- Bernhard Bästlein
Bernhard Bästlein (
3 December 1894 inHamburg –18 September 1944 inBrandenburg an der Havel ) was a GermanCommunist and resistance fighter against the Nazi régime.Bästlein's roots were in a social-democratic family, and he was a precision mechanic by trade. In 1911, he joined the Socialist Worker Youth, and in 1914 the
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). In theFirst World War , he spent two years as asoldier on the Western Front. In 1918, he switched to theIndependent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD), whose left wing became part of theCommunist Party of Germany (KPD) in 1920, taking Bästlein along with it. In 1921, he was elected to the "Hamburgische Bürgerschaft", thelegislature of Hamburg. In March 1921, Bästlein took part in the "Märzkämpfe in Mitteldeutschland", a briefinsurgency in central Germany. He was sought by the police and fled to theSoviet Union . Early in 1923, he came back to Germany and edited partynewspaper s inDortmund ,Hagen ,Wuppertal ,Remscheid andSolingen (in 1929, he waseditor-in-chief of the "Bergische Arbeiterstimme" in Solingen). In 1929, he also became KPD deputy district leader inDüsseldorf , in 1931 political leader of the KPD Middle Rhine ("Mittelrhein") district, and in 1932 a member of thePrussian Landtag .In 1933, after
Hitler had come to power, the Nazis arrested Bernhard Bästlein and sentenced him, for "conspiracy to commithigh treason ", to 20 months in labour prison ("Zuchthaus"), and after his time was up, they further gave him four years in Dachau, Esterwegen andSachsenhausen concentration camp s. He was released in 1939 or 1940, whereafter he eked out a livelihood as a car washer and driver in Hamburg. There, in 1941, he built, along with Comrade Abshagen, a communist resistance group, the Bästlein Organization, which was first active in the Hamburgshipyard s, and which later boasted a network of contacts in northern Germany, inFlensburg ,Kiel ,Lübeck ,Rostock and Bremen. These connections were each overseen by a single leader to lessen the chances of the whole network being exposed to the Nazi authorities. Nevertheless, in October 1942, Bästlein, along with many other members of the organization, was arrested and sent for sentencing inBerlin .In November 1942, he justified his unlawful resistance to the
Gestapo : In his seven years ofpenal servitude in the "Zuchthaus" and the concentration camps, he had experienced ghastly things; his "conviction that a social order in which such things are possible must be eliminated" thereby became solid. The war that began in 1939 had "awoken all memories of the 1914-1918 war and strengthened his conviction that as long as the capitalist social order existed, there would again and again be wars which would destroy all feeling in human society and likewise result in tremendous loss of material wealth."An air raid on
Plötzensee Prison in Berlin made it possible for Bästlein to escape in January 1944. He managed to forge a connection with the KPD's operational leadership underAnton Saefkow , and to help in the creation of an illegal network of the Free Germany Movement ("Bewegung Freies Deutschland") in Berlin-Brandenburg. On30 May 1944 , he was once again arrested, on5 August , he was sentenced to death, and on18 September 1944 , Bernhard Bästlein was put to death at the Brandenburg "Zuchthaus".Literature
* Hermann Weber: "Die Wandlung des deutschen Kommunismus", Bd. 2, Frankfurt 1969, S. 65f
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