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Felix Fechenbach

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Felix Fechenbach
Born28 January 1894
Died7 August 1933(1933-08-07) (aged 39)
Kleinenberg forest
Cause of deathExecution by shooting
NationalityGerman
OccupationJournalist

Felix Fechenbach (28 January 1894 – 7 August 1933) was a German journalist, poet and political activist. He served as State-Secretary in the government of Kurt Eisner that overthrew the Bavarian Wittelsbach Monarchy. After its overthrow, he worked as a newspaper editor during the Weimar period. After the Nazi seizure of power, he was arrested and later executed.

He was born in Mergentheim, the son of a lower-middle-class Jewish family.[1] Felix Fechenbach was the son of Noe Fechenbach and Rosalie Fenchenbach. He grew up in poverty. He had four brothers called Max, Siegbert, Mortiz, Abraham, and Jackob Fechenbach. His first job was delivering bread with his older brother Abraham in the town of Würzburg. His first best friend was called Stoffele, the girl next door. Unfortunately, she died at age 7; every time her name was mentioned, he would burst into tears. He started his very first apprenticeship at age 13 at a shoe store.[2][3][4]

He took vocational education in Würzburg until 1910. Later, he worked in a shoe store. In 1911 he secured work in Frankfurt but was later fired for union-activity and because of a strike he led.[1] From 1912 until 1914, he was a party secretary of the SPD in Munich, he served in World War I was wounded, became a pacifist, later becoming state secretary (1918–1919).[1] During World War I he was a pacifist and served as Private Secretary for Kurt Eisner, the prime minister of Bavaria, shortly after the war.[1]

Felix Fechenbach later married Martha Fechenbach on 27 April 1894, and to Irma Epstein on 16 October 1895, and he had a total of three children. After he was killed by an approaching SA commando, on his way to the Dachau concentration camp, his late wife Irma Epstein was able to escape with their children.[2][3][4]

He was jailed in 1922 for publishing secret diplomatic telegrams while Staats Secretary under Eisner, before the Bavarian Soviet Republic. The decision was a scandal because the court at that time had no standing under the Weimar Constitution. He was pardoned in 1924.[1] He thereafter travelled to Berlin and worked for Kinderfreunde (Friends of Children) and criticised the SPD in his children's stories while still a member of the party.[1]

In 1929, he became the editor in chief of the SPD newspaper Volksblatt in Detmold.[1] On 11 March 1933 he was jailed by the new Nazi government for his anti-fascist activities, and was shot on 7 August by members of the SS and SA in a forest between Detmold and Warburg while being transported to the Dachau concentration camp.

There are two schools named after Fechenbach: the Felix-Fechenbach Gesamtschule in Leopoldshoehe and the Felix-Fechenbach Berufskolleg in Detmold.[5] A street in Detmold and in Oerlinghausen was also named after him.

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Transcription

Works by Felix Fechenbach

Im Haus der Freudlosen, J. H. W. Nachfolger, Berlin 1925.

Im Haus der Freudlosen: Als Justizopfer im Zuchthaus Erbach, revised edition edited by Roland Flade Koenigshausen & Neumann, Wuerzburg 1993.

Mein Herz schlaegt weiter: Briefe aus der Schutzhaft, Kulturverlag, St.Gallen 1936.

Mein Herz schlaegt weiter: Briefe aus der Schutzhaft, revised edition with a foreword by Heinrich Mann, a contribution by Robert M.W. Kempner and a postscript by Peter Steinbach, Andreas-Haller-Verlag, Passau 1987.

Der Puppenspieler, Verlag E. & K. Scheuch, Zuerich 1937.

Der Puppenspieler: Ein Roman aus dem alten Wuerzburg, revised edition edited by Roland Flade and Barbara Rott, Koenigshausen & Neuman, Wuerzburg 1988.

Bibliography

Felix Fechenbach 1894–1933: Journalist, Schriftsteller, Pazifist Symposium zum 100. Geburtstag am 28. Und 29. Januar 1994 in Detmold Landesverband Lippe, Institut fuer Lippische Landeskunde Kreis Lippe.

Das Felix Fechenbach-Buch, Eichenverlag, Arbon 1936.

Hermann Schueler, Auf der Flucht erschossen: Felix Fechenbach 1894–1933, Kiepenhauer & Wutscgm Jiekb, 1981.

Peter Steinbach, Das Schicksal hat bestimmt, dass ich hierbleibe, zur Erinnerung an Felix Fechenbach (1894–1933).

Peter Steinbach, Das Schicksal bestimmt, dass ich hierbleibe, Wissenschaftlicher Autoren Verlag, Berlin 1983.

Herrmann Fechenbach, Die letzten Mergentheimer Juden: und die Geschichte der Familie Fechenbach mit Holzschnittillustrationen von Herrmann Fechenbach, Kohlhammer Verlag, Stuttgart 1972.

Douglas Morris, Justice Imperiled: The Anti-Nazi Lawyer Max Hirschberg, The University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor 2005.

Wolfgang Mueller, Juden in Detmold, Gesammelte Beitraege zur juedischen Geschichte in Detmold, Lippe Verlag, Lage 2008.

Andreas Ruppert, Felix Fechenbach, translated by Katrin von Keitz, lecture given in Detmold, 6 August 2003.

Irma Fechenbach-Fey: Juedin, Sozialistin, Emigrantin 1895–1973. Landesverband Lippe, Institut fuer Lippische Landeskundde, Lemgo 2003.

Auf der Flucht erschossen – Felix Fechenbach, Videotape of Bayerischer Rundfunk Production der Media 3, Muenchen 1989. Videotape.

Felix Fechenabach-Preisverleihung Fernsehbericht 8/6/2003, Bayerischer Rundfunk, Muenchen 2003. Videotape.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Zipes, Jack David (1997). Fairy Tales and Fables from Weimar Days. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 195. ISBN 0-299-15744-X.
  2. ^ a b Tuchel, Johannes. "German Resistance Memorial Center- Biographies". German Resistance Memorial Center- Biographies. German Resistance Memorial Center. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
  3. ^ a b Taylor, Priscilla. "Felix Fechenbach". Geni_Family_Tree. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
  4. ^ a b Mooney, Patrick; Burne, Geoffrey. "The Beginnings of the Fechenbach Family". Hermann Fechenbach. Wood Engravings, Lino Cuts and Print. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
  5. ^ Felix-Fechenbach-Gesamtschule Leopoldshöhe

External links

This page was last edited on 24 February 2024, at 22:29
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