When the
Nazi Party took power in Germany in 1933, Zweig was one of many Jews who immediately went into exile. Zweig went first to
Czechoslovakia, then Switzerland and France. After spending some time with
Thomas Mann,
Lion Feuchtwanger,
Anna Seghers and
Bertolt Brecht in France, he set out for Palestine, or
Mandatory Palestine, then under British rule. In
Haifa, Palestine, he published a German-language newspaper, the
Orient. This was not received well by Zionist activists, who insisted on Hebrew-only publications and went so far as to bomb the newspaper's office, which resulted in the newspaper's shutdown. In Palestine, Zweig became close to a group of German-speaking immigrants who felt distant from Zionism and viewed themselves as refugees or exiles from Europe, where they planned to return. This group included
Max Brod,
Else Lasker-Schüler and
Wolfgang Hildesheimer. During his years in Palestine, Zweig returned to
socialism. In Haifa, Zweig underwent psychoanalysis with Ilja Shalit. His novels
De Vriendt Goes Home and
A Costly Dream are partly set in Mandatory Palestine and describe, among other things, the encounter between Zionism, socialism and psychoanalysis. In
De Vriendt Goes Home, a young Zionist, recently immigrated to Palestine from Eastern Europe, kills the Dutch Jew De Vriendt who, on the basis of a more orthodox religious sentiment, was seeking an understanding with the local Arab population. During his stay in Palestine, Zweig may have been the main link between Freud and the local psychoanalytic community. In 1935,
Education Before Verdun, the third novel of Zweig's cycle
The Great War of the White Men came out and, like its predecessor
The Case of Sergeant Grischa it was translated into many languages, and, once more, the US edition became a
Book of the Month selection for 1936. Zweig's 1947 novel The axe of Wandsbek is based upon the
Altona Bloody Sunday (in German:
Altonaer Blutsonntag) riot which resulted from the march by the
Sturmabteilung, the original
paramilitary wing of the
Nazi Party, in
Altona on 17 July 1932. The march turned violent and resulted in 18 people being shot dead, including four Communists including
Bruno Tesch who were beheaded for their alleged involvement in the riot. An East German film,
The Axe of Wandsbek, was later made about the riot and was adapted from Zweig's novel. The authorised version of the film, which was 20 minutes shorter than the original, was screened in 1962, in honour of Zweig's 75th birthday. ==East Germany==