After the liberation of Buchenwald concentration camp on April 11, 1945, there were several prisoners' groups that made resolutions and declarations. • A declaration of the Popular Front Committee of Social Democrats, Communists and Christians • The Buchenwald Manifesto of German-speaking Social Democrats and Socialists • A resolution of the Buchenwald Communist Party • Draft of a school policy manifesto by the Education Commission • Numerous declarations and manifestos in various languages by former prisoners • Oath of Buchenwald from the International Camp Committee of Buchenwald, in many languages.
Declaration of the Popular Front Committee On April 19, 1945, at the memorial rally of the international camp committee in honor of Buchenwald's dead, the People's Front Committee presented its resolution before 21,000 survivors. :
"The next tasks of the Popular Front" :"The democratic forces around the world stand at the victory over Nazism. The German anti-nazis may be proud to have contributed their part to this victory, in spite of many victims and much suffering. The awful adversary lying on the ground is nonetheless not yet shattered. The hour of history demands much more the mobilization of all anti-fascist forces in order to put down forever the blood-spattered enemy of all cultures and be able to avert any repetition of its criminal dictatorship. Therefore, at present, we call for the following: • Immediate formation of anti-fascist Citizens' Committees in city and nation. • Takeover of the government through the Citizens' Committees in consultation with the occupation authorities. • Purging of the police from Nazi elements, establishment of a defense force from the militia to ward against saboteurs,
Werwolves and the like. • Cessation of all work for Hitler, prevention of any further destruction of Germany, prevention of all work, transport, communication and any fight for the remnants of the
Third Reich through the Citizens' Committees and their institutions. • Arrest and surveillance of all Nazi elements, their transfer to people's court. • Confiscation of Nazi assets and businesses. • Creation of a new democratic order against the Nazis. • Organization of a National Committee of Anti-Nazis, formation of a republican government. • Return to work, under humane conditions, in city and nation; and exclusively for the sustenance of the German people. Speedy re-entry of Germany into the world economy, prompt adoption of a close economic relationship with the
Soviet Union as a natural economic partner on the European continent. • Formation of anti-fascist trade unions. • Publication of new newspapers, magazines, utilization of the news services of radio and all institutions to inform the German people about the crimes of Nazism, about Germany's true situation, and to forge a democratic public opinion. :Long live freedom! Long live the German People's Republic!"
Buchenwald Oath Contents The core of the Buchenwald Oath is:
We will take up the fight until the last culprit stands before the judges of the people. Our watchword is the destruction of Nazism from its roots. Our goal is to build a new world of peace and freedom. This is our responsibility to our murdered friends and their relatives. After the Buchenwald Oath was read aloud, the prisoners raised their hands and said, "We swear".
Reception The Buchenwald Oath was, for the Communist Resistance fighters, an important symbol in the fight against fascism. The role of Communist functionary prisoners is the subject of controversial debate, also because they were exploited by the
German Democratic Republic (GDR). In the GDR, the Resistance was viewed within the framework of
socialist anti-fascism. The achievements of the Communist Resistance fighters were glorified while other Resistance fighters and the fate of the Jewish victims were little discussed. In contrast, in
West Germany, the contribution of the Communists was hardly mentioned. In recent years, the question of how much the functionary prisoners cooperated with the SS and how much they themselves were part of the tyranny in the camp has also been much discussed. and others, calls for the eradication of
fascism through specific measures, for the establishment of a People's Republic, labor reform (e.g. the
eight-hour day and the right to form
trade unions), for socialization of economy, peace and rights through reparations, humanism, freedom of education, the arts and "socialist unity". The Manifesto stated (in part) the following: :We have endured prison,
zuchthaus and concentration camps because we believed we must work for the thoughts and goals of
socialism and for the preservation of peace, even under the [Nazi]
dictatorship. In zuchthaus and concentration camp, despite the daily threat of a wretched death, we continued our conspiratorial activities. :Through this fight, we have gained a degree of human, moral and intellectual strength that, in normal life, is impossible to acquire. Standing in the shadow of our ideology's
martyrs, who died by the Hitlerite hangman; and facing the special responsibility for our children's future, we reserve the right and hold ourselves duty bound to tell the German people what measures are requisite to save Germany from this historically unprecedented collapse and to again earn the respect and confidence in the council of nations. :
1. Eradication of fascism :So long as fascism and
militarism in Germany are not completely eradicated, there will be no rest and no peace for us or in the world. Our first efforts must be directed at the removal of every societal appearance of this bloody oppression, forever. :'''2. Establishment of the People's Republic''' :This gigantic work can only be accomplished if all anti-fascist forces unite in a steadfast alliance. :First, in every community, anti-fascist Citizens' Committees must be formed, which, as soon as possible through the use of anti-fascist organizations, are to be established on a thoroughly democratic basis. :These Citizens' Committees will appoint a German People's Congress for the entire country, which then must install a government of the people and elect a parliament of the people. :The
constitutional rights of civil, personal and religious freedom, of thought, speech and word, of movement and assembly are to be restored. :The Citizens' Committees will have
municipal councils, which, through delegates, will choose district and state councils. The various boards of authority in city and state are to be newly appointed. State commissioners will take control of the remaining administration..." :
3. Labor reform :The building and implementation of the People's Republic are possible only if the masses of working people in city and state see in them their nation, affirm it, and are ever ready to defend this nation. They will do this only when the People's Republic frees labor from its unheard of exploitation and disfranchisement, which the capitalist servants of the Nazi Party hung on it, and creates and guarantees a dignified existence for all workers. Therefore,
social policy and
social insurance are needs of working people to be modeled accordingly. :The eight-hour day is to be restored immediately and further reduction of the
workday is to be prepared. :A new currency, a public budget expurgated from the burdens of the [Nazi] dictatorship and a new
socialization of banks and insurance companies under the direction of open credit institutions shall create the foundation of a healthy economic policy. :
State monopolies for mass consumer goods shall have a fiscal effect and regulate prices [...] :
5. Peace and rights :From the deepest, honest convictions, we admit to the world the legal obligation to pay
Wiedergutmachung for injuries, which the German people have committed through
Hitlerism. We have decided contributions to refuse and vassal service, so sincerely do we want to help, that through the amortization of a determinate debt, a new atmosphere of trust of Germany will be created [...] :We wish to be admitted with all due haste into the world organization of peace and security, and especially as judge and
political party, to make a contribution to the international jurisdiction that will be recognized as worthy by other nations [...] :
6. Humanitarianism :For this, we need a new spirit. It should embody the new type of German European. After the
Second World War, no one will be able to
re-educate us if we don't freely do it ourselves. :New universities formed from emigration's worthiest strengths and domestic socialist intelligence shall generate our new teachers [...] The Buchenwald Manifesto ended with the following words: :Long live the Union of all of Germany's anti-fascist forces! :Long live a free, peaceful, socialist Germany! :Long live revolutionary democratic socialism! :Long live the Socialist International of the whole world!
Signatories The Manifesto was signed by Heinz Baumeister (Dortmund); Gottlieb Branz (Munich); Dr.
Hermann Brill (Berlin); Benedikt Kautsky, (Vienna), Karl Mantler (Vienna), Erich Schilling (Leipzig), Ernst Thape (Magdeburg), among others from Germany and other countries.
Buchenwald Communist Party Resolution At the time of liberation, the clandestine Buchenwald KPD consisted of 629 prisoners from 22 different district branches. Added to that were 111 new candidates for membership. Another 59 prisoners were not accepted for membership for failure to fulfill party obligations. The party began to function legally again and on April 22, 1945, held a delegates' meeting at Buchenwald, where the recent experiences were evaluated and a plan of action for the future was proclaimed. The document referred to fascism and war as "attempt of German
monopoly capitalism, to "overcome the
economic crisis by means of a brutal, fascist dictatorship and an imperialist war". This was to entrench German monopoly capital as a dominant power in the world. The resolution said further, :"We must recognize that the situation in Germany is not yet ready for immediate implementation of the struggle for proletarian dictatorship, but our present struggle for a true people's democracy brings us closer to socialism." :"Our central task today is the mass mobilization of all anti-fascists into a
National Committee for a Free Germany." == References in literature ==