Lieselotte Kruglewsky-Anders

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lieselotte Kruglewsky-Anders , b. Anders, (born May 6, 1915 in Hamburg ; † November 18, 2009 there ) was a German politician ( FDP , SPD ).

Life and work

Anders studied commercial teaching in Hamburg in the 1930s. During the Second World War she belonged to the bourgeois-liberal resistance group Free Hamburg (also group Q ) around Friedrich Ablass , although she had been a member of the NSDAP since 1938 "for reasons of camouflage" . In 1953, now with a doctorate , she joined the Hamburg school service as a commercial teacher. From 1992 to 1999 she was the first chairman of the Hamburg pen art association founded in 1925 .

Political party

After the Second World War , Kruglewsky-Anders initially joined the Bund Free Hamburg , which arose from the resistance group around Friedrich Ablass. On September 20, 1945, she took part in the founding of the Free Democrats Party , later the Hamburg regional association of the FDP , where she also worked as a press officer. On March 31, 1948, she was elected as the representative of the left wing to the state chairman of the Young Democrats . However, she resigned after just six months because of the overwhelming power of the right wing young democrats around Hans Ludwig Waiblinger , who became her successor. On January 20, 1951, along with Hans-Harder Biermann-Ratjen , Emmy Beckmann , Harald Abatz , Anton Leser and Max Dibbern, she was one of the signatories of the appeal for a liberal collection by Edgar Engelhard , who opposed the plans of the state associations of North Rhine-Westphalia, Lower Saxony and Hesse decided to turn the FDP into a party of the National Collection. On March 27, 1953, she resigned from the FDP with Aplomb, when she ended a speech in the citizenry by declaring her conversion to the SPD and then taking a seat in the ranks of the SPD parliamentary group. A few days later it became known that the SPD had already given her a secure place on the list in the election of the same year in the run-up to the speech and that School Senator Heinrich Landahl (SPD, before 1933 DDP ) had given her a job in the school service.

MPs

Kruglewsky-Anders was elected to the Hamburg parliament in 1949 in the constituency 5 St. Georg . The FDP parliamentary group elected her as their secretary on November 2, 1949. In 1953 she was re-elected for the SPD, to which she belonged until 1974.

Individual evidence

  1. Brauers: The FDP in Hamburg 1945 to 1953. Page 116, footnote 248.
  2. boersenblatt.net accessed on July 25, 2013
  3. Brauers, page 488.

Publications

  • Graphics in the 20th Century , Edition Griffelkunst, Hamburg 1977.
  • Art education in the spirit of Lichtwark , Edition Griffelkunst, Hamburg 1977.

literature

  • Christof Brauers: The FDP in Hamburg 1945 to 1953. Martin Meidenbauer Verlagbuchhandlung, Munich 2007, ISBN 978-3-89975-569-5