Jump to content

Horst Salomon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 05:25, 1 October 2020 (Alter: title, url, work. URLs might have been internationalized/anonymized. | You can use this bot yourself. Report bugs here. | Suggested by AManWithNoPlan | All pages linked from cached copy of User:AManWithNoPlan/sandbox2 | via #UCB_webform_linked). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Horst Salomon
Horst Salomon delivering a speech to East) German Writers' Association (1966)
Horst Salomon delivering a speech to East) German Writers' Association (1966)
Born6 May 1929
Pillkallen, East Prussia, Germany
Died20 June 1972
Gera, Thuringia, East Germany
Occupationauthor
poet
dramatist
SpouseRita (1934-1998)

Horst Salomon (6 May 1929 – 20 June 1972) was a German novelist and screenwriter. His successful career in the German Democratic Republic was cut short by his early death.

Salomon was regarded as a regime loyalist.[1]

Life

Horst Salomon was born in Pillkallen, then a small market town in East Prussia still recovering from the destruction of the First World War. His father was an agricultural worker. He nevertheless attended the Gymnasium (school) in Allenstein.[2] When the war ended in May 1945, Salomon, by now aged 16, was one of the millions required to relocate, and he ended up in Thüringia, by now in the Soviet occupation zone, and which in October 1949 would become part of the Soviet sponsored German Democratic Republic. He became active in the no longer illegal local Anti-Fascist committee, later becoming active in the newly recreated Free German Youth.


"Soon we had bread and butter and shoes: the republic prospered, while the enemy - it was a 17 June - spat lies and stupidity out of their confused minds. Swastikas grinned wickedly from the insurgents' buttonholes. "Crush the workers - the power of the peasants!". Thus bawled the fascists. You stood firm, Comrade Ulbricht - with courage worthy of Stalingrad. We were strengthened and we trampled the "White Guard scum."

Horst Salomon, quoted by Mario Frank as the introduction for his biography of Walter Ulbricht (2001)

"Bald gab es Brot und Butter und Schuhe, die Republik gedieh, als der Feind - es war ein 17. Juni - Lüge und Dummheit in verworr`ne Hirne spie. Das Hakenkreuz es grinste frech im Knopfloch der Putschisten. "Stürzt die Arbeiter - die Bauernmacht" So grölten die Faschisten. - Du standest fest Genosse Ulbricht - Mit Stalingrader Mut. Wir waren stärker und zertraten die "weißgardistische" Brut."

Horst Salomon, quoted by Mario Frank as the introduction for his biography of Walter Ulbricht (2001)

In 1951 he started working at the important Wismut Uranium mines. He worked underground for 4½ years as a hewer. He was able to attend evening classes at the Mining School which enabled him to gain promotion, becoming a foreman and supervisor.[3] He was a member of the Mine rescue service, and in July 1955 a member of the rescue team at the worst mining accident in the history of uranium mining at "Shaft 250" in Niederschlema.[3]

At the same time, being a trusted party member, he worked as a "political inspector",[3] which involved ensuring compliance with the party line. His poem "Genosse Walter Ulbricht" ("Comrade Walter Ulbricht"),[4] which eulogised the country's leader and provided justification for what others saw as the gratuitously savage repression of the 1953 uprising, appeared in its original form in 1955. It received wide coverage within East Germany.[5] Praising the leader in print became an important part of Salomon's contribution.[6] He also worked as an "informal collaborator" (informer) for the Ministry for State Security from 1955,[7] under the cover names "Ursel" and "Petrus".[8][9] In 1958 he was sent to the „Johannes R. Becher“ Literature Institute (as it was then known) in Leipzig, where he was one of several of the country's more promising youthful writers to be mentored by Dr.Erna Barnick.[10] He returned to Wismut in 1961, although his role within the mining enterprise was now cultural and political.[11]

From 1965 he lived in Gera and supported himself as a journalist and freelance author.

The writer

Horst Salomon: Published output (not a complete list)

* 1959: Die von morgen träumen * 1960: Das Lied ein gutes Wort * 1960: Für eine Minute
....(Agitprop; with Werner Bräunig) * 1960: Getrommelt, geträumt und gepfiffen (Poetry) * 1961: Vortrieb (Play) * 1961: Kantate der Freundschaft * 1964: Katzengold (Play) * 1967: Ein Lorbaß (Play) * 1968: Der Regenbogen (TV play) * 1969: Genosse Vater (TV & stage play) * 1971: Schwarzes Schaf (TV play)


Horst Salomon came to prominence as a poet. His volume "Getrommelt, geträumt und gepfiffen" won him the FDJ's de:Erich-Weinert-MedailleErich Weinert Medal in 1960. From 1962 he was working closely with the de:Großes Haus (Gera) Theatre in Gera, and it was here that his plays "Katzengold" (1964) and "Ein Lorbaß" (1967) had their original productions. The first of these won him the National Prize Class 3, and the second transferred to the Deutsches Theater in Berlin within a year, in a production by Benno Besson. "Ein Lorbaß", notably, was thereafter frequently revived in the East German theatres.

Further reading

  • Jutta Wardetzky: Salomon, Horst. In Walther Killy: Literatur-Lexikon, vol. 10, Gütersloh 1991, pp. 122–123.
  • Baldur Haase: Mielke kontra Pegasus. Berufs- und Laienautoren, Literaturinteressierte des ehemaligen DDR-Bezirkes Gera im Visier des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit. Landesbeauftragter des Freistaates Thüringen für die Unterlagen des Staatssicherheitsdienstes der Ehemaligen DDR, Erfurt 2001. ISBN 3-932303-32-6.

References

  1. ^ "HEIDRUN, ICH GEHE ZUR ARMEE ... Aus der Presse der Sowjetzone". Der Spiegel (online). 31 October 1962. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  2. ^ "Horst Salomon". Thüringer Literaturrat e.V., Weimar. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  3. ^ a b c Josef Wenig: Nachwort. In: Horst Salomon: Getrommelt, geträumt und gepfiffen. Verlag Neues Leben, Berlin 1960. p. 107–109
  4. ^ Manfred Jäger (7 May 2001). "Review of "Mario Frank: Walter Ulbricht. Eine deutsche Biographie" (Siedler Verlag, Berlin. 2001)". Deutschlandradio, Köln. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  5. ^ Mario Frank: Walter Ulbricht. Eine deutsche Biografie. Siedler, Berlin 2001. ISBN 3-88680-720-7. p. 9.
  6. ^ "DEIN HERZ, DEIN BLUT, DEIN LEBEN .... Aus der Presse der Sowjetzone". Der Spiegel (online). 1 October 1958. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  7. ^ "Kohl-Urteil hält Publizist nicht auf". Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur. 27 March 2002. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  8. ^ Baldur Haase: Auch für kleine Fische zu haben. In die Akten von »Petrus« geschaut [IM Horst Salomon]. In: Gerbergasse 18. Forum für Geschichte und Kultur. ISSN 1431-1607. Jg. 5 (2000), Nr. 18, S. 12–15.
  9. ^ Thüringer Landeszeitung, Ausgabe Gera, vom 27. März 2002.
  10. ^ Joachim Hoffmann. "Barnick, Erna , Dr. phil. (Ps.: Trude Richter, seit 1932)". Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  11. ^ Annette Spreitz; Rudolf Boch (editor/compiler); Rainer Karlsch (editor/compiler) (2011). Vom Sinfonieorchester bis zum Laienzirkel: Kultur fuer die Bergleute ... Der Bitterfelder Weg: Initiative bildender Kunst. Christoph Links Verlag GmbH, Berlin. p. 605. ISBN 978-3-86153-653-6. {{cite book}}: |author2= has generic name (help); |work= ignored (help)