Erich Klausener

Erich Klausener

Erich Klausener (25 January 1885 – 30 June 1934) was a German Catholic politician who was killed in the "Night of the Long Knives", a purge that took place in Nazi Germany from June 30 to July 2, 1934, when the Nazi regime carried out a series of political murders.

Family

Born in Düsseldorf to a strict Catholic family, he is a distant member of the Cluysenaar family. Klausener followed his father's career in public service, serving for a time in the Prussian Ministry of Commerce. He served as an artillery officer in Belgium, France and the front of World War I, and was awarded the Iron Cross second class in 1914 and the Iron Cross First Class in 1917. Klausener's participation in a boycott during the French occupancy of Ruhr in 1923 and 1924 earned him a sentence of two months in prison.

Career

From 1924, Klausener served in the Prussia in the Ministry of Welfare, and later headed the police division Ministry of Interior of that state. From 1928, Klaheusener became head of the group Catholic Action (German: Katholische Aktion). Before 1933, he strongly supported the police battle against illegal Nazi activities. After Adolf Hitler and Nazis came to power in 1933, Hermann Göring became minister-president of Prussia. Klausener was displaced from the ministry of transport of Prussia when Göring started to Nazify the Prussian police.

A close associate of Vice Chancellor Franz von Papen, Klausener contributed to his Marburg speech delivered on 17 June 1934. The speech, though moderate in tone, criticized the violence and repression that had followed since Hitler became Chancellor. Klausener spoke at the Catholic Congress in the Berlin's Hoppegarten on 24 June 1934. His passionate criticism of the repression was viewed by the Nazis as an open challenge.

Six days later, during the "Night of the Long Knives", SS officer Kurt Gildisch was ordered by Reinhard Heydrich to go to Klausener's office at the Ministry of Transport to assassinate him. After the killing, Gildisch was promoted in rank to SS-Sturmbannführer.[1]

After the end of the Nazi regime and after World War II, a monument was erected to Klausener in Berlin. In 1963, his ashes were buried in a grave in the Catholic Church Maria Regina Martyrum, in commemoration of the martyrs of the Nazi era. His grave is in the Friedhof St. Matthias, Berlin.[2]

Klausener's relationship with the future Pope Pius XII has sometimes been controversial. While authors like Guenter Lewy have expressed criticism of Pius for not intervening more forcefully in the case, other authors including Joseph Bottum and David G. Dalin have presented a more positive assessment of the attitude of Pius XII during that time.

[3][4]

References

  1. Hoffmann, Peter (2000) [1979]. Hitler's Personal Security: Protecting the Führer 1921-1945, p. 49, ISBN 978-0-30680-947-7.
  2. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Klausener&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSob=n&GRid=25075103&df=all&
  3. The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany, by Guenter Lewy
  4. The Pius war: responses to the critics of Pius XII, by J. Bottum, David G. Dalin

See also

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