Saint Ansgar School

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Saint Ansgar School
Logo of the Sankt Ansgar School
type of school high school
founding 1946
address

Bürgerweide  33
20535 Hamburg

place Hamburg
country Hamburg
Country Germany
Coordinates 53 ° 33 '28 "  N , 10 ° 1' 54"  E Coordinates: 53 ° 33 '28 "  N , 10 ° 1' 54"  E
carrier Archdiocese of Hamburg
Teachers 68
management Hans-Martin Flesch
Website www.sankt-ansgar-schule.de

The Sankt-Ansgar-Schule (short form: SAS ) in Hamburg-Borgfelde was founded on May 4th 1946 and is a state-recognized Catholic private school ( substitute school ) within the association of Jesuit schools . School boards the school is since 1 January 2017, the Archdiocese of Hamburg . In addition to the Sophie-Barat-Schule, which has also existed since 1946, and the Niels-Stensen-Gymnasium founded in 2003, it is one of the three Catholic high schools in Hamburg. The Sankt Ansgar School was a boys' school until the 1978/1979 school year .

The school's motto is “bonitatem et disciplinam et scientiam doce me, domine” (after Psalm 118,66 Vulgate ; in German “Lord, teach me goodness, discipline and knowledge”). It stands above the main portal of the old building and corresponds to the demand for holistic education . The school patron is Saint Ansgar von Bremen , a monk from the Corvey monastery , who founded the Archdiocese of Hamburg in 834 AD .

The majority of the Jesuits moved from Hamburg to the community in Berlin in 1993 , one brother stayed in the "Ansgar House" on the school premises until 2003 and the Catholic Student Youth (short form: KSJ; until 2011: " Bund Neudeutschland ", short form: ND) became Supervised by Fathers until 2008. The school continues to work according to Jesuit educational principles and is integrated into the network of Jesuit schools.

Foundation and developments at the SAS

Street view of the old building as seen from the Bürgerweide (2014)

Plans for a Catholic boys' school in Hamburg had existed since 1917, but Father Joppens SJ, who was entrusted with the planning, was transferred to Cologne in the 1920s , so they were not pursued any further. In August 1945, Father Kugelmeier SJ suggested to the Provincial of the Lower German Order Province, Father Wilhelm Flosdorf SJ, in Cologne to take up the existing plans and implement them again. The Bishop of Osnabrück , Wilhelm Berning , who was responsible for the Catholic Church in Hamburg at the time, agrees with the request. The Father Provincial commissioned Kugelmeier to negotiate the establishment of a school with the Senate of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg together with the city ​​dean of Hamburg, Prelate Wintermann . The talks with the then school senator Heinrich Landahl ( SPD ) are quick and positive.

On January 17, 1946, Senator Landahl informed Prelate Wintermann and Fathers Dohle SJ and Overhage SJ that he would approve the order's plans. Approval was granted on March 25, 1946 by the school administration. On May 4, 1946, the British occupying power confirmed the Senate's decision and at the same time approved the first five teachers for the new school (Roland Seffrin, August Wilhelm Thies, Rudolf Heinisch, Father August Dohle SJ, Father Paul Overhage SJ). You do not choose "Sankt-Ansgar-Kolleg" or "Sankt-Ansgar-Gymnasium", but rather neutrally for "Sankt-Ansgar-Schule". This marked the founding of the Sankt Ansgar School.

On May 28, 1946, an opening service was held in what was then St. Mary's Church on Danziger Strasse. The National Socialists set the beginning of the school year on September 1st in 1941; the British occupation forces had moved this rule back to Easter in 1945. That is why on May 29, 1946, lessons began in two classrooms in the Danziger Strasse 60 building with 48 boys, including 8 pupils, who were voluntarily repeating the 5th grade due to the war.

There were no new admissions at Easter 1950, as the Senate extended the primary school in Hamburg from 4 to 6 years. On April 26, 1950, the deputation of the school authorities approved the SAS's application to be allowed to take Abiturexamina . On November 29, 1950, the move to the building of the Catholic community school on Pestalozzistraße at Hamburg-Barmbek train station ; the new headmaster is Father Ferdinand Becker SJ.

On April 16, 1951, the plans for a new building at Bürgerweide 33 are presented; The foundation stone was laid on January 23, 1952 and the topping-out ceremony on June 30, 1952 . The SAS move from Barmbek to the new building on March 25, 1953.

The first Abitur exams took place on March 1 and 2, 1954 under the supervision of the school authorities. All admitted students pass the school leaving examination. At Easter 1954 the elementary school is shortened again to 4 years, which is why there are two new 5th (then sixth grade) and 7th grades (then fourth grade).

The publication from 1964 on the SAS contains occupational statistics of the parents as of May of the same year. The order lists employees , civil servants , merchants , doctors , lawyers and engineers as the most frequently mentioned professions. The statistics also show 11% workers and craftsmen and the fact that 5% of the students do not have a father. The publication also presents brief portraits of 9 former Ansgar students who were ordained priests between 1960 and 1964 .

For the 1967/1968 school year, the Germany-wide regulation will be implemented at the SAS to start each school year on August 1st. The previous entrance exams for admission to grammar school were abolished in Hamburg in 1968, which led to a significant increase in the number of students. On November 29, 1968, the final high school diploma examination was held exclusively in music .

The property along Alfredstrasse was bought for a new extension on June 20, 1969, when the SAS visited 758 students. The development plan from 1961 reserved this property between the school and the Lübeck – Hamburg railway line as an area for a new substation for the Hamburgische Electricitäts-Werke . The order was able to successfully come to an agreement with the HEW and campaign for changes to the development plan. The plans for the new building come from Neue Heimat .

For the 1973/74 school year, instead of the 11th (previously upper secondary ), 12th (previously lower primary) and 13th grade (previously upper primary), the reformed upper level at the SAS with pre-semester and study levels was introduced. The design of the gymnasiale Oberstufe as a course system and the reform of the Abitur as a cumulative examination accompanying training go back to an agreement by the Conference of Ministers of Education .

In the summer of 1977, 835 boys attended the SAS and the college comprised 46 teachers and, for the first time, 3 female teachers.

An employee representative body was first elected on May 7, 1979. At the beginning of the 1979/1980 school year, 29 girls were enrolled in school and co-education was thus introduced at the SAS.

At the end of the 1992/1993 school year, the Jesuits left the Sankt Ansgar School due to a lack of young people in the order and switched to the Canisius College in Berlin . The school there was and is in the sponsorship of the order, while the SAS was at that time in the sponsorship of the Association of Roman Catholic Churches in Hamburg.

Model of education

Ratio Studiorum Societatis Jesu from 1598

The core of the education at the Sankt Ansgar School is still the "Ignatian Pedagogy" according to Ignatius von Loyola , the founder of the Jesuit order. The educational principles of the “Society of Jesus”, for which the Ratio Studiorum Societatis Jesu (“Study Regulations of the Society of Jesus”) has been in force since 1598 , strives for a “world and life affirming” attitude and calls for learning and research in all areas of life, but from a Christian perspective and religious point of view. Its three pillars are “charity”, “justice” and “reflection”.

Key points of "Ignatian Pedagogy":

  • The teachers care about the development of each individual student (cura personalis)
  • everyone is accepted, promoted and respected for their own sake - not because of their achievements or benefits
  • Every student should feel their self-worth as a person and at the same time the value of the other in their daily dealings and thus develop a strong sense of justice
  • the education for the ability to develop and orientate oneself to humane values - with an eye for the importance of the respective cultural, social and political environment of all who participate in the life of the school.

On this basis, the school should be consciously perceived as a place where students and teachers live together, where it is not just about the acquisition of knowledge, but also about the education of the entire personality. One example of this is the social internship, in which the students spend four weeks helping people in need in society.

The school as part of the Jesuit schools

The Sankt Ansgar School has not been run by the Jesuit order for 25 years, but is still actively integrated into the network of Jesuit schools. She maintains contacts with other Jesuit schools at home and abroad, for example in the form of an annual student exchange with “St. Joseph de Tivoli ”in Bordeaux in France and from 1990 to 2010 with an exchange every two years with the“ Loyola High School ”in Los Angeles in the USA , until the latter discontinued its German offer in favor of the introduction of Mandarin .

In the course of this worldwide network of Jesuit schools, the school administrators consult with each other in order to react to new questions in the education and organization of schooling. Institutionalized contacts exist with the Aloisius College in Bonn , the Canisius College in Berlin and the College St. Blasien in the Black Forest , as the fathers working there often worked and lived at the SAS in Hamburg for a time due to the rotation principle . In addition, the schools compete against each other, for example in sports competitions.

Charitable commitment

Clay pendant commemorating the 40th anniversary of the SAS (1986)

The school supports several charitable projects, for example through the traditional "Alsterlauf". The pupils of all private schools in Hamburg collect donations to finance school projects and sometimes for charitable purposes by having businesses or private individuals, for example their parents, pay a fixed amount per kilometer. The run goes several times around the Outer Alster . On the occasion of the school's fortieth anniversary in 1986, the proceeds from clay pendants previously made in art class were donated to charity.

Most recently, several Catholic schools organized a modified "Alsterlauf" for a good cause. All the students went around the Alster once; Each student had to find as many sponsors as possible beforehand, who paid a lump sum. The run was started by the Archbishop of Hamburg, the Second Mayoress and some international representatives. The motto was: "Solidarity is possible!"

The second project is “Ciudad Bolivar”, which is used to build a day care center in Ciudad Bolívar, a district of Bogotá , in Colombia . There, young mothers can have their children looked after while they are doing their own training. Several thousand euros were collected for this project, among other things through the "Mini-Dom", the traditional annual school festival , and through flea markets . In addition, a soccer ball with the HSV players' signatures was auctioned for this project and a “game day” was organized.

Upper level profile and state requirements

In the 2009/2010 school year, the “ upper level profile ” was introduced at all Hamburg schools with an upper level . Since the SAS follows all state requirements that apply in the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg , the upper level profile was also implemented at this school. In this context, it should be mentioned that, for the above reasons, in biology lessons the textbooks common in all Hamburg schools teach " theistic evolution " and not the " doctrine of creation ".

There are six profiles to choose from at the Sankt Ansgar School:

  • 1. Profile: "Biology - on the trail of life": biology, chemistry, religion, seminar
  • 2. Profile: “Source of life - energy”: physics, geography, chemistry, religion, seminar
  • 3. Profile: “World – Pictures”: Music / visual arts, history, religion, seminar
  • 4. Profile: "Globalization": PGW (politics / society / economy), geography, religion, business English, seminar
  • 5. Profile: "Body and soul": religion, biology, Latin, sports theory, sports practice, seminar
  • 6. Profile: "Shaping the future": PGW, biology, religion, chemistry (1st / 2nd semester) / History (3rd / 4th semester)

Two of the subjects to the right of the profile name must be chosen at a so-called "advanced level". Furthermore, the core subjects German, mathematics, English / Spanish must be taken. The usual elective offers are retained.

Degrees and subject combinations

languages

The SAS attaches great importance to (old) language education. Every student learns English as well as Spanish or Latin. After five years, all successful Latin students receive the Latinum . In addition, there is the possibility of obtaining the great Latinum. The SAS also offers French and Ancient Greek. Students who have chosen Ancient Greek can receive the Graecum .

Language sequence of the school:

  • Class 5: English or Latin and English
  • Class 6: Latin or Spanish
  • End of grade 7 Profile decision for grades 8-10: linguistic profile (French or ancient Greek) or scientific profile (natural sciences)

Possible orders:

  • Class 5: English → Class 6: Latin or Spanish → Class 8: French or ancient Greek
  • Class 5: English → Class 6: Latin or Spanish → Class 8: Natural Sciences
  • Class 5: Latin and English → Class 8: Spanish or ancient Greek
  • Class 5: Latin and English → Class 8 natural sciences

Natural sciences

In addition to mathematics (grades 5 to 12), other natural sciences (see below) are taught. The SAS has several modern school laboratories for this purpose. The Nano-AG (a physics workshop) has won the “zero-emission” competition at state level several times. In addition, students and teachers jointly operate the SAS website . Since 2011, the Sankt-Ansgar-Schule has been running a three-day student course on particle physics together with four other Hamburg schools in cooperation with DESY and the Particle World Network . Since March 2013, the Sankt-Ansgar-Schule has been one of the pilot schools of the girl support program mint: pink of the NAT initiative. Since October 2013 the Sankt-Ansgar-Schule has been GYPT-Nord base to prepare for the IYPT. The school has an " S1 laboratory ".

Overview natural sciences:

  • Class 5: Biology
  • Grade 6: Physics (through to Grade 10)
  • Class 8: Chemistry; Compulsory elective BCS (BioChemical Studies)
  • Class 11: Compulsory elective: Computer science (basic course)

Music at the SAS

There are several music groups at the Sankt Ansgar School, which, among other things, perform two days a year with a “music cocktail”. The concert will be prepared on a musical tour. The proceeds from the event flow into new instruments for the school.

Play on the music cocktail:

  • the SAS big band
  • the junior big band
  • the old school big band
  • the large, intermediate and lower level choir
  • the orchestra and the pre-orchestra
  • the SAS band (best-known former member: Michael "Weiki" Weikath).

In the spring of each year, these music groups rehearse for the music cocktail for a week from Monday to Friday at the Musikfreizeit in Hitzacker .

On every third Sunday in Advent , the Sankt Ansgar School organizes an Advent concert . The choirs and orchestras sing and play.

There are also benefit concerts by the jazz formations, at which the SAS bands play together with the SOPHIEsticators of the SBS and the Martin Terens Trio for the Catholic schools in Hamburg. The proceeds from this go to the foundation of the Catholic schools in Hamburg.

The jazz formations took the following places at Jugend jazzt 2009 :

  • SAS Big Band - 1st Prize

The jazz formations took the following places at Jugend jazzt 2006 :

  • SAS Big Band - 2nd Prize
  • SAS Junior Big Band - 1st prize
  • SAS Old School Students Big Band - 1st Prize

The jazz formations took the following places at Jugend jazzt 2004 :

  • SAS Old School Students Big Band - 1st Prize

School fees

From 1970 to the 2000s, no school fees were charged for attending any Catholic school in Hamburg . For attending the SAS, a monthly fee of EUR 100 has to be paid per school year; Guest students pay a flat rate of 30.00 euros.

School grounds

Actual main entrance on Alfredstrasse
The 2010 extension to the new building (seen from Alfredstrasse)
Photo from the roof of the sports hall: new building (left), part of the schoolyard, old building (right)
Ansgar House, seen from Alfredstrasse
Entrance and roof of the sports hall

The school grounds of the SAS consist of an ensemble of several buildings around the school yard. Until 1943 there was an elementary school on the property, founded in 1892 , which was bombed out during Operation Gomorrah in 1943 ; In 1946, the Catholic Church acquired the property at Bürgerweide 33 from the Senate of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg in exchange for the property at Holzdamm 16 in the St. Georg district, which it owned until then (today the state commercial school at Holzdamm 5). The lessons first took place in the school at Danziger Strasse 60 and then in Pestalozzistrasse until the building on Bürgerweide could be occupied. Today's old building was built on the foundations of the former primary school building under the direction of the architect Gerhard Kamps ; he stands since the 1960s under monument protection . The actual main entrance, the access to the school yard and the teachers' car park are located on Alfredstrasse. The "Ansgar-Haus" can be reached from the back of the school yard and also has its own house number (Bürgerweide 35) and a separate pedestrian access from the Bürgerweide.

Old building
In the three-story old building, the school management's offices, the teachers' room , several conference and administration
rooms and the school chapel are located on the ground floor . On the mezzanines there are two classrooms , course rooms and the specialist rooms for art , physics and computer science . Until the "Ansgar House" was built, the priests lived in the eastern part on the second floor, which was converted into classrooms after the move. On the top floor are the natural science rooms for biology and chemistry , which were renovated in 2004 . In the entire basement area of ​​the building are the rooms of the KSJ city group “St. Willibrord ” , named after an Anglo-Saxon missionary (approx. 658–739 AD).

New building (since 2010 "Friedrich-Spee-Haus")
The new building was erected in 1970/1971 along the property line to Alfredstrasse (topping-out ceremony on May 26, 1971). The planning was based on the vision of using digital media in the future , so that the entire building was equipped with conduits for future cables . The report on the inauguration emphasizes that no tax money was used for the new building. There are classrooms on the two main floors (12 are 64 m², 8 are only 47 m²). From September 29, 1980, a canteen operated by the pupils' mothers was set up in the basement of the new building, offering cold and warm drinks, open and dry rolls and hot lunches. Today the canteen is professionally managed by an external provider. In 2005 a caretaker's box was built inside the building on the ground floor; In 2006, the language laboratory on the first floor was expanded, and the room has been used as a regular classroom ever since. The new building was in 2010 a northern farming by the classrooms of fifth and some sixth grades and the new music rooms were set up, expanded and is now on with this "Friedrich-Spee-house" , named after a famous Jesuit (1591-1635) and opponents of the witch hunt . As part of this construction work, the music rooms that had previously been located next to the canteen in the basement were dismantled and the space created was used to enlarge the canteen, as it existed before 1987. On the third floor there is a 100 m² former art room, which has been used for exhibitions and events since 2011 and as an exam room and which has a narrow roof terrace along the entire hall.

Schoolyard and former Pavilion
Built in the August 1981 pavilion in the schoolyard, where since every school year two classes of middle school had their regular classes, was demolished in 2010 to make way for the construction of a future assembly hall to create; the music lessons took place temporarily in containers during this time .

Sports hall and “Ansgar-Haus”
In the fourth building is the semi-underground sports hall, which was built in 1977 and was extensively modernized in 2014 and the front half of the roof is accessible and usable as an elevated schoolyard area via stone stairs; the demolition of the "old gym" (an Art Nouveau building made of red clinker brick ) had become necessary for reasons of disrepair . This building goes south into the "Ansgar House", which formerly housed the apartments and common rooms of the Jesuits as well as their private chapel. This still houses the small chapel, some course rooms, the library , a storage room for maps , the afternoon care rooms with a new refectory and a "ski cellar", in which the equipment is stored that is necessary for the annual ski trips of the 8th Classes are awarded and on the upper floors the caretaker's apartment and offices of the coordinators, the school social worker and the school pastoral care team.

School newspapers and SAS journal for external presentation

In the commemorative publication for the 25th anniversary of the school, a student magazine called Ventil is mentioned, which was published at the school in the 1960s.

From 1981 to 1990 there was a school newspaper at the SAS with the title The suitcase ; this was replaced from 1991 to 1996 by the school newspaper Tacheles . Since July 2016 there is a new school newspaper with the title sas | tastic .

The SAS Journal , the school's annual report published until 2011, was used to promote the SAS. Copies of it were sent to headmasters of other Catholic schools and to all Catholic parishes in Hamburg. It appeared annually and contained articles about the achievements of the school and its students as well as articles on the educational image of the school, but also reports on trips. The articles in the journal were written by students and teachers; the latter formed the editorial team. It was financed through grants from the school's friends' association and advertisements.

Cases of abuse at the SAS

After cases of sexual abuse of students by fathers and secular employees at the Canisius College in Berlin in 2010, it came to light that there had been similar acts at other Jesuit schools. One of the reasons for this is the "rotation principle" of the Jesuit order, which ensured that the perpetrators actually worked in turn at all German Jesuit schools for a number of years.

From 1981 to 1983 Father Bernhard Ehlen SJ worked at the SAS as a teacher and youth minister. In early 2010, allegations against him were made public, which he admitted in one case and reported himself. Thereupon he was suspended from the priesthood by the then Father Provincial Stefan Dartmann SJ. After that he lived temporarily in the " Ignatius House " for retired Jesuits in Frankfurt am Main . Today he lives in the “Friedrich-Spee-Haus” senior community of the order in Cologne - Mülheim . In the public report on the abuse cases, a victim is quoted as saying “everything except oral sex ”; In addition, it is mentioned that the public prosecutor's investigation was immediately discontinued, because according to the laws in force in 2010, all of Ehlen’s acts were already statute-barred.

Other cases concern Father Wolfgang Statt SJ. From 1979 to 1982 he was a religion and sports teacher at the SAS and is considered to be the inventor of the still popular “Alsterlauf”. In the spring of 2010, five cases became known in which there had been "blows with the hand or a stick on the bare bottom, in the changing room, in front of the comrades' eyes". In an interview with the editor and former Ansgar student Martin Spiewak, the father in question described his deeds in detail, explaining himself: “At the same time, however, those responsible for the order failed to ban me from any educational context parallel to the therapy being started.” The then headmaster of the SAS did not rule out in the spring of 2010 that there might be further cases. Instead, he was transferred to Hamburg in order to take part in therapy in Kiel based on his internally known actions at the Canisius College in the 1970s. When the therapy location was relocated to Freiburg im Breisgau , it was also transferred to the St. Blasien college. Although the order was aware of the problem, instead of assigning tasks with children and young people over and over again. After his tertiary degree , the final admission to the order, Statt was entrusted with the management of a parish in Arica in northern Chile . There he met a Chilean woman , was laicized in 1991 , married her and had a daughter with his wife. Instead, contrary to an earlier promise on his part, he did not return to Germany; his actions are statute-barred.

As early as 2007, the Jesuit Order commissioned the Berlin lawyer Ursula Raue to deal with cases of abuse, who presented a report in May 2010 that can be accessed online. This lists the number of at least 205 victims who were physically abused and / or sexually abused in Jesuit facilities. The number of unreported cases of victims experience has shown higher; In February 2010, the Hamburger Abendblatt reported on three known perpetrators at the Sankt Ansgar School. Rough there were six victim reports of violent and sexual acts at the SAS. In her report, she criticized the fact that "the deeds had been systematically covered up by members of the order". After multiple criticism of her work by the victims and due to the fact that the Jesuit order was her client, i.e. she did not act independently, Raue voluntarily ended her activity as an abuse officer in August 2014.

Also in 2010 the victims' association "Eckiger Tisch" was formed; on their blog in 2014 it was criticized that in the majority of the known cases no compensation had been paid.

Well-known teachers and fathers

  • Father Adolf Rodewyk SJ (1894–1989), exorcist , teacher of Latin and religion, 1954–1960 rector of the Jesuit community at the SAS.
  • Father Rainer Rendenbach SJ (1916–2007), headmaster (1968–1977), at the same time teacher of chemistry and religion at the SAS.
  • Father Heinrich Köster SJ (1935–2000), since 1972 teacher of Latin and religion, 1976 upper school coordinator, 1977–1993 headmaster, then 1993–1997 headmaster at Canisius-Kolleg Berlin, most recently pastor in Erfurt .
  • Father Bernhard Ehlen SJ (* 1939), priest suspended since 2010 because of admitted abuse, and from 1981–1983 teacher and youth minister at the SAS; Founder of “Doctors for Developing Countries” (today German Doctors ).
  • Reiner Schmitz (* 1947), 1993–1996 headmaster, later deputy state school supervisor, head of the Catholic Education Office and 2004–2008 state councilor for education in the Senate under Ole von Beust .
  • Marino Freistedt (* 1954), 1996–2004 headmaster, then high school councilor in the Catholic School Association Hamburg, former member of parliament .
  • Father Klaus Mertes SJ (* 1954), religion teacher and writer , taught from 1990 to 1994 at the SAS, 2000–2011 Rector of the Canisius College, since 2011 Director of the College St. Blasien.
  • Father Heinrich Watzka SJ (* 1954), since 2007 professor of philosophy at the PTH St. Georgen in Frankfurt am Main , 2010–2014 rector of the university, since 2015 rector of the college there, taught philosophy and religion at the SAS during 1989–1998 of his doctoral studies at the University of Hamburg .
  • Father Johannes Siebner SJ (1961–2020), was clerical director of KSJ Hamburg at the SAS from 1993–2002 and taught religion; From 2017-2020 he was the Provincial of the Jesuits in Germany.
  • Father Bernd Hagenkord SJ (* 1968) was spiritual director of the KSJ Hamburg at the SAS from 2002–2008 and has been the head of the German-language editorial team of “ Radio Vatican ” since 2009 .

Well-known graduates

Publications

  • Sankt Ansgar School (ed.): Report of the Sankt Ansgar School . Hamburg, 1955, no ISBN.
  • Sankt Ansgar School, Father Hans Hartmann SJ: Sankt Ansgar School Hamburg. 1960-1964. Hamburg, 1964, no ISBN.
  • Sankt Ansgar School (ed.): Sankt Ansgar School Hamburg. 1946-1971. Sator-Verlag, Hamburg, 1971, no ISBN.
  • Sankt Ansgar School, Christoph Disselhoff (ed.): 40 years of the Sankt Ansgar School. 1946-1986. Beisner-Verlag, Hamburg, 1986, no ISBN.
  • Sankt Ansgar School, Andreas Oettel, Helge Sturm (eds.): 50 years of the Sankt Ansgar School. 1946-1996. Book publication with CD-ROM (19 pieces from the SAS band). Sankt-Ansgar-Schule, Hamburg 1996, no ISBN.
  • Sankt Ansgar School (ed.): This is how we pray! Prayers from young people in the 10th grade of the Sankt Ansgar School in Hamburg. Katholische Verlagsgesellschaft St. Ansgar, Hamburg 1999, ISBN 978-3-932379-16-1 .
  • Sankt Ansgar School, Richard Lutz (ed.): Borgfelde - then and now. 1880-2012. Illustrated book for the school project on the 70th anniversary of the destruction of the district and the inauguration of the school building 60 years ago. Hamburg, 2013, no ISBN.

Web links

Commons : Sankt Ansgar School  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Homepage of the school authority, accessed on March 11, 2017.
  2. Article ( Memento from February 14, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) in the Elbe-Wochenblatt on the tenth anniversary of the NSG, accessed on February 14, 2016.
  3. ^ Text from the picture of the dead ( memento of February 11, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) for Frater Dr. Bernward Lukner SJ
  4. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Sankt-Ansgar-Schule (ed.): Sankt-Ansgar-Schule Hamburg. 1946-1971. Sator-Verlag, Hamburg, 1971, no ISBN.
  5. Sankt-Ansgar-Schule, P. Hans Hartmann SJ: Sankt-Ansgar-Schule Hamburg. 1960-1964. Hamburg, 1964, no ISBN.
  6. a b c d e f g Sankt-Ansgar-Schule, Christoph Disselhoff (ed.): 40 years of the Sankt-Ansgar-Schule. 1946-1986. Beisner-Verlag, Hamburg, 1986, no ISBN.
  7. sankt-ansgar-schule.de
  8. Hamburg student course particle physics
  9. [1]
  10. ^ S1 laboratory - Sankt Ansgar school. Accessed November 30, 2018 (German).
  11. ^ Result list Jugend Jazzt for jazz orchestra
  12. a b Old School Students Big Band
  13. School fees table of the Catholic School Association Hamburg , accessed on June 27, 2016.
  14. Signature 311-3 I_Abl. 1978 421-548 / 1 ( Memento from January 4, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) in the Hamburg State Archives, "Exchange of the state property Bürgerweide 33-35 / Alfredstrasse, Borgfelde sheet 1441, for the property Holzdamm 16, St. Georg-Nord sheet 1811, the Roman Catholic community to build a Catholic school (St. Ansgar School) ”.
  15. ^ Directory of schools from 1933 to 1945 , excerpt from Uwe Schmidt: "Hamburg Schools in the Third Reich" ", p. 22 (PDF census, identified in the document as p. 792).
  16. List of monuments of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, ID 14820, page 929.
  17. ^ Entry at the DNB on the school newspaper Der Koffer , accessed on April 3, 2017.
  18. Entry at the DNB on the school newspaper Tacheles , accessed on April 3, 2017;
  19. Festschrift for the 50th anniversary of the SAS, 1996. Page 109.
  20. haz.de Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung : "Respected Jesuit admits sexual assault in Hanover", accessed on February 12, 2016
  21. Father admits child abuse
  22. german-doctors.de (PDF) Doctors for Developing Countries : “Declaration of the Secretary General”, accessed on February 12, 2010
  23. February 3, 2010, 10:04 am KNA Katholische Nachrichten-Agentur GmbH
  24. Berliner Morgenpost : " Former Canisius teacher admits abuse ", February 3, 2010
  25. ^ Website "Ignatiushaus" in Frankfurt am Main , accessed on February 12, 2016.
  26. Report on cases of sexual abuse in schools and other institutions of the Jesuit Order - May 27, 2010 ( Memento of April 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF), accessed on February 13, 2016.
  27. Website of the victims association Square table , entry of 21 January 2014 called on February 12 2016th
  28. a b c Chapter 2: Hamburg. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung . March 18, 2010, accessed February 12, 2016.
  29. ^ "In passing , so to speak" , Zeit online from February 11, 2010, accessed on February 13, 2016.
  30. Third chapter: St. Blasien. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung. March 18, 2010, accessed February 12, 2016.
  31. ^ The years afterwards In: Süddeutsche Zeitung. March 18, 2010, accessed February 12, 2016.
  32. Report on cases of sexual abuse in schools and other institutions of the Jesuit Order - May 27, 2010 ( Memento of September 5, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF), accessed on February 13, 2016.
  33. Article “Sankt Ansgar School: Even more abuse cases in Hamburg” from February 3, 2010, accessed on February 13, 2016.
  34. Article in the world of May 27, 2010, accessed on February 13, 2016.
  35. ^ Post in the blog of the victims' association "Eckiger Tisch" from August 26, 2014, accessed on February 14, 2016.
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