Walter Haenisch

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Walter Haenisch (11 December 1906, Dortmund – 16 June 1938, Butovo) was a Marxist theoretician and the son of German SPD politician Konrad Haenisch.

Life

Haenisch did his Abitur at the famous Karl-Marx-Schule in

Science and Society", the leading Marxist publication in the USA.[3] Haenisch's connections to Western countries and culture as well as the earlier accusations which led to his dismissal from Marx-Engels-Institute raised the suspicion of the NKVD, which arrested him in March, 1938. In June, 1938, Haenisch was sentenced to death for "espionage" (like thousands of German communists) and subsequently shot at Butovo
firing range and interred in a mass grave there.

Haenisch was married to Gabriele Bräuning, who was deported to Uzbekistan in 1941 and returned to the GDR in 1954. She later married German geologist Friedrich Stammberger, worked as a lecturer for Dietz Verlag Berlin, was a lifelong member of SED (and successors PDS and Linkspartei) and died in 2005.

Literature on Haenisch and his reception

References

  1. ^ Walter Haenisch: William Cobbett im Spiegel der Schriften von Marx und Engels In: Internationale Literatur Bd. 7 (1937), Nr. 8: 146
  2. ^ Walter Haenisch: Percy Bysshe Shelley Das Wort Heft 1 [Issue 1] (January 1938): 96-110
  3. ^ Walter Haenisch: Karl Marx and the Democratic Association of 1847, Science and Society, Vol. 2, No. 1, Winter, 1937, pp. 83-102