Friedrich Schorlemmer Explained

Friedrich Schorlemmer
Birth Date:16 May 1944
Birth Place:Wittenberge, Gau March of Brandenburg, Germany
Death Place:Berlin, Germany
Education:Martin Luther University Halle

Friedrich Schorlemmer (pronounced as /de/; 16 May 19449 September 2024) was a German Protestant theologian. He was a prominent member of the civil rights movement in the German Democratic Republic, leading to the Peaceful Revolution. Remaining active in politics and society after German reunification in 1990, he was engaged in the Wittenberg town council and several organisations as an activist for peace and nature preservation, and as a critical voice.

Life and career

Friedrich-Wilhelm Schorlemmer was born in Wittenberge on 16 May 1944. He grew up in the small town of Werben in the region of Altmark. As the son of a Protestant pastor, Schorlemmer was not allowed by the East German authorities to take the exams at a normal secondary state school, but he passed his at an adult education centre. As a pacifist, he refused to perform military service in 1962. From 1962 to 1967 he studied Protestant theology at the Martin Luther University in Halle.

Theology

Schorlemmer worked as a vicar in Halle West and as a supervisor of studies in a students' home from 1968. After his ordination in 1970, he worked as a pastor in charge of young people and especially students in Merseburg from 1971. He was a member of the Protestant synods of Saxony and of East Germany from 1976. In 1978, he became both a lecturer at the Protestant pastors' seminary in Wittenberg and a pastor at All Saints' Church there, the church closely associated with Martin Luther and his 95 Theses.

Finally, from 1992 until his retirement in December 2007, he was head of studies of theology, culture and modern history at the in Wittenberg.

Politics

In 1968, when Alexander Dubček tried to reform communism in Czechoslovakia in the Prague Spring, Schorlemmer and his friends not only sympathized with that development but also spread information about it. In the 1980s, he worked for environmental, human rights and peace groups. He founded a peace group in 1980. The Stasi's department of "political underground" put him under observation. He was responsible for at the Kirchentag national church assembly in Wittenberg on 24 September 1983, in which a sword was turned into a ploughshare by Stefan Nau, a local blacksmith. The Stasi did not interfere because Richard von Weizsäcker, then mayor of West Berlin, attended the action, as a representative of the Protestant Church in Germany, and the Western media reported about it. In 1988, Schorlemmer's Wittenberg peace group presented twenty theses at the Kirchentag in Halle, demanding more freedom, which was a provocation at the time.

On 21 August 1989, Schorlemmer was among the founders of a group called Democratic Awakening (Demokratischer Aufbruch) in Dresden. After this group became a political party in December 1989, and Wolfgang Schnur (who was later identified as a collaborator of the Stasi) and Rainer Eppelmann increasingly worked together with the Christian Democratic Union, Schorlemmer and various members left. Schorlemmer joined the East German Social Democrats in the beginning of 1989.

The largest mass meeting in East German history took place on Alexanderplatz in East Berlin on 4 November 1989. Many East Germans were no longer willing to accept the dictatorship of the ruling Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED). It was a dangerous situation, with the possibility of a clash between the demonstrators and armed forces. Schorlemmer was one of the speakers at the Alexanderplatz demonstration. He called for change and a new beginning, but he also pleaded for nonviolence.

After the Fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989, many people left East Germany. Schorlemmer and others published a passionate appeal to stay and build up a new and better kind of society there: (For our country). Schorlemmer remained politically active. He was elected to the Wittenberg town council in 1990 and became speaker of the SPD fraction, serving until 1994. He was chairman of the Willy Brandt Society (Willy-Brandt-Kreis). He was one of the editors of the journal Der Freitag, a weekly with a daily online edition, and of the monthly . As a member of the German centre of International PEN, the association of writers, he was among the authors of an open letter in 2004 that asked Muslim intellectuals to protest against international terrorism. He joined the German Commission for UNESCO and the BUND, an organization for the protection of nature and the environment. In 2009, he joined ATTAC, the network of globalization critics. He was one of the founders of the in January 2010.

Schorlemmer spoke out against the wars in Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003. He published Reformation in der Krise (Reformation in a crisis) on the occasion of the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation, with a critical view of the celebrations and the position on Protestantism then.

He published numerous books, essays, speeches and sermons.

Personal life

Schorlemmer was married, the couple had a daughter, Uta. They lived in Wittenberg. His younger brother was Andreas Schorlemmer, pastor in Groß Kiesow.After his dementia diagnosis in 2022, Schorlemmer withdrew from the public and lived in a nursing home in Berlin.

He died in Berlin on 9 September 2024, at the age of 80. President Frank-Walter Steinmeier described him as a courageous fighter for freedom and democracy, one of the people who made the Peaceful Revolution possible.

Publications

Awards and honours

Schorlemmer was awarded the Carl von Ossietzky Medal of the International League for Human Rights in 1989, the Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels peace prize of the German Book Trade in 1993, the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 2009, and the Gold Medal from the in 2014.

He was awarded honorary doctorates, from the Concordia University Texas in Austin in 2002, and from the European University Viadrina in 2014. He became an honorary citizen of Wittenberg in 2015.[1]

Further reading

Obituaries

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statement des Oberbürgermeisters zum Tod von Herrn Dr. h. c. Friedrich Schorlemmer, Ehrenbürger der Lutherstadt Wittenberg . Stadt Wittenberg . 10 September 2024 . de . 12 September 2024.