Carl von Ossietzky was a German pacifist and journalist, who was awarded the 1935 Nobel Peace Prize
@Pacifist, Timeline and Life
Carl von Ossietzky was a German pacifist and journalist, who was awarded the 1935 Nobel Peace Prize
Carl von Ossietzky born at
In 1914, he got married to an Englishwoman Maud Lichfield-Wood, who was a suffragette. The couple had a daughter, Rosalinde von Ossietzky-Palm.
Carl von Ossietzky died on 4 May, 1936 in Berlin-Pankow due to tuberculosis at the age of 48. He was released from prison and kept under surveillance by the Gestapo during his last days.
Carl von Ossietzky was born on 3 October, 1889 in Hamburg, Germany, to Carl Ignatius von Ossietzky and his wife Rosalie. His father used to work as a stenographer and was employed by a lawyer and later on by a senator.
His father passed away when he was still only two. His mother remarried when he was around 9 and his step-father, Gustav Walther, shaped his attitude to politics and life.
He did not fare as well in academics as he would have liked and when he was 17, he decided to discontinue his education at secondary school in order to work as an administrative civil servant. Subsequently, he started working as a journalist and the first publication to give him a platform was ‘Das FreieVolf’ (The Free People).
He was opposed to militarism and in 1913 declared himself as a pacifist. In July of the same year, he wrote an article criticising a verdict passed by the court that was pro-military in nature and he had to face the court since the Prussian War Ministry deemed the article to be an insult. He got off after paying a fine.
He was drafted into the army in the Bavarian Pioneer Regiment in 1916 despite his reluctance. During his time at the army, Carl von Ossietzky was appalled at the destruction that was caused due to military action and it was something that further strengthened his pacifist views. Following the war, he went back to journalism and continued to write in favour of democracy.
Following his appointment as the secretary of the German Peace Society in Berlin, he established the monthly publication ‘Information Sheet’ in 1920. The ‘Monists’ Monthly’ was another publication for which he wrote regularly. However, Carl von Ossietzky wasn’t too keen on an office job and before long he took up the job of an editor of foreign affairs at the ‘Berlin People’s Paper.’
The ‘Berlin People’s Paper’ established a political party called ‘Republican Party’ but suffered a loss in the election in 1924 and Ossietzky’s brief dalliance with politics came to an end. Subsequently, he joined the political magazine ‘Tagebuch’ or ‘Journal’ and became a political commentator.
He joined the German publication ‘The World Stage’ in 1926 and shortly thereafter he was named the editor in chief of the publication. The publication was known for its vocal stand on the German military’s policy of secretly rearming itself and Ossietzky continued that tradition during his editorship. He was held guilty of libel and he was imprisoned for a month.
Carl von Ossietzky’s most significant work was the period in which he served as the editor of ‘The World Stage’. During his time as an editor, he went after the secret plans of the German military establishment in violating the provisions of the ‘Treaty of Versailles’.