Kisch was born into a wealthy German-speaking
Sephardi Jewish family in
Prague, at that time part of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire, and began his journalistic career as a reporter for
Bohemia, a Prague
German-language newspaper, in 1906. In 1910,
Bohemia began publishing a weekly column of Kisch's essays. “Prague Forays” ran for more than a year and, along with several books containing reprinted and original material, made Kisch a local celebrity. These feuilletons, which consisted of what he called "little novels" about the city, were characterised by an interest in prisons, work houses, and the lives of the poor of Prague. His style was inspired by
Jan Neruda,
Émile Zola and
Charles Dickens's
Sketches by Boz. Before World War I, he uncovered the spy scandal involving
Alfred Redl, which he published anonymously at the time. At the outbreak of World War I, Kisch was called up for military service and became a corporal in the Austrian army. He fought on the front line in
Serbia and the
Carpathians and his wartime experiences were later recorded in
Schreib das auf, Kisch! (
Write That Down, Kisch!) (1929). He was briefly imprisoned in 1916 for publishing reports from the front that criticised the Austrian military's conduct of the war, but nonetheless later served in the army's press quarters along with fellow writers
Franz Werfel and
Robert Musil.
Communist The war radicalised Kisch. He deserted in October 1918 as the war came to an end and played a leading role in the abortive
left-wing revolution in
Vienna in November of that year.
Werfel's novel
Barbara oder die Frömmigkeit (1929) portrays the events of this period and Kisch was the inspiration for one of the novel's characters. Although the revolution failed, in 1919 Kisch became a member of the
Austrian Communist Party and remained a Communist for the rest of his life. in 1934 was later chronicled in his book
Landung in Australien (
Australian Landfall) (1937). The right-wing Australian government refused Kisch entry from the ship
Strathaird at Fremantle and Melbourne because of his previous exclusion from the UK. Kisch then took matters into his own hands. He jumped five metres from the deck of his ship onto the quayside at
Melbourne, breaking his leg in the process. He was bundled back on board but this dramatic action mobilised the Australian left in support of Kisch. When the
Strathaird docked in Sydney, proceedings were taken against the Captain on the grounds that he was illegally detaining Kisch. Justice
H. V. Evatt ordered that Kisch be released. Under the
Immigration Restriction Act 1901, visitors could be refused entry if they failed a dictation test in any European language. As soon as Kisch was released, he was re-arrested and was one of the very few Europeans to be given the test; he was tested in
Scottish Gaelic because it was thought he might pass if tested in other European languages. The officer who tested him had grown up in northern Scotland but did not have a particularly good grasp of Scottish Gaelic himself. In the
High Court case of
R v Wilson; ex parte Kisch, the court found that Scottish Gaelic was not within the fair meaning of the Act, and overturned Kisch's convictions for being an illegal immigrant. On 17 February 1935, Kisch addressed a crowd of 18,000 in the Sydney Domain warning of the dangers of Hitler's Nazi regime, of another war and of
concentration camps.
Spain, France, the United States and Mexico In 1937 and 1938, Kisch was in Spain, where left-wingers from across the world had been drawn by the
Spanish Civil War. He travelled across the country, speaking in the
Republican cause, and his reports from the front line were widely published. Following the
Munich Agreement of 1938 and the subsequent Nazi occupation of
Bohemia six months later, Kisch was unable to return to the country of his birth. Once war broke out, Paris, which he had made his main home since 1933, also became too dangerous for an outspoken Jewish communist whose native land no longer existed. In late 1939, Kisch and his wife Gisela sailed for New York where, once again, he was initially denied entry. He eventually landed at
Ellis Island on 28 December, but as he only had a transit visa moved on to Mexico in October 1940. He remained in Mexico for the next five years, one of a circle of European communist refugees, notable among them
Anna Seghers and
Ludwig Renn and the German-Czech writer
Lenka Reinerová. He continued to write, producing a book on Mexico and a memoir,
Marktplatz der Sensationen (
Sensation Fair) (1941). In this period of exile, Kisch's work regularly returned to the themes of his Prague home and his Jewish roots and in March 1946 (after troubles in securing a Czechoslovak visa) he was able to return to his birthplace. Immediately after the return he started to travel around the country and work as a journalist again.
Legacy Kisch died of a stroke two years after his return to Prague, shortly after the
Communist party seized complete power. Kisch is buried in the
Vinohrady Cemetery, Prague, Czech Republic. After his death, Kisch's life and work were held up as exemplary in the
GDR. The attitude to both in West Germany was more complicated due to his communism. Nonetheless, when
Stern magazine founded a prestigious award for German
journalism in 1977, it was named the
Egon Erwin Kisch Prize in his honour. Kisch's work as a writer and communist journalist inspired Australian left wing intellectuals and writers such as
Katharine Susannah Prichard,
E. J. Brady,
Vance and
Nettie Palmer and
Louis Esson. This group formed the nucleus of what later became the Writers League, drawing on the example of Egon Kisch’s own journalistic dedication to reportage. Kisch has appeared as a character in novels by Australian authors. Without naming him, his visit to Australia, the leap from the ship and the court case challenging the validity of the language test are mentioned in
Kylie Tennant's
Ride on Stranger (novel) (1943). He is a minor character in
Frank Hardy's
Power Without Glory (1950), which was filmed for television in (1976), and plays a central, if fictionalised, role in
Nicholas Hasluck's
Our Man K (1999). He appears in
Sulari Gentill's detective novel
Paving the New Road (2012) along with other real persons such as
Nancy Wake and
Unity Mitford. ==Selected bibliography==