German Party (Romania)

German Party (Romania)

The German Party ( _de. Deutsche Partei in Rumänien; _ro. Partidul German din România, "PGR") was a political party in post-World War I Romania, claiming to represent the entire ethnic German community.

The German Party went through a rather lengthy period of creation. It was founded on the initiative of part of the ethnic German bourgeoisie at Timişoara on September 6, 1919, in advance of the November election. Gradually, it extended its organisations into Transylvania, Banat, Bukovina and Bessarabia, territories with appreciable numbers of "Volksdeutsche". Its leadership organs were elected by general assemblies or by congresses. The party was the political expression of the Union of Romanian Germans (UGR, "Uniunea Germanilor din România"), which oversaw a wide range of activities (political, cultural, religious, economic). Although it claimed to speak for all local Germans, in reality the party overwhelmingly represented the interests of the wealthiest layer of that national minority.

The programme adopted in 1919 and which, in essence, remained the same for the entire interwar period, called for the application of the resolution adopted at the Alba Iulia National Assembly on December 1, 1918 regarding minorities, respect for the rights and liberties guaranteed by Romanian legislation, and the promotion of certain specific interests (cultural rights; maternal-language education; the right to found schools and other institutions maintained through special contributions paid by the German population; the right to associate for religious, cultural, economic, and other purposes). A core motivation was to secure recognition of the UGR by successive governments as a distinct entity within Romania, with the right to speak on behalf of all ethnic Germans. The PGR fought for an ever-larger representation of the German minority in Parliament as well as on county and communal councils.

The process of founding the PGR began in 1919 and ended in 1921. At first, Transylvanian Saxons created their own political parties (the Saxon Party - "Partidul Sas", and the National Saxon Party - "Partidul Naţional Săsesc"), as did the Banat Swabians (Swabian Party - "Partidul Şvab", and the National Swabian Party - "Partidul Şvab Naţional"). At the September 1921 Cernăuţi Congress, the UGR was created, led by a National Council and with Rudolf Brandsch as its president. The Saxons, through the January 8, 1919 Mediaş resolution, and the Swabians, through the August 10, 1919 Timişoara resolution, joined the act of Union of Transylvania and Banat with Romania.

From a political point of view, the PGR adopted a strategy of collaboration with Romanian governments, no matter their political orientation, calculating that they could more easily achieve their specific demands in this way. The party took part in parliamentary elections on the side of the party in government (except in the 1927 election, when it allied itself with the Magyar Party), winning between 10 and 15 seats in the lower house every time. It had a significant number of communal and county councillors, and even mayors in localities with a sizeable German component. Brandsch, between April 23, 1931 and October 20, 1932, and Hans Otto Roth, between July 4 and September 4, 1940, were respectively Undersecretary of State and Minister for Minorities. The PGR organised numerous meetings, also editing a large number of newspapers and gazettes through which it promoted its political agenda. It official newspaper was the "Siebenbürgisches Deutsches Tageblatt", published from 1919 to 1944.

After 1930, Nazi ideas began to seep into the party. The man who promoted this trend was Fritz Fabritius, who in September 1932 created the Movement for Reciprocal Assistance of Romanian Germans (Romanian: "Mişcarea de Întrajutoare a Germanilor din România"; German: "Selbsthilfe"), with a national-socialist orientation. In May 1933, Fabritius founded the National-Socialist Party of Romanian Germans (PNSGR, "Partidul Naţional-Socialist al Germanilor din România"), which propagated Nazi ideas and organised youth camps; members of this party wore uniforms and used the swastika as their symbol. So as not to be dissolved on the basis of the December 9, 1933 journal of the Ion Duca government, the PNSGR took the name Movement of National Renewal of Romanian Germans (NEDR, "Mişcarea de Reînnoire Naţională a Germanilor din România"). The attempt at evasion did not go undetected and on July 7, 1934, the government decided to ban the work camps and disband the NEDR, as it was undertaking activities "banned by the laws in effect".

On November 22, 1933, Otto Fritz Jikeli, who continued Fabritius' ideas, was elected president of the National Saxon Council ("Consiliul Naţional Săsesc"), whereupon he declared himself a follower of the national-socialist conception. Some leaders challenged Jikeli, so that Fabritius personally took control of the National Saxon Council on April 30, 1935. On October 22 of that year Fabritius was elected president of the UGR, then of the PGR too. Dissent continued within the PGR: in April 1935, Alfred Bonfert founded the German People's Party, accusing Fabritius of having a conciliatory attitude toward the democratic leaders of the PGR. In the 1937 election, the German Party formed an electoral alliance with the governing National Liberals, and then, in advance of the 1938 election (which never took place), with the governing National Christian Party.

The German Party, along with all other parties extant in Romania, was dissolved on March 30, 1938. However, it continued its activity at the cadre level, using the cover of the Romanian German Community ("Comunitatea Germanilor din România"), which joined the National Renaissance Front on January 10, 1939. On October 27, 1938, following orders from Nazi Germany, the PPGR and the PGR merged. On November 21, 1940, during the National Legionary State, when many thousands of German troops were on Romanian soil, the Ethnic German Group of Romania (GEGR, "Grupul Etnic German din România") was founded and declared a "Romanian juridical person of public right". All Romanian citizens of German origin were officially inducted into the organisation; the representative of the "national will of the Ethnic German Group of Romania" was the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP). After the Legionnaires' Rebellion was crushed in January 1941, NSDAP remained the sole legal political organisation in Romania until the King Michael Coup of August 23, 1944. The head of the GEGR and of the local NSDAP was Andreas Schmidt, named directly by Berlin, whose interests he represented. Some members of GEGR called for including Transylvania and Banat into a separate state – Donauland – which would be a protectorate of the Third Reich. The GEGR, which used terror against ethnic Germans who did not share its Nazi ideology, was disbanded by the decree-law of October 7, 1944.

Notable members

*Rudolf Brandsch (president, 1919-1935)
*Fritz Fabritius (president, 1935-1938)
*Hans Otto Roth
*Fritz Connert
*Franz Krauter

References

*"Enciclopedia partidelor politice din România, 1859-2003", Editura Meronia, Bucharest 2003, ISBN 973-8200-54-7

External links

*ro icon William Totok, [http://www.divers.ro/germanii_din_romania_intre_nazism_si_stalinism_de_william_totok_ro "Germanii din România intre nazism si stalinism", at Divers.ro]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • German People's Party (Romania) — The German People s Party ( de. Deutsche Volkspartei in Rumänien; ro. Partidul Poporului German din România, PPGR) was a political party that operated in Romania between 1935 and 1938, claiming to represent the ethnic German community.Alfred… …   Wikipedia

  • Magyar Party (Romania) — The Magyar Party (Hungarian: Országos Magyar Párt; Romanian: Partidul Maghiar, PM, officially Partidul Naţional Maghiar) was a political party in post World War I Romania. The party had a heterogeneous structure, including bourgeois and… …   Wikipedia

  • National Liberal Party (Romania) — National Liberal Party Partidul Naţional Liberal President Crin Antonescu Secretar …   Wikipedia

  • Conservative Party (Romania, 1880–1918) — This article is about the Conservative Party which existed in Romania between 1880 and 1918. For the Romanian political party currently known as the Conservative Party, see Conservative Party (Romania). Conservative Party Partidul Conservator… …   Wikipedia

  • National Socialist Party (Romania) — The National Socialist Party (Romanian:Partidul Naţional Socialist) was a mimetic National socialist political party active in Romania during the early 1930s. The success of the Nazi Party in the July 1932 election in Germany increased interest… …   Wikipedia

  • National Agrarian Party (Romania) — The National Agrarian Party (Romanian:Partidul Naţional Agrar) was a right wing agrarian political party active in Romania during the early 1930s. The party emerged in 1932 following a split in the People s Party and in response to the conversion …   Wikipedia

  • Conservative Party (Romania) — Conservative Party Partidul Conservator President Daniel Constantin Founded 18 December 1991 …   Wikipedia

  • Peasants' Party (Romania) — The Peasants Party (Romanian: Partidul Ţărănesc , PŢ ) was a political party in post World War I Romania that espoused a left wing ideology partly connected with Agrarianism and Populism, and aimed to represent the interests of the Romanian… …   Wikipedia

  • German occupation of Czechoslovakia — Occupation of Czechoslovakia redirects here. For the 1968 invasion, see Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia. The partition of Czechoslovakia in 1938–1939. German occupation of Czechoslovakia (1938–1945) began with the Nazi annexation of… …   Wikipedia

  • German exodus from Eastern Europe — Flight and expulsion of Germans during and after World War II (demographic estimates) Background …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”