Today's Birthdays

one click shows all of today's celebrity birthdays

Browse All Birthdays

43,625    Actors
27,931    Actresses
4,867    Composers
7,058    Directors
842    Footballers
221    Racing drivers
925    Singers
9,111    Writers

Get FamousLikeMe on your website
One line of code gets FamousLikeMe on your website. Find out more.

Subscribe to Daily updates


Add to Google

privacy policy



Famous Like Me > Composer > W > Horst Wessel

Profile of Horst Wessel on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Horst Wessel  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 9th September 1907
   
Place of Birth: Bielefeld, Germany
   
Profession: Composer
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
For the tall ship, formerly the Horst Wessel, see USCGC Eagle.

Horst Wessel (September 9, 1907 in Bielefeld – February 23, 1930 in Berlin) was a German Nazi known for being the author of lyrics to the song "Die Fahne hoch" ("Horst Wessel Lied") and for being glorified by the Nazi regime as a martyr of the early years of the movement.

A son of a pastor, he abandoned his studies of law in 1926 to join the Nazi Brownshirt paramilitary in the final days of the Weimar Republic. He soon caught the attention of Joseph Goebbels, who sent him to Vienna in 1928 to organize the Nazi youth movement there.

Intelligent and politically astute, Wessel was also extremely violent. Upon returning to Germany, he organized an attack on the local headquarters of the Communist Party of Germany in Friedrichshain, Berlin, during which four workers sustained serious injuries. This prompted Heinz Neumann, editor of the Communist Red Flag daily to call on party members to "Beat the fascists wherever you find them," exacerbating the already tense political situation.

On January 14, 1930, Wessel got into a heated argument with his landlady, a widow of a Communist Party member. Although the exact details of the argument are still debated, what is known is that:

  1. she claimed Wessel refused to pay his rent—alternatively, she may have tried to raise it and Wessel refused to pay the difference;
  2. she claimed he threatened to beat her;
  3. Wessel refused to pay rent for his girlfriend, a prostitute (according to some accounts, a former prostitute reformed by Wessel); since the landlady was herself subletting to Wessel, she feared she would lose the rights to her apartment because a prostitute was living there.

Rather than approach the police, the landlady went to a local tavern frequented by Communists for help.

The Communists saw this as an ideal opportunity to avenge themselves on Wessel for the earlier attack. Two men, Ali Höhler, a tough with underworld connections, and Erwin Rückert, an active party member, went to Wessel's apartment. When he opened the door for them, Höhler shot him in the head. He died several weeks later from his injuries.

The shooting was immediately exploited by both the Nazis and the Communists to further their political aims. The Communists portrayed Wessel as a pimp, while the Nazis claimed he had actually saved his girlfriend from a life of prostitution by introducing her to the Nazi Party and its values. Goebbels organized a public funeral for the new "martyr" to the Nazi cause, and 30,000 people lined the streets of Berlin to see the procession. Goebbels delivered the eulogy in the presence of Hermann Göring and Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia. During the Nazi era, his life was glorified in memorials, books, and films.

Some months before he died, Wessel had written the verses to what would become the "Horst Wessel Lied" but it first gained popular currency when a choir of Stormtroopers performed it at his funeral. It was later recorded, and in 1931 it became the official anthem of the Nazi Party, played alongside "Deutschland über Alles" at all official occasions. The song celebrates the SA (whom Hitler would soon purge in the Night of the Long Knives).

The Berlin district of Friedrichshain was renamed Horst Wessel during the Nazi regime. It reverted to its original name after the end of the war.

Trivia

A German soldier in the 1980 Samuel Fuller war film The Big Red One proclaims that Horst Wessel was not a heroic German figure, but in reality a drug-addicted pimp. The soldier is promptly shot by his Sergeant as a result.

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Horst Wessel