Gerhard Lenski (politician)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gerhard Lenski (born January 29, 1914 in Posen , † September 28, 2006 in Gießen ) was a German politician ( CDU ) and a former member of the Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania state parliament .

Gerhard Lenski attended elementary school until 1926, the grammar school in Anklam until 1932 and then did a commercial apprenticeship. Lenski then worked as a commercial clerk in various wholesalers in Szczecin. In 1935 he served the RAD in Demmin, but was unfit for military service. After the Second World War, Lenski first headed the resettlement office in the district council and from September 1946 he was appointed chief adviser in the trade and supply department of the city of Anklam. Lenski had been a member of the CDU since November 1945. After the Anklamer CDU was founded by the city ​​treasurer Hans Falke, Lenski soon took over the chairmanship of the local association and was elected to the city council in the elections in spring 1946 and to the state parliament in the 1946 state elections. The SED Anklam district leadership attested Lenski a "reactionary activity" and an "always hostile attitude towards the SED". On the pretext that Lenski had kept quiet about his candidate status in the SA in 1933, she attacked him in the state newspaper on November 19, 1948 and brought about his dismissal in a public city council. Lenski sued the labor court, but then decided to flee to Schleswig-Holstein .

swell

  • LHAS 6.11-1-301, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania State Parliament 1946–1952, personnel records of the Member of the State Parliament, Lenski, who fled to the West
  • Klaus Schwabe: State elections in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania 1946. Booklet accompanying the exhibition in the Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania state parliament from August 28 to October 20, 1996, Schwerin 1996
  • Christian Schwießelmann: The CDU in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania 1945 to 1952. From the foundation to the dissolution of the regional association. A representation of party history . Droste, Düsseldorf 2010, ISBN 978-3-7700-1909-0 , ( research and sources on contemporary history 58).

Web links