Eduard Wald

Eduard Wald (March 10, 1905 – November 5, 1978) was a Communist politician, trade unionist and member of the German Resistance against Nazism.

Biography

Eduard Wald, known as Edu, was born in Kiel, Germany, where he attended school. He reached upper school, then received training as a gardener between 1921 and 1923. By 1923, he was already a member of the Young Communist League of Germany and in 1924, he joined the Communist Party (KPD). He soon became a member of the Lower Saxony district leadership, where he was responsible for agitation and propaganda and the Rotfrontkämpferbund. In 1926, he became the editor of the Niedersächsischen Arbeiterzeitung,[1] the Lower Saxony workers' newspaper and from 1926 to 1927, he was district treasurer. As editor of the newspaper, between 1926 and 1929, he was convicted of 12 different press violations. In 1929, he went to the Soviet Union for medical reasons, to be cured of a lung condition. On his return, he was active in the educational programs of the KPD.

He was a member of the Versöhnler, a group of KPD members critical of the ultra-left policies of KPD leader Ernst Thälmann and as a result, in 1929, lost his job in the Party, though he was not expelled until 1930.[1] He was unemployed until 1930, when he got a job at a factory and began to build a regional Versöhnler network both in and outside the KPD.

After the Nazi Party seized power in 1933, Wald was forced to go underground. He was able to build a Resistance group called the Committee for Proletarian Unity (Komitee für Proletarische Einheit).[2] Several hundred members strong, its focus was the Hanover area. He kept in close contact with the Versöhnler group organized by Hans Westermann in Hamburg and the Hannover Socialist Workers' Party under Otto Brenner. In 1934, Wald moved to Berlin, where he work to coordination the various Versöhnler groups around Germany. On May 11, 1936, he was arrested by the Gestapo and on June 30, 1937, he was sentenced at the Volksgerichtshof to 15 years' hard labor.[1] He was imprisoned at Emslandlager and at Brandenburg-Görden Prison with other political prisoners, including Erich Honnecker, later head of East Germany's Socialist Unity Party. Wald remained at Brandenburg-Görden until his release in April 1945.

In 1945, Wald again became a KPD party official in Lower Saxony. From August 23, 1946 to October 29, 1946, he was a representative in the State of Hanover legislature established under the British occupation forces. He also was one of those who held the newspaper license, required in postwar Germany, to publish a newspaper in Lower Saxony, the Niedersächsischen Volksstimme.[2] He held this position until 1948, when he withdrew from the Party over the "Russianization of the KPD".[2] In 1948, Wald became the leader of the Confederation of German Trade Unions in Lower Saxony and on the national level. In 1950, he published Feinde der Demokratie ("Enemies of the Democracy") and he became a member of the Social Democratic Party (SPD),[1] working closely with Sigmund Neumann, then head of the eastern office of the SPD.[2]

In 1977, Wald was quoted in Der Spiegel in an article about Honnecker's years in Brandenburg-Görden Prison.[3] Wald died in Lachen am Ammersee in 1978.

Personal

Wald was married twice. His son from his first marriage is the German journalist and author Peter Wald. He and his first wife were divorced in 1947. In November 1947, he married Orli Wald.[4] Otto Brenner was his first wife's brother.

Publications

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Eduard Wald Friedrich Ebert Stiftung Archiv der sozialen Demokratie. Retrieved July 16, 2011 (German)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Manfred Wilke (Ed.), Anatomie der Parteizentrale: die KPD/SED auf dem Weg zur Macht Akademie Verlag GmbH, Berlin (1998) pp. 481-482. ISBN 3-05-003220-0 Retrieved July 18, 2011 (German)
  3. "Farblos, scheu, wenig kameradschaftlich" Der Spiegel (October 31, 1977) p. 87. Retrieved July 18, 2011 (German)
  4. Biography of Orli Torgau-Wald Stolpersteine Trier. Retrieved July 14, 2011 (German)

Sources

External links