Gerald Götting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gerald Götting (born 9 June 1923) was an East German Christian Democratic (CDU) politician.

Contents

[edit] Life

Götting was born in Nietleben, Province of Saxony. During the Second World War he worked in the Reichsarbeitsdienst, an auxiliary support and supply organization, and served as a Wehrmacht soldier. He was briefly held as a prisoner of war by US forces in 1945.

Following the conclusion of the war, Götting joined the East German Christian Democratic Union in 1946. He then spent two years at the Martin Luther University of Halle, where he studied Germanism, history and philology.

In 1949, Götting became General Secretary of the CDU and, after the establishment in the Soviet Zone of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), began his career as a member of the People's Chamber (Volkskammer), the East German legislative body, in which he served for the next forty years. During that time Götting came to hold a number of influential positions within the East German state: from 1949 to 1963, he served as the Chairman of the CDU faction in the People's Chamber; from 1958 to 1963 as Deputy Prime Minister of the GDR; and from 1963 to November 1989 Götting served as Deputy Chairman of the Council of State, a position equivalent in rank to the vice-presidency of the GDR. Götting also served as Chairman of the People's Chamber from 1969 to 1976 and as its Vice-Chairman from 1969 to 1989. Finally, Goetting was elected Chairman of the CDU at its 1966 party congress. As chairman, he worked closely with the other parties that formed the National Front and with the Socialist Unity Party of Germany, and during his party leadership published brochures exploring the relationship between Christianity and socialism.

Götting held a number of other positions in East German society. From 1961 to 1969 Götting was Vice-President of the German-African Society, and from 1963 he was a member of the Albert Schweitzer Committee. He visited with Schweitzer twice, which meetings he recorded and publicized in his book “Begegnungen mit Albert Schweitzer“. In 1976 Götting was elected Chairman of the People's Friendship League of the GDR.

On 2 November 1989, just days before the official opening of the Berlin Wall, Götting was forced to resign as Chairman of the CDU. He then resigned from his position as a member of the Council of State five days later on November 7th. He was arrested one month later, but released in February 1990. Goetting was later charged with stealing the party funds and was expelled from the CDU in February 1991.

[edit] Citation

"...here is our fatherland, to which we are tied and which we actively design..." [1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ On a meeting of the leadership of the CDU (DDR) on August 22, 1989, cited in Die Transformation der DDR-Blockparteien während und nach der politischen Wende http://paper.olaf-freier.de/blockpt.htm#31

[edit] See also

[edit] Bibliography

  • Götting, Gerald, Der Christ zagt ja zum Sozialismus (1960)
  • Götting, Gerald, Begegnung mit Albert Schweitzer (1961)
  • Götting, Gerald, Christen und Marxisten in gemeinsamer Verantwortung (1974)
  • Götting, Gerald, Christliche Demokraten auf dem Weg in die 90e Jahre (1988)
  • Götting, Gerald, Prediger für eine gerechte Welt (1989)
  • Götting,Gerald, Nowak,Kurt "Paul Gerhard Braune. Ein Christ der Tat" 1988 ISBN 3-92246-357-6
  • Childs, David, The GDR: Moscow's German Ally. London: George Allen & Unwin (1983)
Preceded by
Johannes Dieckmann
President of the Volkskammer
1969–1976
Succeeded by
Horst Sindermann