Gerhard Dengler (29 May 1914 in Reinhausen – 3 January 2007 in Hennigsdorf) was an East German writer, print and broadcast journalist, and (briefly) newspaper editor.[1]
Life
Early years
Gerhard Dengler's father was the noted Forestry ScientistAlfred Dengler (1874–1944). He grew up in Eberswalde where his father was a professor and at one stage rector of the Forestry Academy. Gerd studied Journalism in Berlin and then in Munich from 1934 till 1939. Between 1935 and 1937 he undertook his military service in an Artillery Regiment in Frankfurt. On 1 May 1937 he was admitted into the NSDAP (Nazi party). He was also a member of the party's quasi-military wing, the Sturmabteilung (SA), having been in the youth branch of a precursor organisation, Der Stahlhelm since 1932.[2][3]
War
In 1939 his studies led to a doctorate, which he received shortly before being recalled to the army.[4] His unit fought against Poland and against France, where he was temporarily the Location commander for Autun. He was then sent to the Eastern front and took part in the Battle of Stalingrad[4] as an ArmyCaptain.[1] He surrendered with his unit at the start of 1943 and became a member of the National Committee for a Free Germany, an alliance of exiled German soldiers who had become communist prisoners of war, now held in the Soviet Union.[4] His switch from mainstream Nazism would prove heartfelt and enduring, and he paid a high personal price: his father, on learning that Gerhard had become a Communist, took his own life in October 1944.[4] Looking back in 1949, applying the then fashionable language of European Marxism, Gerhard Dengler spoke to a regional party congress of how he had "separated himself from his class".[5][6] Many decades later, in a wide ranging and thought provoking radio interview broadcast in 2001, he explained how the outdated bourgeois preconceptions and the bourgeois social outlook with which he had grown up had been incinerated in the [cauldron of] Stalingrad.[4][7]
After returning to Berlin in 1958 Dengler became the chief commentator for Deutschlandsender, the country's national radio station, taking the position over from Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler.[1] In 1959 he took on the vice-chairmanship of the National Presidium Council of the East German National Front,[1] a political grouping of minor political parties and mass movements, each having a fixed quota of seats in the National Assembly (Volkskammer), and controlled through the National Front by the country's ruling SED (party). In 1966 he became Vice-president of the National Front's National Council with responsibility for "West work", a position he held till 1969.[1] From 1962 till 1967 he headed up the working group in the National Council on Braunbuch, a book that appeared in several editions and enjoyed large print-runs, and which detailed how numerous former Nazis continued to hold positions of power and influence in West Germany and in the West more generally. (West Germany responded with a "Braunbuch" of its own detailing former Nazis who had turned up in positions of power and influence in East Germany.[8])
Gerhard Dengler lived long enough to see the changes that led to German reunification in 1990. In extreme old age he gave a number of media interviews reflecting on some of the decisions he had made.[4] He expressed no regrets over his decision to become a Communist.
"Of course we were Stalinists [in 1943]. Stalin, for us, was the hero who had defeated us in front of Moscow and in front of Stalingrad."[9][10]
^"Meine bürgerliche überkommene Anschauung und Gesinnung von dieser bürgerlichen Gesellschaft, in der ich groß geworden bin, die war in Stalingrad verbrannt." German sources frequently refer to the Battle of Stalingrad as a "kettle" operation, recalling to the way German army were surrounded and "cooked" when the Soviets regrouped and counter-attacked.
^Olaf Kappelt: Braunbuch DDR. Nazis in der DDR. Reichmann Verlag, Berlin (West) 1981. ISBN3-923137-00-1
^"Natürlich waren wir Stalinisten ... Stalin war der Held für uns. Er hatte uns vor Moskau besiegt und vor Stalingrad."
^"Das war mein zweites Stalingrad .... zu erfahren, dass Stalin mehr Kommunisten umgebracht hatte als Hitler."
^"In einem Bauernhaus bekamen wir Tee, ein Stück geröstetes Brot und Trockenfisch. Die Russen haben mich nicht erschossen, sondern ihr Brot mit mir geteilt."