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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ernst Aust (12 April 1923 – 25 August 1985) was a German communist political activist and journalist. He was the founder of the Communist Party of Germany/Marxist–Leninists (KPD/ML).[1]

Biography

Aust was born into a working-class family. During the Second World War, he was taken prisoner by the British. There he met German communists and began studying Marxist works. Aust became a member of the Communist Party of Germany and the Cultural Association for the Democratic Renewal of Germany.[2] From 1951 he worked as an editor of the Hamburger Volkszeitung.[3]

In 1953, Aust took over the coastal magazine Blinkfüer, which emerged from the Movement for the Liberation of Heligoland, on behalf of the party. Aust was a staunch opponent of de-Stalinization and sided with the People's Republic of China during the Sino-Soviet split. In June 1967, Aust began publishing the newspaper Roter Morgen.

On 31 December 1968, Aust founded the Communist Party of Germany/Marxist–Leninists (KPD/ML) in Hamburg – one of the first K-Gruppens in Germany. After the extraordinary party conference at the end of 1971, the party elected him as its chairman.[4]

The party later split several times. As early as 1970, Aust fell out with Willi Dickhut, the editor of the theoretical organ Revolutionärer Weg. Dickhut later became the founder of the Communist Workers' Association of Germany (KABD), a merger of the KPD/ML (Revolutionary Way) and the Communist Workers' Association/Marxist–Leninists (KAB/ML), the latter from which today's Marxist–Leninist Party of Germany later emerged. While Dickhut remained a Maoist even after the death of Mao Zedong, Aust followed the course of the Albanian communists under Enver Hoxha after 1978.[5]

References

  1. ^ Keefe, Eugene K. (1975). Area Handbook for the Federal Republic of Germany. American University, Foreign Area Studies. p. 231.
  2. ^ AZ (25 August 2020). "35. Todestag des Genossen Ernst Aust: Kämpfen wir für eine starke kommunistische Arbeiterpartei!". Arbeit-Zukunft (in German). Retrieved 14 November 2023.
  3. ^ "Für Ernst Aust, hoch die Faust!". junge Welt (in German). Retrieved 14 November 2023.
  4. ^ Brown, Timothy Scott (2013). West Germany and the global sixties: the anti-authoritarian revolt, 1962–1978. New studies in European history. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-02255-3.
  5. ^ Ernst Aust gestorben. Ehemaliger Vorsitzender der Kommunistischen Partei Deutschlands/Marxisten-Leninisten, in: Frankfurter Rundschau Nr. 197 vom 27. August 1985,
This page was last edited on 31 January 2024, at 08:19
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