Josef Dotzauer

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Josef Dotzauer (born September 4, 1900 in Tuchorschitz , † February 14, 1972 in Diepoltskirchen ) was a German politician ( GB / BHE ).

Life

Dotzauer, who attended the kuk infantry cadet school in Prague until 1918 , graduated from the Elbogen State Realschule in 1921 . This was followed by a visit to the commercial academy in Aussig . From 1923 he worked as an accountant at the agricultural district advance fund in Saaz , where he became deputy director in 1928. From 1939 he took part in the Second World War as a soldier . His participation in the war was interrupted from August 1942 to June 1944 when he worked as director of the agricultural district advance fund in Tuschkau city . Dotzauer was most recently taken prisoner by the United States and Britain, from which he was released in December 1946.

While he was a prisoner of war, his family was expelled from Czechoslovakia in August 1946 . She moved to West Germany and settled in Diepoltskirchen. After his release, Dotzauer himself worked for a short time as a temporary worker in Tüschnitzer agriculture, then also came to Diepoltskirchen and there began to get involved politically for the needs of the displaced . In 1947 he was elected as the refugee shop steward for the Diepoltskirchen community, and a year later he assumed the same position in the Eggenfelden district . In May 1948 he was elected to the Diepoltskirchen parish council. In the same year he took over the management of the district group of the new citizens' union Eggenfelden .

In the state elections in 1950 , Dotzauer was elected as a member of the Bavarian state parliament through the constituency of Lower Bavaria for the bloc of expellees and disenfranchised (BHE), which had concluded an electoral alliance with the German Community (DG) , to which he was a member until 1954. In the state parliament he was a member of the Committee for Social Policy Affairs and the Committee for Food and Agriculture for the entire legislative period. From November 1953 he was also a member of the Committee for Economics and Transport.

Web links