Sopade
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Sopade (also called SoPaDe) was the name of the exile organization of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). It operated in Prague from 1933 to 1938 and from 1938 to 1945 in Paris.
After the occupation of the trade union houses by the Nazis on 2 May 1933, the party executive committee decided that some particularly endangered members of the board would immediately have to flee from the grasp of the Nazis. Otto Wels, Paul Hertz, Friedrich Stampfer, Erich Ollenhauer and others were assigned to build up a foreign party structure in Prague.
When the Sopade could not reach an agreement with the remaining party executive committee in Berlin about Paul Löbe against Hitler's peace resolution, which was interpreted as sanctioning the fascist foreign policy by the SPD, nothing could prevent the break between Berlin and Prague, which came two weeks later, in the mid-May 1933. Because of the final Nazi prohibition of the SPD on 22 June 1933 it no longer came to a split between the home and foreign SPD.
With the cooperation of Rudolf Hilferding the Sopade published Germany Reports through a secret correspondence system. These dealt with the situation in National Socialist the EN Germany internationally informed. The reports appeared in published form from April/May 1934 to December 1936 under the title Germany Report of the Sopade, from January 1937 until April 1940 under the title of “Germany Reports of the Social-Democratic Party of Germany (Sopade)”, by order of the executive committee in exile of the SPD, edited by Erich Rinner, until March 1938 in Prague, from May 1938 in Paris.
Under pressure from the intra-party opposition groups Neu Beginnen and Revolutionäre Sozialisten Deutschlands the Sopade in 1934 published the Prague Manifesto, penned by Rudolf Hilferding. This document called for the revolutionary overthrow of the Hitler regime.
[edit] Bibliography
- German Reports of the Sopade. From the copy in the “Archives of Social Democracy” of the Friedrich Ebert Foundation given change and with a register provided by Klaus Behnken in the Petra Netelbeck publishing house, Salzhausen and Zweitausendeins, Frankfurt am Main, 1980 (7 volumes).