Hanns Oberlindober

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Hanns Oberlindober
In the first row from left to right: Hanns Oberlindober, Fedor von Bock , Erhard Milch , Heinrich Himmler , Karl Dönitz , Wilhelm Keitel , Hermann Göring and Adolf Hitler at the Heroes' Remembrance Day on March 21, 1943 in the Zeughaus Berlin

Hanns Oberlindober (born March 5, 1896 or 1895 in Munich , † April 6, 1949 in Warsaw ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

Live and act

Empire and Weimar Republic

Hanns Oberlindober, son of a professional officer, attended a humanistic high school in Berlin-Friedenau . From 1914 to 1918 he took part in the First World War. In 1918 he was seriously wounded as a company commander in a Bavarian engineer company and retired from the army. He was awarded the Iron Cross of both classes.

After the war, Oberlindober worked in the commercial field until 1927. He then worked as an orator and journalist for the NSDAP, which he joined in 1922 and which he rejoined in 1925 after it was temporarily banned. In 1923 Oberlindober married. Since 1930 he published the magazine Der Dank des Vaterland . From 1924 to 1929 he sat on the city council of Straubing for the NSDAP , temporarily as parliamentary group leader. In the Sturmabteilung (SA) he achieved the rank of group leader, later that of standard then that of brigade leader of the SA. His most important function in the following years, however, was the management of the Office of War Victims at the Reich leadership of the NSDAP.

In the general election of September 1930 Oberlindober was a candidate of the Nazi Party for the constituency 7 (Breslau) in the Reichstag elected. In July 1932, he exchanged constituency 7 in favor of constituency 19 (Hessen-Nassau), for which he subsequently belonged without interruption until the end of the Nazi era in May 1945. The most important parliamentary event in which Oberlindober was involved during his time as a member of parliament was the passing of the Enabling Act in March 1933, which was also passed with his vote.

In 1933 he lived as a businessman in Obermenzing .

Period of National Socialism and the post-war years

During the time of National Socialism, Oberlindober headed the NS War Victims Supply eV (NSKOV), which emerged from the Kyffhäuserbund . In this capacity he organized meetings of World War I veterans as well as maintaining relations with British and French veterans organizations. In 1934 Oberlindober also took over the management of the NSDAP main office for war victims. He was also a member of the Reich Labor Minister's Settlement Advisory Board and he was a supply officer at the NSDAP's Defense Policy Office.

In addition, Oberlindober held numerous functionary posts. He was a board member of the working committee of the German associations, chairman of the Reich committee for the welfare of war disabled and war survivors, member of the Academy for German Law and chairman of the supply committee of the academy. He was also a member of the Presidential Council of the Academy for State Research and Reich Planning, a member of the board of the German-French Society and a member of the federal board of the German Reich Warrior Association Kyffhäuser. Finally, he was a member of the federal board of the Reich Association of German Officers, a member of the board of trustees of the Hindenburg donation , chairman of the board of directors of the Deutscher Kriegerkurhaus Davos and a member of the Great Council of the Red Cross.

After the Second World War Oberlindober fell into American captivity. In 1948 he was extradited from American custody to Poland, where he died in April 1949 in a Warsaw hospital. All of Oberlindober wrote pamphlets and, edited by him five years working for leaders and people (German war victims, Berlin 1938) and provided him with a foreword frontline soldiers want peace (Safari-Verlag, Berlin 1937) were in the Soviet occupation zone on the list of literature to be discarded is set.

Fonts

  • Thanks from the fatherland. Speech given in the Gau Düsseldorf , 1932.
  • Honor and justice for the German war victims , 1933.
  • The team, comradeship of the front poets , 1933.
  • Front soldiers want peace , 1937.
  • 5 years of work for leaders and people , 1938.
  • A fatherland that belongs to everyone! Letters to contemporaries from twelve years of struggle , 1940.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Bavarian Main State Archives IV , z. B. 16696. War ranking. Date of birth here 03/05/1895 as in 14 other KRL entries - compared to only 5 that state 1896.
  2. ^ Yearbook of the Academy for German Law, 1st year 1933/34. Edited by Hans Frank. (Munich, Berlin, Leipzig: Schweitzer Verlag), p. 256
  3. ^ Hermann-Josef Rupieper / Alexander Sperk: The situation reports of the secret state police for the province of Saxony 1933 to 1936 , p. 332.
  4. http://www.polunbi.de/bibliothek/1946-nslit-o.html
  5. http://www.polunbi.de/bibliothek/1946-nslit.html
  6. http://www.polunbi.de/bibliothek/1946-nslit-f.html