Socialist Patients' Collective

Socialist Patients' Collective

Infobox militant organization
name = Socialist Patients' Collective

caption =
dates = 1968 - June 1971, (1973-)
leader = Dr. Wolfgang Huber
motives = 'Liberation from Iatrocapitalism'
area = Heidelberg University, West Germany
ideology = 'Pro-illness' (often considered an extension of anti-psychiatry), Radical left
crimes =
attacks =
status = Largely disbanded following a stint as "Informations Zentrum Rote Volks-Universität" from July 1971. Partially absorbed into the "Red Army Faction".(Ostensibly continued as a licit organisation, "Patientenfront" from 1973, later "SPK/PF(H)")

The Socialist Patients' Collective (in German the "Sozialistisches Patientenkollektiv") also known as the SPK and the Patients' Front (in German "Patientenfront"), or PF, was a leftist German patients' group of the late 1960s/early 1970s fighting against medicine and doctors as enemies of the "patients' class", seeing capitalism as the reason for illness and trying to see "illness as a weapon" against capitalist society. [ [http://www.baader-meinhof.com/terminology/terms/spk.html baader-meinhof.com] this is baader-meinhof / terminology / SPK]

History

The group was officially founded in February of 1970 by Doctor Wolfgang Huber of Heidelberg University. It began when Huber was sacked from his position in the University clinic because he refused to co-operate with the rest of the psychiatric department. This led to his group therapy patients staging protests and eventually occupying the administration offices of the University. Huber warned the director of the University that some of his group therapy patients may commit suicide if he wasn't allowed to work with them again, so Huber was reinstated with full pay and given the use of 4 rooms from the university.

During their group therapy sessions, the SPK were supposed to be discussing dialectics, Marxism, religion, education and sexuality, but in reality their working circles were based on explosives, radio transmission, photography, judo and karate.

A mentally ill girl was once sent away from Huber's group therapy because he said that after two weeks she had made "no noticeable political progress."Fact|date=February 2007

Dissolution and the IZRU

When parts of the group turned militant Huber was imprisoned (June 1971) and the group eventually dissolved. They changed their title to IZRU or Information Zentrum Rote Volks-Universität (in English; "Information Center of the Red People's University") and proposed the formation of guerrilla cells however most members soon joined the ranks of the leftist Red Army Faction, a large terrorist organisation.

Ideology

Members of the early/original SPK (before its dissolution), according to Jillian Becker, believed that the 'late-capitalist performance society of the Federal Republic' was sick and that it therefore kept producing physically or psychologically sick people. Therefore they believed in order for society to be cured it must undergo revolution - a violent revolution, if necessary. Becker states that members of the SPK believed that to cure their own personal mental disorders they had to execute violent attacks on 'society.' They therefore saw their illness as a weapon against society and despised doctors and capitalism and saw them as enemies of the 'patient class.'

One of the SPK's slogans was:

"The system has made us sick. Let us strike the death blow to the sick system."

The SPK today

A group of some individuals, amongst them Ingeborg Muhler, a lawyer in Mannheim, still claim to be legal successors to the original SPK group and claim to be the only "pro-illness" group in the world.

Notable Members

Notable members of the SPK include:

*Doctor Wolfgang Huber
*Ursula Huber
*Klaus Junschke
*Margrit Schiller
*Gerhard Muller
*Carmen Roll
*Siegfried Hausner

ources and notes

*Book: Hitler's Children by Jillian Becker
*Book: Televisionaries (Televisionaries: the red army faction story 1963-1993) by Tom Vague

Further reading

*Book: by Wolfgang Huber
* [http://www.spkpfh.de/index_english.html Socialist Patients' Collective/Patients' Front SPK/PF (H)]
* [http://www.spkpfh.de/Timeline.htm Timeline]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Collectivization in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic — Holodomor topics Historical background Famines in Russia and USSR · Soviet famine of 1932–1933 Soviet government Institutions: All Union Communist Party (Bolshevik) · Communist Party (Bolshevik) of Ukraine · …   Wikipedia

  • Margrit Schiller — Born 1948 Bonn, Germany Organization Socialist Patients Collective, Red Army Faction Margrit Schiller (born March 1948) was a West German militant leftist associated with the Socialist Patients Collective and later the second generation Red Army… …   Wikipedia

  • SPK — may refer to:* Scandinavic acronym for Spurning, Prósent and Kontrol (Icelandic) (English: Question, Present and Control ) and it is used by Scandinavic kids in a way alike that of truth or dare. * Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund or Statens …   Wikipedia

  • Red Army Faction — Infobox terrorist organization name = Red Army Faction caption = Later design of the RAF s insignia showing a Red Star and MP5 dates = 1970 – 1998 leader = motives = Armed resistance to perceived fascist tendencies area = West Germany ideology =… …   Wikipedia

  • Brigitte Mohnhaupt — Infobox revolution biography name = Brigitte Margret Ida Mohnhaupt lived = June 24, 1949 ndash; dateofbirth = Birth date and age|1949|6|24|mf=y placeofbirth = Rheinberg, West Germany alternate name = movement = organizations = Socialist Patients… …   Wikipedia

  • Colectivo Socialista de Pacientes — El Colectivo Socialista de Pacientes (en alemán Sozialistisches Patientenkollektiv, y conocido por sus siglas SPK) fue una organización izquierdista de pacientes psiquiátricos de la Policlínica de la Universidad de Heidelberg, fundada por… …   Wikipedia Español

  • David Cooper (psychiatrist) — For other people of the same name, see David Cooper (disambiguation). David Graham Cooper (born 1931 in Cape Town, South Africa; died 1986 in Paris, France) was a British psychiatrist, theorist and leader in the anti psychiatry movement. Cooper… …   Wikipedia

  • Members of the Red Army Faction — Red Army Faction Insignia. The Red Army Faction (RAF) operated in Germany from the late 1960s to 1998, committing numerous crimes, especially in the autumn of 1977, which led to a national crisis that became known as German Autumn . The RAF was… …   Wikipedia

  • Siegfried Hausner — (24 January 1952 – 5 May, 1975) was a student member of the German SPK (Socialist Patients Collective) and later the terrorist Red Army Faction. As a TerroristAs a leading member of the SPK, Hausner was especially involved in the working circle… …   Wikipedia

  • CIA transnational anti-terrorism activities — This article deals with activities of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) related to terrorism. Especially after the CIA lost its coordinating role over the entire Intelligence Community (IC), it is impossible to understand US… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”