Rolf Nast-Kolb

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Rolf Nast-Kolb

Rolf Nast-Kolb (born February 3, 1922 in Sonthofen ; † November 16, 2012 in Riemerling ) was a German ministerial official and federal judge .

Life

Nast-Kolb spent the first four years of his childhood in Graefelfing . He came to Rome with his two younger brothers . From the age of 6 he attended a private school run by German nuns and mostly attended by Italians. His stay in Rome ended in autumn 1931 and after a final year of elementary school - again in Graefelfing - he attended the Karlsgymnasium in Munich-Pasing for two years . Years of high school followed in Berlin-Zehlendorf , Perleberg and Vienna . As an officer applicant for the army (Wehrmacht) , he received the "leaving certificate with maturity note" in Vienna at the end of 1939.

war

After training in an artillery regiment , he served in occupied France and Holland. After attending the weapons school (probably at the Döberitz military training area ) he was promoted to lieutenant in 1941. From then on only used on the Eastern Front, he was awarded the Iron Cross II and I Class, the Assault Badge , the Medal Winter Battle in the East 1941/42 , the Demyansk Shield and the Wound Badge . On the day of the unconditional surrender of the Wehrmacht , he was taken prisoner by the Soviets , which he spent in Tilsit and, from spring 1948, in Bashkir gulags . He was released in early December 1949.

Education

Nast-Kolb

Support for late returnees (monthly 125 DM) made it possible for him in the summer semester 1950 at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich for Law enroll. Since his mother was related to two members of the Corps Suevia Munich , he found access to the surgeon Eduard Weber (1910-1966), where he could eat regularly. After visiting a pub - which at that time still took place in a Schwabing Wild West pub - he decided to become a Swabian too. The Reception in May 1951 was followed by 1951/52, two in the summer term 1951 and winter term bracketed seniorates . In the group of mostly younger corps brothers, Nast-Kolb was able to catch up on some of his lost youth. Perceived as no longer “up to date”, the (striking) connections were exposed to frequent attacks and defamations. The Munich University made a major exception to this. To celebrate its 481st anniversary, the rector Michael Schmaus called on all corporations to participate in Couleur . This happened. Already at an intercorporative convent held in the winter semester of 1951/52, in which mainly weapons students took part - Nast-Kolb was then Senior Suevias and the Munich Seniors' Convent  - Schmaus stated to thunderous applause that the university and corporations belonged together and that both were together in their education of young academics would have to contribute. In the same semester, the Munich Senior Citizens' Convention went public for the first time with a large SC-Kommers in the Augustiner basement . Arranged by Hein Martin Franconiae Munich, the American State Commissioner for Bavaria George N. Shuster also took part. Nast-Kolb countered his critical speech politely and unequivocally:

“As the senior of the currently presiding corps in the Munich SC, I would like to thank you, dear Professor Schuster, for your attendance and your interesting statements on behalf of the young Munich corps students. Professor, we corps students have received your remarks today with great interest; they will form the basis for lively discussions within the individual corps. Due to our upbringing and true to the democratic principles that have been anchored in the constitutions of the individual corps for over 100 years, we students of the corps have a very clear idea of ​​a democratic view of life. In practical application of this view, we are pleased to have heard a prominent opponent of our goals today, as it gave us the opportunity to grapple with other views.
Professor, you too may take with you on this evening the conviction that we young corps students are not saber-rattling and brawling-looking neo-militarists that malicious cartoonists would like to make us into, but rather young students who are open to the problems of our time and strive for their knowledge to expand, have come together in their corps and have joined like-minded in deep friendship, just as students have come together in the universities of other countries in the forms characteristic of their people. If our opponents everywhere would first inform themselves personally about our nature and will, we are certain that we can count on the tolerance towards those who think differently, which is indispensable in a democratic state, if not everywhere on approval. We students of the Corps have been willing to work loyally and honestly in democracy since the Corps was founded, and we are still ready today. We do not demand a special position, but we do demand that the basic human rights are respected towards us as well - and in a democratic state every decent citizen should be saved according to his own free choice. "

- Rolf Nast-Kolb

Professional background

Nast-Kolb passed the trainee exam in 1953. Even more inactive , he married Ursula Dietert in September 1953. The marriage resulted in the sons Dieter, Thomas and Kristof as well as the daughter Katrin. Philistriert was Nast-Kolb 1956, after he had passed the Assessor exam. In January 1957 he started as a government assessor in the government of Upper Bavaria . In 1959, he came as a Councilor and Head of the Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior . There he rose to the position of Ministerialrat . In August 1978 he was appointed federal administrative judge for life. In recognition of his military experience and previous activities in the Ministry of the Interior, combined with numerous lectures in police courses and at Bundeswehr schools, he was assigned to the military service senates of the Federal Administrative Court in Munich. By his retirement in May 1987, he was rapporteur or co-rapporteur in around 600 judgments.

For more than 35 years, from 1960 to 1995, he sat on the Philistine Committee of his corps, 1970–1972 and 1982–1984 as chairman. He died at the age of 90 and was buried on November 21, 2012 in Hohenbrunn .

See also

literature

  • Albert Füner: Rolf Nast Kolb . Die Trausnitz, No. 1/2013, pp. 55–58.

Web links

Commons : Rolf Nast-Kolb  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1996, 150/1998
  2. Die Trausnitz, No. 2/1985, p. 26