Victor Klemperer
Victor Klemperer was a German philologist and diarist. His journals, published posthumously in Germany in 1995, detailed his life under the German Empire, the Weimar Republic, the fascist Third Reich, and the German Democratic Republic.
Three volumes of his diaries have been published in English translations: I Shall Bear Witness, ''To the Bitter End, and The Lesser Evil. The first two, which cover the period of the Third Reich, have become standard sources and have been extensively quoted. His book cat=no cat=no, published in English as The Language of the Third Reich'', examined how Nazi propaganda co-opted and corrupted German words and expressions.
Early life and education
Klemperer was born in Landsberg an der Warthe as the youngest child of a Jewish family. His parents were Wilhelm Klemperer, a rabbi, and Henriette née Frankel. Victor had three brothers and four sisters. His oldest brothers were physicians: Georg, 1865–1946, director of the hospital Berlin-Moabit ; Felix, 1866–1932, director of the hospital Berlin-Reinickendorf.Victor was a cousin of the conductor Otto Klemperer, and first cousin once removed to Otto's son, the actor Werner Klemperer. In 1903 Klemperer converted to Protestantism for the first time, shortly thereafter returning to Judaism.
Victor Klemperer attended several gymnasia. He was a student of philosophy, Romance and German studies at universities in Munich, Geneva, Paris and Berlin from 1902 to 1905, and later worked as a journalist and writer in Berlin, until he resumed his studies in Munich from 1912.
Though not a religious man, Victor Klemperer needed a religious identity, as Jew, Christian or religious dissenter, to support his career in German academia of the time. He chose Christianity as being most compatible with his primary sense of identity as, simply, a German, and became baptised again in Berlin in 1912.
He completed his doctorate in 1913.
Career
Klemperer was habilitated under the supervision of Karl Vossler in 1914. From 1914 to 1915, he lectured at the University of Naples. He responded to the Italian entry into World War I by enlisting as a military volunteer in the Bavarian Army. From November 1915 to March 1916 he was deployed as an artilleryman on the Western Front in France. He was wounded and decorated for bravery by the Kingdom of Bavaria. After a recovery period in Germany, he served in the military censorship department of Prince Leopold of Bavaria's Ober Ost command in Kaunas and Leipzig.He stayed in Munich from December 1918 to 1920, initially reporting for the national conservative and Pan-German on the revolution in Bavaria under the pseudonym Antibavaricus. He took a hostile attitude to both the People's State of Bavaria and the Bavarian Soviet Republic despite keeping company with some revolutionaries, whom he dismissed in his account as a "foreign legion". He regained his affiliation to the University of Munich and after the revolution's suppression by the Freikorps, with whom he critically sympathised, he worked as an unpaid lecturer in modern French literature for one term of the 1919/20 academic year.
From 1920 until 1935 he was Professor of Romance Languages at the Technical University of Dresden.
Third Reich
Despite his conversion to Protestantism in 1912 and his strong identification with German culture, Klemperer's life started to worsen considerably after the Nazis' seizure of power in 1933. Under the 1933 Nazi "First Racial Definition", a "Jew" was a racial category, not just a religious one. As such, Klemperer was considered a Jew even though he had converted to Protestantism.In 1933, the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service was passed removing all non-Aryan professors from their profession, with the exception of those who had fought in World War I. This exception allowed Klemperer to continue in his position a little longer, although without the right to use the university library or other faculty privileges.
Klemperer was gradually forced out of his job and forced to retire in 1935. Although he was allowed to keep part of his pension, the money quickly ran out and he and his wife had to take cleaning jobs.
The couple lost their right to drive and had to sell their car, and their housekeeper had to resign due to the law that prohibited Jews from employing Aryan women. Eventually the Klemperers were forced to put down their household cat, a tomcat named Muschel, because of a restriction as to Jews' ownership of pets. A Nazi law obliged every Jewish female or male to add Sarah or Israel, respectively, as a middle name on all official documents, allowing Jews to be identified as such whenever required to give their full name.
That same year, and subsequently, Klemperer was so dismayed with the spread of antisemitism, even among those who professed to be against the Nazis, that he from time to time entertained the possibility of emigration to the U.S.
A diary entry—for April 10, 1940—records other problems with emigration: "Meeting with the emigration adviser of the Jewish Community, result less than zero: You really must get out—we see no possibility. American-Jewish committees support only observant Jews." In the end his connection to his fatherland was too strong, even after Kristallnacht in November 1938, and the outbreak of war. During the pogrom later in November 1938 their house was searched by Nazis who found Klemperer's saber from World War I—he was arrested briefly and released. By this time he had come to concede that "No one can take my Germanness away from me, but my nationalism and patriotism are gone forever." This release can be attached to the fact that he had a German wife. Although the day after his arrest he wrote to his brother Georg asking for assistance in leaving Germany, in the end he did not do so.
Since his wife, Eva, was "Aryan", Klemperer avoided deportation, often narrowly, but in 1940, he and his wife were rehoused under miserable conditions in a "Jews' House" with other "mixed couples". Here, and especially when he ventured out, or at factories where he was forced to work, he was routinely questioned, mistreated, and humiliated by the Gestapo, Hitler Youth members and Dresden citizens. Only because of his "Aryan" German wife were the couple able to procure food enough to subsist. Klemperer and his fellow Jews became aware only gradually of the nature of the atrocities and the scale of extermination being carried out at camps such as Theresienstadt and Auschwitz, even as they watched friends and neighbors deported and as their own risk of deportation mounted.
Flight
On 13 February 1945, Klemperer witnessed the delivery of notices of deportation to some of the last remaining members of the Jewish community in Dresden, and feared that the authorities would soon also send him to his death. On the following three nights the Allies heavily bombed Dresden for the first time, causing massive damage and a firestorm; during the chaos that followed, Klemperer removed his yellow star on 19 February, joined a refugee column, and escaped into American-controlled territory. He and his wife survived, and Klemperer's diary narrates their return, largely on foot through Bavaria and Eastern Germany, to their house in Dölzschen, on the outskirts of Dresden. They managed to reclaim the house, which the Nazis had "aryanized".Post-war
After the war, Klemperer joined the communist Socialist Unity Party of Germany, and was reinstated in his post at Technical University of Dresden. His former friend, historian who had severed connections with Klemperer upon his dismissal from the University of Dresden, welcomed him back as if nothing had happened.Klemperer became a significant cultural figure in East Germany, holding professor positions at the universities of Greifswald, Halle and Berlin. He was a delegate of the Cultural Association of the GDR in the GDR's Parliament from 1950 to 1958, and frequently mentioned in his later diary his frustration at its lack of power and its largely ceremonial role.
Personal life and death
Victor Klemperer married Eva Schlemmer, an "Aryan" German, in 1906. Intermarriage helped Victor Klemperer to survive, but brought down his wife's societal status. The Nazi Government could not effectively force people to divorce, so many intermarried Jewish and non-Jewish Germans stayed married, despite scrutiny by others.Klemperer died 11 February 1960.
Work
- The Language of the Third Reich, a study on the language of Nazi propaganda.
- Munich 1919 : Diary of a Revolution, John Wiley and Sons Ltd 2022.
- Tagebücher, Klemperer's diary, published in 1995, an immediate literary sensation and rapidly became a bestseller in Germany. An English translation of the years spanning the Nazi seizure of power through Klemperer's death has appeared in three volumes: I Shall Bear Witness, To The Bitter End and The Lesser Evil.
In the diary, the much-feared Gestapo is seen carrying out daily, humiliating, and brutal house searches, delivering beatings, hurling insults, and robbing inhabitants of coveted foodstuffs and other household items. In addition, the diary relates the profound uncertainty all Germans—Jews and non-Jews—experienced because of the paucity of reliable information about the war's progress, largely due to the propaganda so central to the Reich's conduct of the war and of the Final Solution. This diary details the Nazis' perversion of the German language for propaganda purposes in entries that Klemperer used as the basis for his book LTI – Lingua Tertii Imperii.