Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Alfred Klahr

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Citizenship
  
Parents
  
Salman Klahr

Died
  
1944, Warsaw, Poland

Role
  
Austrian Politician

Name
  
Alfred Klahr


Alfred Klahr wwwklahrgesellschaftatFotosKlahrFotojpg

Born
  
Known for
  
Theory of Austrian Nation

Political party
  
Party
  
Communist Party of Austria

Alfred Klahr (16 September 1904, Vienna - 1944, Warsaw) was an Austrian communist politician, journalist and historian. He was the leading marxist intellectual and theorist in the First Austrian Republic.

Contents

Biography

Alfred Klahr was born on 16 September 1904 in Vienna. His father Salman Klahr worked as hazzan in Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien. Becoming a student at the University of Vienna, Alfred Klahr joined the Kommunistischen Jugendverband. From 1930 Klahr lived in Moscow and worked as representative of the Communist Youth Union of Austria. From 1935 to 1937 he taught in Austrian section of International Lenin School. In 1937 Klahr turned to Prague and worked in communist newspaper Weg und Ziel. From 1938 - after Anschluss and annexation of Czechoslovakia - Alfred Klahr was active in anti-nazi Austrian Resistance. From August 1942 he was detained in Auschwitz concentration camp (as Ludwig Lokmanis, prisoner number 58933). He was member of Kampfgruppe Auschwitz. 15 June 1944 Alfred Klahr (together with polish communist, PPR member, Stefan Bratkowski) managed to escape, but he died afterward, shot by the SS in nazi-occupied Warsaw.

Klahr's theory of the national question in Austria

In March and April 1937 Klahr published the series of articles titled Zur nationalen Frage in Österreich. In these texts he explain how the Austria emerged from the German part of Europe to take another political direction.

This permitted to understand the conflict between the clerical Austrofascism and the Pan-German Nazism, each being expression of different social classes.

In Auschwitz Klahr wrote the famous Auschwitz text, as a result of debates by Austrian and German communist detained in Auschwitz.

References

Alfred Klahr Wikipedia