Kurt Tucholsky (January 9, 1890 – December 21, 1935) was a German-
Jewish journalist,
satirist and writer. He also wrote under the
pseudonyms Kaspar Hauser,
Peter Panter,
Theobald Tiger and
Ignaz Wrobel. Born in
Berlin-Moabit, he moved to
Paris in 1924 and then to
Sweden in 1930.
Tucholsky was one of the most important journalists of the
Weimar Republic. As a politically engaged journalist and temporary co-editor of the weekly magazine
Die Weltbühne he proved himself to be a social critic in the tradition of
Heinrich Heine. He was simultaneously a satirist, an author of satirical political revues, a songwriter and a poet. He saw himself as a
left-wing democrat and
pacifist and warned against anti-democratic tendencies – above all in
politics, the
military and
justice – and the threat of
National Socialism. His fears were confirmed when the Nazis came to power in 1933: his books were listed on the Nazi's
censorship as "
Entartete Kunst" ("
Degenerate Art") and burned, and he lost his German citizenship.
[edit] Tucholsky's life
[edit] Youth, school and university
Memorial plaque at his birthplace in
Berlin-Moabit (Lübecker Straße 13)
Kurt Tucholsky's parents' house, where he was born on January 9, 1890, was at 13 Lübecker Straße in
Berlin-
Moabit. However, he spent his early childhood in
Stettin (now in
Poland) where his father had been transferred for work reasons. The
Jewish
bank cashier Alex Tucholsky had married his cousin Doris Tucholski in
1887 and had three children with her: Kurt, their oldest son, Fritz and
Ellen. In 1899, the family returned to Berlin.
While Tucholsky's relationship with his mother was strained
throughout his life, he loved and respected his father. However, in
1905, Alex Tucholsky died as a result of
syphilis.
He left a considerable fortune to his wife and children, which enabled
his oldest son to go to university without any financial worries.
Kurt Tucholsky started school at the French Grammar School (das Französische
Gymnasium) in 1899. In 1903 he transferred to the Königliche Wilhelms-Gymnasium, but he left there in 1907 to prepare for his
Abitur with a private tutor. After taking his Abitur examinations in 1909, he began studying
Law in Berlin in October of the same year, spending his second semester in
Geneva at the start of 1910.
When he was at university, Tucholsky's main interest remained that of
literature. Thus he travelled to
Prague in September 1911 with his friend
Kurt Szafranski in order to surprise his favorite author
Max Brod with a visit and a model landscape that he had made himself. After meeting Tucholsky, Brod's friend and fellow author
Franz Kafka had this to say about him in his diary:
- "... a wholly consistent person of 21. From the controlled and
powerful swing of his walking stick which gives a youthful lift to his
shoulders to the deliberate delight in and contempt for his own literary
works. Wants to be a criminal defence lawyer, ..."
Yet, despite his later doctorate, Tucholsky never went on to a legal career: his inclination towards literature and
journalism was stronger.
[edit] First successes as a writer
While he was still at school, Tucholsky had already written his first articles as a journalist. The weekly
satirical magazine
Ulk ("
Prank") had published the short text
Märchen ("Fairy Tale") in 1907 in which the 17-year-old Tucholsky made fun of
Kaiser Wilhelm II's taste in art. At university he worked more intensively as a journalist, among other things working for the
social democratic party organ
Vorwärts ("onwards"). He involved himself in the
SPD's election campaign in 1911.
With
Rheinsberg – ein Bilderbuch für Verliebte ("
Rheinsberg – a Picture Book for Lovers")
in 1912, Tucholsky published a tale in which he adopted a fresh and
playful tone (which was unusual for that time) and which made him known
to a wider audience for the first time. In order to support the sales of
the book, Tucholsky and Szafranski, who had illustrated the tale,
opened a "Book Bar" on
Kurfürstendamm in Berlin: anyone who bought a copy of his book also received a free glass of
schnapps. This student prank however came to an end after only a few weeks.
In comparison, the involvement that Tucholsky began at the start of
1913 was to be much more long-lasting. On January 9, 1913 his first
article appeared in the theatre magazine
Die Schaubühne, the weekly paper that was later renamed
Die Weltbühne and which was owned by the publicist
Siegfried Jacobsohn who was to be Tucholsky's friend and mentor until his death. Tucholsky wrote about this special relationship in a "
Vita" (
biography) which he wrote in
Sweden
two years before his death: "Tucholsky owes to the publisher of the
paper, Siegfried Jacobsohn, who died in the year 1926, everything he has
become."
[edit] Soldier in World War I
The beginning of Tucholsky's journalistic career was interrupted by the outbreak of
World War I – for over two years, no articles by Tucholsky were published. He finished his studies at the
University of Jena in
Thuringia where he received his
doctorate in law (dr. jur.)
cum laude with a work on
mortgage law at the beginning of 1915. By April of that year he had already been
conscripted and sent to the East
Front. There he experienced positional warfare and served as a
munitions soldier and then as
company writer. From November 1916 onwards he published the field newspaper
Der Flieger. In the
administration of the
Artillery and
Pilot Academy in Alt-Autz in
Courland
he got to know Mary Gerold who was later to become his wife. Tucholsky
saw the posts as writer and field-newspaper editor as good opportunities
to avoid serving in the
trenches. Looking back he wrote:
- "For three and a half years I dodged the war as much as I could.
(...) I used many means not to get shot and not to shoot – not even the
worst means. But I would have used all [means], all without exception,
if I had been forced to do so: I wouldn't have said no to bribery or any other punishable behaviour. Many did just the same."
(Ignaz Wrobel, Wo waren Sie im Kriege, Herr –? (Where were you in the war, Mr –?) in Die Weltbühne; March 30, 1926; p. 490)
These means, in part, did not lack a certain comic effect as emerges in a letter to Mary Gerold:
- "One day for the march I received this heavy old gun. A gun? And
during a war? Never, I thought to myself. And leaned it against a hut.
And walked away. But that stood out even in our group at that time. I
don't know now how I got away with it, but somehow it worked. And so I
got by unarmed."
(Kurt Tucholsky, Unser ungelebtes Leben. Briefe an Mary. (Our Unlived Life. Letters to Mary.); Reinbek, 1982; p. 247)
His encounter with the
jurist Erich Danehl eventually led to his being transferred to
Romania in 1918 as a deputy
sergeant and field
police inspector. (Tucholsky's friend Danehl later appeared as "Karlchen" in a number of texts, for example in
Wirtshaus im Spessart.) In
Drobeta-Turnu Severin in Romania, Tucholsky had himself
baptized as a
Protestant in the summer of 1918. He had already left the
Jewish community on July 1, 1914.
Although Tucholsky still took part in a contest for the 9th
war bond(
Kriegsanleihe) in August 1918, he returned from the war in the autumn of 1918 as a convinced anti-militarist and
pacifist.
[edit] Battle for the Republic
In December 1918, Tucholsky took on the role of
editor-in-chief of
Ulk which he held until April 1920.
Ulk was the weekly
satirical supplement of
publisher Rudolf Mosse's
left-liberal Berliner Tagesblatt.
He again worked regularly for
Die Weltbühne at that time. In order not to make the
left-
democratic weekly paper seem too "Tucholsky-heavy", he had already created three
pseudonyms by 1913 which he retained until the end of his journalistic work:
Ignaz Wrobel (perhaps from the Polish word for "sparrow", "wróbel"),
Theobald Tiger and
Peter Panter (
Panter means "Panther" in German). Since Theobald Tiger was for a while reserved for
Ulk,
poems written under a fourth pseudonym,
Kaspar Hauser, appeared for the first time in
Die Weltbühne in December 1918. There was then hardly any section to which Tucholsky had not contributed: from
political lead articles and
court reports via
commentaries and
satires to
poetry and book
reviews. In addition he composed texts and
songs for the
cabaret
– for example the "Schall und Rauch" ("Hollow Words") theatre – and for
singers such as Claire Waldoff and Trude Hesterberg. He also wrote
"couplets" (jokey, satirical songs with a chorus and content which may
be frivolous or intellectual –
see also the article Couplet in the German Wikipedia). His poetry collection
Fromme Gesänge (
Pious Songs) appeared in October 1919.
In the immediate post-war period came a chapter of Tucholsky's life
little worthy of praise: his short-term but well-paid work for the
propaganda magazine
Pieron. Under orders from the German government, the magazine was intended to turn the people against
Poland because of the final drawing up of the
German-
Polish border in
Upper Silesia. This task, strongly criticized by other newspapers finally led to Tucholsky no longer being allowed to write for
USPD publications. Tucholsky himself later described the work he had done on
Pieron as a mistake, which he had got into because of financial difficulties.
At the time, however, Tucholsky had also not ceased writing in
left-wing publications to defend the
democratic Weimar Republic (which had emerged from the
November Revolution) against its avowed enemies in the
military, in
justice, in the
administration, in the old
pro-monarchist elites and in the new anti-
democratic popular movements. He had already started the anti-
military series of articles
Militaria, an attack on the
wilhelminian spirit of the
officer
ranks which he saw as further coarsened by the war and which lived on
in the Republic. His own conduct as a soldier during the war did not
substantially differ, however, from that of those in the
German officer corps which he so strongly criticized.
Biographers thus see in the
Militaria articles "a kind of public self-analysis" (Michael Hepp). In the first article of the series he wrote:
- "We must take the blame for the trouble a degenerate militarism has put us in.
- Only by completely turning away from this shameful period can we return to order.
- It is not Spartacus; neither is it the officer who saw his own people as a means to an end – what, then, will it be in the end?
- The upstanding German."
("Militaria: Offizier und Mann" ("Militaria: Officer and Man"), in Die Weltbühne; January 9, 1919; p. 39)
Tucholsky denounced equally strongly the many
political murders which shook the
Weimar Republic during its first years. Again and again attempts were made on the lives of
left-wing,
pacifist and even merely
liberal politicians and
publicists, for example
Karl Liebknecht and
Rosa Luxemburg,
Walther Rathenau,
Matthias Erzberger,
Hans Paasche and
Philipp Scheidemann or
Maximilian Harden. As a
court observer in proceedings against
right-wing radical
Fememörder (murderers carrying out killings ordered by a
Vehmgericht) he realised that the
judge shared and sympathised with the
defendant's
monarchist and
nationalist views. In his article
Prozeß Harden (
Harden Trial) he wrote in 1922.
- "The German political murder of the past four years is
schematically and tightly organised. (...) Everything is certain from
the outset: incentives from anonymous financial backers, the deed
(always from behind), sloppy investigation, lazy excuses, a few phrases,
pitiful skiving, lenient punishments, suspension of sentences,
privileges – "Carry on!" (...) That is not bad justice. That is not poor
justice. That is not justice at all. (...)
- Even the Balkans and South America will refuse to be compared with this Germany."
("Prozeß Harden" ("Harden Trial") in Die Weltbühne; December 21, 1922; p. 638)
Tucholsky also did not hold back in his criticism of democratic
politicians, who he believed were too lenient with their opponents.
After Foreign Secretary
Walter Rathenau was murdered in 1922, on 29 June of that year he wrote the poem "Rathenau" in
Die Weltbühne
appealing to the republic's self-esteem: it called upon people to stand
up and pound with their fist, not to fall back to sleep again. Four
years of murder, it said, were enough, and now it was time to fight or
die – there was no alternative. This was their last breath. Eleven years
before Germany's first attempt at democracy really took its last
breath, when the
Nazis
came to power in 1933, in this poem Tucholsky already pointed a finger
at those responsible – the poem describes the "mob" living off the
republic, sabotaging it and scrawling
swastikas on its doors.
Tucholsky's actions did not stop at writing – he was also directly
politically active. He was one of the founders of the "Peaceful League
of Combatants" (
Friedensbund der Kriegsteilnehmer) and was active in the
USPD,
the Independent Social Democratic Party, which he joined in 1920.
However, just because he was a member of a party, this did not hold
Tucholsky back from criticising its members. For example, he made this
comment on
Rudolf Hilferding's work as the chief editor of the USPD's newspaper,
Freiheit:
- Mr Rudolf Hilferding was dispatched by the Imperial Federation to
the editorial office of the "Freiheit" to fight social democracy.
Within two years he managed to run down the dangerous newspaper so much
that we can no longer describe it either as a newspaper or dangerous.
(Dienstzeugnisse, in Die Weltbühne, 3 March 1925, p. 329)
Tucholsky took the
SPD to task in a particularly harsh manner, accusing its leadership of failure, even of betraying its own supporters, during the
November Revolution. In 1922 in the "Harden Trial", he wrote of
Friedrich Ebert:
- And above them all this president is enthroned, a man who threw
his beliefs out of the window at the very moment that he became able to
put them into practice.
At the worst point of
inflation, Tucholsky was forced to hold back on his work in publishing and take on work in
economics.
However, it was apparently not only financial reasons which led him to
make this step. In the autumn of 1922 he suffered badly from
depression, had doubts about the sense of writing at all, and is said to have even made his first
suicide attempt. On March 1, 1923 he then started work in the
Berlin bank "Bett, Simon & Co.", but on 15 February 1924 he already signed a contract to work with
Siegfried Jacobsohn at the
Weltbühne again. In the spring of 1924 he set off for
Paris as a correspondent for the
Weltbühne and the renowned
Vossische Zeitung.
In 1924 there were also great changes in Tucholsky's private life. In
February 1924 he divorced the doctor Else Weil, whom he had married in
May 1920. On 30 August of the same year he went on to marry Mary Gerold;
he had corresponded with her by letter since being sent from Alt-Autz.
In Paris, however, the couple was to discover that they also could not
live together happily in the long term.
[edit] Between France and Germany
Just like his role model
Heinrich Heine,
once he had left for Paris, Tucholsky spent most of the rest of his
life abroad, returning only occasionally to Germany. But this distance
served only to whet his interest in German affairs and the German
people. He used the
Weltbühne as a stage from which to remain
part of political debate in his home country. Furthermore, like Heine in
the 19th century, he tried to help the French and the Germans
understand one another.
Upon Siegfried Jacobsohn's death in December 1926, Tucholsky immediately agreed to take over his job at the head of the
Weltbühne.
However, working as a "directing editor of headlines" did not suit him,
and he would have had to return to Berlin permanently, so shortly
afterwards, he handed over the position to his colleague and friend
Carl von Ossietzky. He remained a coeditor, seeing to it that unorthodox articles such as those of the
Socialist Kurt Hiller were published.
In 1927 and 1928 Tucholsky brought out his
essayistic travelogue Ein Pyrenäenbuch ("A book on the Pyrenees"), the collection of articles
Mit 5 PS ("At 5
hp", meaning his name and his four pseudonyms) and
Das Lächeln der Mona Lisa
("Mona Lisa's smile"). He used his literary figures "Herr Wendriner"
and "Lottchen" to describe typical contemporary Berlin characters.
During his time abroad, once more Tucholsky was taken to court by
political opponents who felt insulted or under attack by his writing. In
1928 a case was even brought against him for
blasphemy because of his poem
Gesang der englischen Chorknaben ("The song of English choirboys")
In 1928, Kurt and Mary Tucholsky (née Gerold) finally divorced.
Tucholsky had met Lisa Matthias the year before and now went on holiday
with her to
Sweden in 1929. This stay inspired him to write the short novel published in 1931,
Schloß Gripsholm ("
Gripsholm Castle") which had the same youthful, lighthearted feel as
Rheinsberg.
His work
Deutschland, Deutschland über alles, a piece of social criticism produced with graphic designer
John Heartfield
in 1929, could hardly provide a greater contrast. In it, Tucholsky
managed to combine vicious attacks on everything he disliked about
Germany in his days with a declaration of love for his country. In the
last chapter, under the headline
Heimat, he wrote:
- We have just written "no" on 225 pages, "no" out of sympathy and
"no" out of love, "no" out of hate and "no" out of passion – and now we
would like to say "yes" for once. "Yes" – to the countryside and the
country of Germany. The country where we were born and whose language we
speak. (...)
And now I would like to tell you something: it is not true that all
those who call themselves 'national' and who are nothing but gentrified
militants have taken out a lease on this country and its language just
for them. Germany is not just a government representative in his
tailcoat, nor is it a headmaster, nor is it the ladies and gentlemen of
the steel helmets. We are here too. (...)
Germany is a divided country. We are one part of it. And whatever the
situation, we quietly love our country – unshakably, without a flag, or a
street organ, no sentimentality and no drawn sword.
(Heimat, in Deutschland, Deutschland über alles, Berlin 1929, p. 226)
[edit] Relapse into silence
At the beginning of the 1930s it became clear to Tucholsky that his
warnings were falling on deaf ears, and that his actions in favour of
the Republic, for
democracy and
human rights were apparently to no effect. It was a crushing blow to him, as he recognised the danger approaching with
Adolf Hitler. "They are preparing to head towards the
Third Reich" he wrote, years before Hitler's
Machtübernahme in 1933, and was under no deception as to where Hitler's
chancellorship would take the country.
Erich Kästner,
looking back in 1946, described him as the "little fat Berliner" who
wanted to "prevent a catastrophe with his typewriter". (From Erich
Kästner, "Kurt Tucholsky, Carl v. Ossietzky, 'Weltbühne'", in
Die Weltbühne, June 4, 1946, p. 22)
In 1930 Tucholsky finally moved permanently to the Swedish town of
Hindås near
Gothenburg. The "
Weltbühne
Trial" had made clear to him that critical publications already faced
severe restrictions in Germany: from 1929 an investigation had been
carried out of
Carl von Ossietzky and the journalist
Walter Kreiser for
treason and the leaking of military secrets. The
Weltbühne had published an article,
Windy affairs in German aviation revealing the
Reichswehr's illegal air rearmament. At the end of 1931, Ossietzky was then sentenced to 18 months imprisonment for
espionage.
Ossietzky was also indicted for Tucholsky's now famous sentence,
"Soldiers are murderers". In July, 1932, however, a court pronounced the
sentence not to be
defamation of the
Reichswehr.
As Tucholsky lived abroad, no action was brought in against him.
Nonetheless, he considered travelling to Germany for the trial, as at
the time Ossietzky was already in prison because of the aviation
article. But the situation was too risky for Tucholsky; he was afraid of
falling into the hands of the Nazis, even though he realised that his
failure to appear would not leave a good impression. Writing to Mary
Gerold, he referred to the final scene of
Faust: "
Outwardly
it is still distressing to carry earth's remains. There is something
about it which makes one think of desertion, a foreign country, failing
someone in need, my comrade Oss in prison". Mary, he wrote, had been "so
kind as to point out to [him] that there was deadly danger from the
Nazis". (Kurt Tucholsky,
Unser ungelebtes Leben. Briefe an Mary, Reinbek 1982, p. 537)
A few days before his death, Tucholsky wrote that he regretted the decision he had made in 1932:
- But in Oss' case I didn't even come, I failed him then, it was a
mixture of laziness, cowardice, disgust, contempt – and I should have
gone. I know that it would not have helped in the slightest, that we
would certainly both have been sentenced, that I might have fallen into
the clutches of these animals; but a trace of consciousness of my own
guilt still remains.
(letter to the woman Hedwig Müller, December 19, 1935, in Kurt Tucholsky, Briefe. Auswahl 1913-1935. Berlin 1983, p. 325 ff.)
From 1931 Tucholsky's voice was to be heard less and less often in
the press. His resigned attitude had been worsened by the end of his
relationship with Lisa Matthias, a close friend's death and a chronic
nasal ailment. His last major piece was published on November 8, 1932 in
the
Weltbühne. It was merely "snippets", as he called his
aphorisms. On January 17, 1933, he appeared in the
Weltbühne again with a short note from
Basel.
Tucholsky was increasingly losing the strength to write longer literary forms. He presented the
Rowohlt publishing house with the outline of a
novel but political developments in Germany prevented him from carrying out the project. In 1933 the Nazis closed down the
Weltbühne, burned Tucholsky's books (see
book burning) and
expatriated him.
From 1960 Tucholsky's letters came into publication, giving an
insight into the last years of his life and his thoughts on the
developments in Germany and Europe. Some of the letters were to friends
such as
Walter Hasenclever, some to his last love affair, the
Zürich
doctor Hedwig Müller, whom he called "Nuuna". He sent his letters to
Nunna with pages from his diary, now known as the "Q diaries". In these
letters and others, Tucholsky described himself as an ex-German and an
ex-poet. On April 11, 1933 he wrote to Hasenclever:
“ |
I suppose I need not tell you
that our world in Germany has ceased to exist, so I'll just shut up for
the moment. No one holds up a red card to an ocean. |
” |
-
- Kurt Tucholsky,Politische Briefe, Reinbek 1969, p16)
Neither did Tucholsky subscribe to the view held by many
exiled Germans that
Hitler's
dictatorship would soon collapse. He recognised with bitterness that
the majority of Germans came to terms with the dictatorship and that
even other countries accepted Hitler's rule. He expected a war within
only a few years.
Tucholsky refused outright to join the developing group of exiled writers. For a start, he did not consider himself an
emigrant
as he had already left Germany in 1924 and was considering taking on
Swedish nationality. In a moving last letter to Mary Gerold he went into
the deeper reasons why he no longer bothered with Germany:
“ |
I have not published a single
line about what has been going on there – not at any request. It no
longer has anything to do with me. It is not cowardice – which is,
however, needed to write in those stinking papers! But I am au-dessus de
la mêlée, nothing has anything to do with me any more. I'm finished
with it. |
” |
-
- (Kurt Tucholsky, Unser ungelebtes Leben. Briefe an Mary, Reinbek 1982, p. 545)
Mariefred: Tucholsky's grave.
In reality, however, he was not yet finished with everything, and in
fact did take an interest in the developments in Germany and Europe. To
back up Ossietzky in prison, he considered stepping back into the public
eye. Shortly before his death, he had plans to get even with the
Norwegian poet
Knut Hamsun,
whom he had once admired. Hamsun had spoken out publicly for the Hitler
regime and attacked Carl von Ossietzky who was imprisoned in the
Papenburg-Esterwegen concentration camp and was unable to defend himself. Behind the scenes, Tucholsky also supported the awarding of the
Nobel Peace Prize
to his imprisoned friend in 1935. Ossietzky was given the award the
year after, retroactively, but Tucholsky did not live to see the success
of his efforts.
Weakened by the chronic illness, on the evening of December 20, 1935 Tucholsky took an overdose of
sleeping tablets in his house in Hindås.
[1] The next day he was found in a
coma
and taken to hospital in Gothenburg. He died there on the evening of
December 21. Recently, Tucholsky's biographer Michael Hepp has called
into doubt the verdict of
suicide, saying that he considers it possible that the death was accidental.
In the summer of 1936 Kurt Tucholsky's ashes were buried under an oak tree near
Gripsholm Castle,
Mariefred, Sweden. The gravestone, with its inscription "
Alles vergängliche ist nur ein Gleichnis" ("All that is transitory is but a symbol", from
Goethe's Faust, Part II) was laid down after the end of the
Second World War.
[edit] English editions and books
- Grenville, Bryan P.: Kurt Tucholsky: The Ironic Sentimentalist. London 1981.
- Poor, Harold Lloyd: Kurt Tucholsky and the ordeal of Germany, 1914-1935. New York 1968.
- Tucholsky, Kurt: Castle Gripsholm. A Summer Story. Overlook Press. New York 1988.
- Tucholsky, Kurt: "Germany? Germany": a Kurt Tucholsky Reader. With translations by Harry Zohn, Karl F. Ross and Louis Golden. Manchester 1990
- Tucholsky, Kurt: What if –?; Satirical writings of Kurt Tucholsky. Translated by Harry Zohn and Karl F. Ross. New York 1967 (1968).
Kurt Tucholsky (alias Kurt Severing) is portrayed in the political/historical comic series
Berlin by Jason Lutes.
[edit] References
- This article draws heavily on the corresponding article in the German Wikipedia, retrieved April 24, 2005.
^ "Kurt Tucholsky". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 21 April 2009.