Rainer Hildebrandt

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Rainer Hildebrandt

Rainer Hildebrandt (born December 14, 1914 in Stuttgart, died January 9, 2004 in Berlin) was a German anti-communist resistance fighter, historian and founder of the Checkpoint Charlie Museum. He was involved in the resistance to the communist regime of the Soviet occupation zone since the 1940s, as a member of the Kampfgruppe gegen Unmenschlichkeit. The resistance group received financial aid from the Central Intelligence Agency.

Early life[]

Rainer Hildebrandt, son of the art historian and the painter , studied physics in Berlin, later philosophy and sociology at the Faculty of Foreign Studies, and earned his doctorate under Franz Rupp on a topic in psychology.[1] At his university, a lively circle of resistant lecturers and students gathered from 1939/40 on. Among them were Harro Schulze-Boysen and Horst Heilmann as well as the professor Albrecht Haushofer and the student Rainer Hildebrandt. He had contact with the wider circle of the July 20, 1944 conspirators and was a member of the Haushofer circle: "A long look goes out to the companions. I lost my best friends, Albrecht Haushofer and Horst Heilmann, in the Nazi Reich and was myself imprisoned for 17 months. I learned to fight against injustice." Hildebrandt was imprisoned for "Wehrkraftzersetzung" and connections to resistance groups.[2] [3] [4]

Letter by deputy US chief prosecutor in the Nuremberg Trials Robert Kempner to Rainer Hildebrandt.

Founder of the Combat Group against Inhumanity[]

After the beginning of the Cold War, Hildebrandt, together with the writer Günther Birkenfeld, the then chairman of the Junge Union Ernst Benda and the then FDP city councilor , founded the anti-communist Kampfgruppe gegen Unmenschlichkeit (KgU), which was financed by secret services, as a licensee of the Allied Command. At the beginning, this Kampfgruppe was headed by Rainer Hildebrandt, whose main goal was initially to set up a tracing service to track down the many arrested and disappeared or abducted and missing and deceased persons in the Soviet occupation zone. Other files existed in parallel, such as one of denunciators who had imprisoned fellow citizens or those that provided information on the political, economic and military situation. As early as 1948, the U.S. intelligence service CIC became interested in the card indexes that had been built up. Since Hildebrandt was willing to cooperate and the Kampfgruppe's activities shifted more to spying, American government money flowed substantially through the CIC and later the CIA from 1949 on. Other intelligence services working in Berlin were also interested in the KgU.[5] [6] [7]

According to his own account, there were three kidnapping attempts against Hildebrandt, including by the GDR State Security. According to Hildebrandt's recollections, the first kidnapping attempt failed on July 24, 1949.[8] [9]

1952 until his death[]

Commemorative plate for Hildebrandt in Berlin-Westend

Hildebrandt owned a villa in the street Am Schlachtensee in Berlin-Nikolassee. The conditions there were described by Mourad Kusserow, who temporarily lodged here in 1954 after fleeing the GDR, thus:

"Trade unionists, artists, journalists and students, politicians and refugees from the East, sometimes failed existences, secret agents and V-men from all intelligence services, the American and British Abwehr, the French Deuxième Bureau, the West Berlin Staatsschutz and the Organisation Gehlen, the West German intelligence service, among them also informers who worked for East German spy services, gave each other the runaround in the villa at Schlachtensee [...]."[10]

After his retirement from the KgU, Hildebrandt devoted most of his time to public relations work and then to the Arbeitsgemeinschaft 13. August, which was founded shortly after the construction of the Berlin Wall. Until the end, Hildebrandt directed the Checkpoint Charlie Museum.[11]

On October 1, 1992, Hildebrandt was awarded the Order of Merit of the State of Berlin, and in 1994 Roman Herzog awarded him the Federal Cross of Merit I Class. In 1995 Hildebrandt married Alexandra Hildebrandt. On January 9, 2004, Rainer Hildebrandt died at the age of 89.[12] [13] [14]

In 2004, the International Human Rights Award Dr.-Rainer-Hildebrandt-Medaille was established. It is awarded annually since 2005 to individuals who have campaigned for human rights in a non-violent manner. The jury includes Henry Kissinger, Avi Primor, Joachim Gauck, Hans-Dietrich Genscher, and Sergei Khrushchev.[15] [16] [17] [18]

Publications[]

  • Rainer Hildebrandt: Ein tragischer Auftakt zur deutschen Teilung und zur Mauer (Neuauflage der 1948 erstmals erschienenen Publikation * … die besten Köpfe, die man henkt', ergänzt durch zahlreiche Fotos und Originalunterlagen); Verlag Arbeitsgemeinschaft 13. August: ISBN 978-3-922484-48-6
  • Als die Fesseln fielen … Neun Schicksale in einem Aufstand
  • Von Gandhi bis Walesa – Gewaltfreier Kampf für Menschenrechte
  • Die Mauer spricht
  • Es geschah an der Mauer

Literature[]

  • Alexandra Hildebrandt: Ein Mensch Rainer Hildebrandt – Begegnungen Verl. Haus am Checkpoint Charlie, Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-922484-41-7

References[]

  1. ^ https://www.archiv.ub.uni-stuttgart.de/veroeffentlichungen/Hildebrandt_Hans.pdf
  2. ^ ""...the best heads one hangs" - Hardcover, Softcover - Language: Eng bei Mercateo günstig kaufen".
  3. ^ De Groot, Emile (October 1951). "Wir Sind die Letzten: Aus dem Leben des Widerstandkämpfers Albrecht Haushofer und seiner Freunde". International Affairs. 27 (4): 482. doi:10.2307/2608592. JSTOR 2608592.
  4. ^ https://www.amazon.de/die-besten-Köpfe-die-henkt/dp/3922484484
  5. ^ https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol-59-no-4/pdfs/Boghardt-The-Fighting-Group.pdf
  6. ^ "Geschichte Nordamerikas - Ruhr-Universität Bochum".
  7. ^ "Später Werwolf".
  8. ^ "Mauermuseum: Lest we forget | Discover Germany". December 2019.
  9. ^ "Geschichte".
  10. ^ Mourad Kusserow: Flaneur zwischen Orient und Okzident, Verlag Donata Kinzelbach, Mainz 2002, ISBN 3-927069-59-0, S. 10
  11. ^ Kinzer, Stephen (24 August 1993). "Berlin Journal; Germany Warms up to 'a Fossil of the Cold War'". The New York Times.
  12. ^ Grieshaber, Kirsten (12 January 2004). "Rainer Hildebrandt, Museum Head, 89, at Berlin Crossing". The New York Times.
  13. ^ "Rainer Hildebrandt tot".
  14. ^ "Rainer Hildebrandt, 89; Director of Berlin Wall Museum". Los Angeles Times. 2004-01-13. Retrieved 2021-01-07.
  15. ^ "Yoko Ono Awarded Germany's Highest Human Rights Medal".
  16. ^ "Az egyik legrangosabb németországi emberi jogi elismerést kapta Balog Zoltán és posztumusz Maléter Pál".
  17. ^ "Awards and Nominations".
  18. ^ "Menschenrechtspreis für Antonia Rados".

External links[]

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