Karl-Heinz
Tanulságos történet a Wall Street Journal tegnapi számából:
Ugye nem.
[+/-] A teljes bejegyzés megjelenítése ill. összecsukása
The historical surprise concerns a turning point whose ripple effects were felt in Europe and beyond. On June 2, 1967, a West German policeman fatally shot an unarmed, 26-year-old literature student in the back of his head during a demonstration in West Berlin against the visiting Shah of Iran. Benno Ohnesorg became "the left wing's first martyr" (per the weekly Der Spiegel). His dying moments captured in a famous news photograph, Ohnesorg galvanized a generation of left-wing students and activists who rose up in the iconic year of 1968. What was a fringe soon turned to terrorism.Karl-Heinz, a fiatal baloldali tüntető fasiszta gyilkosa a kommunista titkosszolgálat ügynöke volt. Meglepő?
To them his killer, Karl-Heinz Kurras, was the "fascist cop" at the service of a capitalist, pro-American "latent fascist state." "The post-fascist system has become a pre-fascist one," the German Socialist Student Union declared in their indictment hours after the killing. The ensuing movement drew its legitimacy and fervor from the Ohnesorg killing. Further enraging righteous passions, Mr. Kurras was acquitted by a court and returned to the police force.
Now all that's being turned on its head. Last week, a pair of German historians unearthed the truth about Mr. Kurras. Since 1955, he had worked for the Stasi, East Germany's dreaded secret police. According to voluminous Stasi archives, his code name was Otto Bohl. The files don't say whether the Stasi ordered him to do what he did in 1967. But that only fuels speculation about a Stasi hand behind one of postwar Germany's transformative events.
Ugye nem.
Címkék: ajánló
[+/-] A teljes bejegyzés megjelenítése ill. összecsukása
0 megjegyzés:
Megjegyzés küldése
Feliratkozás Megjegyzések küldése [Atom]
<< Főoldal