Max Hoelz

Max Hoelz with his wife Traute née Loebinger (1928)

Max Hoelz (14 October 1889 - 15 September 1933) was a German Communist, most known for his role as a 'Communist Bandit' in the Vogtland region.

Hoelz was born the son of a day labourer[1] and emigrated to Britain in 1905 to become a mechanic.[2]

Hoelz served in the German army during the World War I but was wounded and worked on the railways.[1] Towards the end of the war he was working in a reinforced concrete construction company near Mulhouse in Alsace where he received news his wife in Vogtland was ill, leading him to travel back to Falkenstein with soldiers returning from the front, amongst whom he helped form the Falkenstein Workers' and Soldiers' Council on 9 November 1918.[3] However, he was shortly forced out of the council by his co-chair Sturl, a USPD member, but despite this he joined the USPD a got a job selling subscription to their new journal for the Vogtland, Vogtlandische Volkszeitung.[4] Hoelz went on to found the local branch of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in Falkenstein in Spring 1919 and became a leader of the unemployed in the town.[5]

During the Kapp Putsch Hoelz helped form a Red Army in Vogtland.[6] However the activities of his mobile detachment consisting of sometimes as many as 200 armed men caused dismay to the KPD leaders, and soon Heinrich Brandler of the Chemnitz KPD ensure he was expelled from the party. As the Communist Workers Party of Germany (KAPD) was at that time bringing together former KPD activists who were disillusioned with the moderate politics of the KPD leadership, he soon joined them, finding himself more at home amongst their ranks.[7] In the aftermath of the crushing of the Ruhr Red Army, the Vogtland was surrounded by 50,000 government troops and Hoelz led his army to the border with Czechoslovakia where they were surrounded by the Reichswehr.[8] The Red Army split up into detachments to avoid the Reichsweher and Hoelz was eventually arrested in Czechoslovakia and then deported to Austria.[9]

After returning to Vogtland in late 1920, Hoelz organised a band of around 50 men equipped with arms and bicycles to try and free those detained after the Kapp Putsch.[10] The first bombing he organised was of the Falkenstein Rathaus on 6 March 1921 and others targeted courthouses throughout Germany.[11]

Later in his 1929 autobiography 'From the "White Cross" to the Red Flag' he regretted taking part in this these attacks,

"It was a grave political mistake to endorse, and participate in, the robberies of banks, post offices, etc. by "expropriation groups." The money went to leaders of the KAPD. It fulfilled a political purpose because it was used to print newspapers and leaflets. A small part was used to help the comrades living underground. Unfortunately, the proletarian aid organisation Rote Hilfe did not yet exist. However, the political gain never outweighed the damage done to the communist cause by the expropriations. One reason was that most of the revolutionary communist workers did not understand and condone them. Another reason was that the actions corrupted the comrades involved in them."[12]

March Action

Hoelz was one of the leaders of armed groups during the March Action in the Mansfelder district[2] and ended up on trial in Berlin in May 1921 where he was sentenced to life imprisonment.[13]

Later life

He was released by an amnesty in 1928 and moved to the Soviet Union where he remained critical of Communist Parties of Germany and the Soviet Union as well as of the Comintern as a whole. His request to return to Germany was turned down.[14] He drowned in the Oka River near Nizhny Novgorod on September, 1933.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Kuhn, G. (eds) All Power to the Councils! A Documentary History of the German Revolution of 1918-1919, Oakland: PM Press pg.279
  2. 1 2 Broue, P. (2006) The German Revolution 1917-1923, Chicago: Haymarket pg.970
  3. Hoelz pp. 280-1
  4. Hoelz p. 281
  5. Hoelz p. 282
  6. Hoelz pp. 285-6
  7. Heath, Nick. "Max Hoelz, The Red Robin Hood". Libcom.org. Libcom.org. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  8. Hoelz p. 291
  9. Hoelz p. 295
  10. Hoelz p. 296
  11. Hoelz pp. 296-7
  12. Hoelz pp. 297-8
  13. Hoelz pp. 299-302
  14. "Unser Wort On the Death of Max Hoelz". The Militant. VI (55). 1933. Retrieved 1 February 2016.

Sources

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Max Hoelz.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.