenossenschaft). He also had further training in Berlin, at the University of Geneva, and in Amsterdam. On 3 September 1930, he wed Emmi Delbrück, who was Hans Delbrück's daughter, and Justus and Max Delbrück's sister.

He worked as a lawyer and from 1935 as a legal adviser for Lufthansa, serving from 1937 to 1944 as chief syndic. This job took him on many business trips, even during the War.

In the years 1940 to 1944, he systematically forged contacts with various resistance groups working against the Nazi régime. Through his brother Dietrich Bonhoeffer, he had contacts with the church resistance, and through his brothers-in-law, Justus Delbrück, Hans von Dohnanyi and Rüdiger Schleicher, he had many contacts in the military resistance to Hitler, especially in the circle about Wilhelm Canaris in the Abwehr of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht. Through his wife's cousin Ernst von Harnack, he was connected to the social-democratic resistance. Klaus Bonhoeffer also led his colleague Otto John, among others, into the resistance. He used his travel opportunities to further the cause against the Nazis.

He was dedicated to the plans to assassinate Hitler on 20 July 1944 and overthrow the government.

According to the detention book kept at the Lehrter Straße prison in Berlin, where the Gestapo had a special section for political prisoners, Bonhoeffer was arrested on 1 October 1944 and sentenced to death at the Volksgerichtshof on 2 February 1945. On the night of 22-23 April 1945, as Soviet troops were already reaching Berlin's eastern outskirts, he was taken forth by a special squad from the Reichssicherheitshauptamt and killed with a shot to the neck.

The only eyewitness to these murders was Herbert Kosney, who managed to move his head at the last moment so that the shot meant for his neck missed.

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