Detlef Dzembritzki

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Detlef Dzembritzki at an election campaign event in Berlin-Tegel

Detlef Dzembritzki (born March 23, 1943 in Berlin ) is a German politician ( SPD ) and was a member of the German Bundestag from 1998 to 2009 .

Since 2005 he has been chairman of the United Nations subcommittee of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the German Bundestag. From 1994 to 1999 he was state chairman of the SPD in Berlin. He is the federal chairman of the German Society for the United Nations and for many years was the state chairman of the Berlin regional association of the German War Graves Commission .

Life and work

After graduating from secondary school in 1959, Dzembritzki initially did a commercial internship, but then began training at a technical school for kindergarten teachers, after-school care workers and educators in 1960, which he finished in 1962 with an exam. After completing his year of recognition as an educator , he became a consultant for political education at the Berlin regional association of the Association of German Scouts (BDP) in 1964 . From 1966 to 1970 Dzembritzki was then the full-time federal secretary of the BDP. He then took over the management of a youth education center in Berlin and was then from 1972 to 1975 personal advisor to the State Secretary to the Senator for Family, Youth and Sport of the State of Berlin.

From May 1996 to December 2000 Dzembritzki was managing director of the Regionalentwicklungsgesellschaft Velten mbH. Since July 1999 he has been honorary president of the Institute for Applied Family, Childhood and Youth Research at the University of Potsdam . Detlef Dzembritzki has been chairman of the executive board of the German Society for the United Nations since December 2011.

Detlef Dzembritzki is married and has two children. His son is the former head of the Rütli School , Aleksander Dzembritzki .

Political party

Dzembritzki joined the SPD in 1962. From 1992 to 1994 he was first deputy chairman and then from 1994 to 1999 regional chairman of the SPD in Berlin. He resigned from this office after the primary election of the top candidate of the Berlin SPD for the election to the House of Representatives in 1999, not the parliamentary group chairman Klaus Böger favored by him and the SPD state executive , but the former governing mayor Walter Momper as challenger Eberhard Diepgens .

MP

From 1971 to 1975 he was a member of the district assembly of Berlin-Reinickendorf .

From 1998 to 2009 he was a member of the German Bundestag , from 2002 to 2005 deputy chairman of the Committee for Economic Cooperation and Development and also spokesman for the Berlin regional group in the SPD parliamentary group .

From 2005 Dzembritzki was chairman of the United Nations subcommittee of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the German Bundestag.

In addition, he was a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe from January 23, 2006 to January 25, 2010 . a. as first vice-chairman in the committee for culture, science and education.

Detlef Dzembritzki has always entered the Bundestag as a directly elected member of the Berlin-Reinickendorf constituency . In the 2005 Bundestag elections , in which he stood for the last time, he received 42.5% of the first votes .

Public offices

From 1975 to 1989 Dzembritzki was district councilor for public education and since 1981 for youth and sport in the Reinickendorf district. He was then mayor of the Reinickendorf district from 1989 to 1995 .

Honor

In January 2014, Governing Mayor Klaus Wowereit awarded Dzembritzki the Federal Cross of Merit on ribbon .

Web links

Commons : Detlef Dzembritzki  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German Society for the United Nations : Board members . Accessed January 30, 2020 . The current DGVN board was elected at the 35th Ordinary General Meeting on October 26, 2019 in Berlin.
  2. Ulrich Zawatka-Gerlach: Aleksander Dzembritzki becomes State Secretary for Sports. In: tagesspiegel.de. Tagesspiegel , May 3, 2018, accessed May 21, 2018 .
  3. Mr. Detlef DZEMBRITZKI . PACE. Archived from the original on March 31, 2009. Retrieved February 19, 2019.