Hans Henning Atrott
Hans Henning Atrott, also Hans Atrott, was notable for his commitment in the German right-to-die movement.
Biography
His father was Protestant minister at James Church in Memel. Neither of his parents survived World War II. He spent his childhood with his maternal grandparents and in Christian boarding schools.He studied philosophy, political science and sociology at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and the Bavarian School of Public Policy. As student from 1969 - 1971, he was federal, i.e., national, chairman of the Association of East Prussian Students in Germany.
Atrott was the founder and first president of the German society for voluntary euthanasia then based in Augsburg, Bavaria, and former secretary of the World Federation of Right to Die Societies. He introduced living wills in Germany and was the first to promote voluntary euthanasia after World War II within Germany.
He self-published his theories in his books "Jesus' Bluff - The universal Scandal of the World ", in 2009 and in 2015 "Cross and Crime - Jesus Came to Crucify the World." Both books have been translated into Spanish, the latter, in addition, into French.
From 1978 until his death, he was married to Anita Atrott. Atrott left Germany in 1995. He was a father and grandfather. Depending on the seasons of a year, towards the end of his life, he shared his time between Klaipéda,, Los Gigantes and Switzerland, where his descendants also live. He died in 2018.