Joining the SA '' uniform leading an
SA unit at a
Nazi Party rally in
Nuremberg, 1929 In May 1926, the Viking League and the Olympia Association were banned in Prussia, when it was discovered they were planning a coup against the government. Realizing the League would not achieve its self-defined mission and was moving in the direction of tolerating the parliamentary political system, Wessel resigned from it on 23 November 1926, at age 19. On 7 December, he joined the paramilitary
Sturmabteilung ("Storm Detachment" or SA) of Adolf Hitler's
National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP or Nazi Party). He later commented that over two-thirds of his colleagues from the Viking League had already joined the SA and the Nazi Party. Part of the attraction of the NSDAP to Wessel was
Joseph Goebbels, the Party's newly appointed
Gauleiter (regional leader) of Berlin, about whom he would later say: There was nothing [Goebbels] couldn't handle. The party comrades clung to him with great devotion. The SA would have let itself be cut to pieces for him. Goebbels – he was like Hitler himself. Goebbels – he was 'our' Goebbels. Writing in his diaries – he kept two, one for his political life and one for other matters – Wessel described the differences between the groups he had been a part of, and the appeal of being involved in the Nazi Party: Bismarck League, that was pleasure and enjoyment, the Viking League was adventure, the atmosphere of the coup, playing at soldiers, albeit against a background that was not without its dangers. But the NSDAP was a political awakening. ... The movement's centrifugal force was tremendous. ... One meeting followed hard on the heels of the last one. ... Street demonstrations, recruiting drives in the press, propaganda trips into the provinces creating an atmosphere of activism and high political tension that could only help the movement. It was Goebbels who had created this atmosphere, which prompted right-wing youth to leave organizations they felt had let them down for the excitement of the Nazi Party's highly visible activism. For a few years Wessel lived a double life, as a middle-class university law student and as a member of the primarily working-class SA, but in some ways the two worlds were converging in ideology. At university, Wessel joined a
dueling society dedicated to "steeling and testing physical and moral fitness" through personal combat. With the SA, which was always interested in a good street fight, he was immersed in the antisemitic attitudes typical of the extreme right-wing paramilitary culture of the time. His study of jurisprudence at school was seen through the filter of his belief that the application of the law was primarily an instrument of power; and his personal beliefs, already geared toward anti-Jewish attitudes, were further hardened by the novel
From Double Eagle to Red Flag by
White emigre General
Pyotr Krasnov, which is set between the
Russian Revolution of 1905 and the
Red Guards' victory at the end of the
Russian Civil War, and which was first published in the
Weimar Republic in 1922. According to Wessel's sister, General Krasnov's novel was enormously influential upon her brother.
Activities In August 1927, Wessel traveled in a group of fifty SA men to the Nazi Party rally in
Nuremberg, which he described as "Flags, enthusiasm, Hitler, all of Nuremberg a brown army camp. It made an enormous impression." Wessel was with other Berlin-based Nazis making up a group of 400, led by Goebbels. At that time the SA was banned in Berlin. When they returned, they were arrested. Wessel soon impressed Goebbels. In January 1928, a period in which the Berlin city authorities had banned the SA in an effort to curb political street violence, Wessel was sent to
Vienna to study the National Socialist Youth Group, and the organizational and tactical methods of the Nazi Party there. In July 1928, he returned to Berlin to recruit local youths, and was involved in helping to implement a reorganization of the NSDAP in Berlin into a cell-structure, similar to that used by the German Communist Party (KPD). Wessel did this despite SA rules forbidding its members from working for the Party. In 1929, Wessel became the Street Cell Leader of the
Alexanderplatz Storm Section of the SA. In May, he was appointed district leader of the SA for
Friedrichshain where he lived, SA-Sturm 5. with the rank of
Sturmführer. In October 1929, Wessel dropped out of university to devote himself full-time to the Nazi movement. In that same year, he wrote the lyrics to
"Die Fahne hoch!" ("Raise the Flag!"), which would later be known as the "
Horst Wessel Song". Wessel wrote songs for the SA in conscious imitation of the Communist paramilitary, the
Red Front Fighters' League – in fact, the music to
"Die Fahne hoch!" was taken from a Communist song book – to provoke them into attacking his troops, and to keep up the spirits of his men. He was recognized by Goebbels and the Berlin Nazi hierarchy as an effective street speaker; in the first 11 months of 1929, for instance, he spoke at 56 NSDAP events. Wessel's Friedrichshain Sturm 5 unit had a reputation as being "a band of thugs, a brutal squad". One of his men described the way they fought against the Communists (KPD): Horst made Adolf Hitler's principle his own: terror can be destroyed only by counterterror ... The places where the KPD met were often visited by a mere handful of loyal supporters, and our standpoint was made unequivocally clear to the landlord and all who were present. In the East End [of Berlin] Horst Wessel opened up a route through which a brown storm tide poured in unceasingly and conquered the area inch by inch. By 1929–30, the continual violence in Berlin between the street fighters of the Nazi Party and other extreme right-wing groups, and those of the Communist Party and other parties on the left, had become a virtual civil war the Prussian police were powerless to control. This physical violence was encouraged by Goebbels, the Nazi
Gauleiter of Berlin, to whom Hitler had given the difficult task of establishing a reorganized Nazi presence in "Red Berlin" – a city sympathetic to the Communists and the Socialists – one that was under the firm control of the Nazi Party headquarters in Munich and which was not controlled by the northern branch of the party under the
Strasser brothers with their socialist leanings. Goebbels' violent approach was appreciated by Wessel, who preferred it to the official restraint he experienced as a member of the Bismarck Youth and the Viking League. Wessel kept two journals, one specifically about his political life. In neither does he describe his physical participation in these street skirmishes: he refers to "we" – i.e. the SA – and not to "I". Wessel had broken one arm several times while horseback riding as a schoolboy which deformed it, and had been given a permanent exemption from physical education. Nonetheless, he boxed and practiced martial arts while in the Viking League, and boasted in one journal of having mastered
ju-jitsu, a primarily defensive art he may have needed to compensate for his lack of physical power. Still, the limitations of his physicality would have prevented him from taking as full a role in the street brawls, and he may therefore have ratcheted up his rhetoric in an attempt to compensate for his physical disability. Wessel became well known among the Communists when – on orders from Goebbels – he led a number of SA incursions into the
Fischerkiez, an extremely poor Berlin district where Communists mingled with underworld figures. Several of these agitations were only minor altercations, but one took place outside the tavern which the local Communist Party (KPD) used as its headquarters. As a result of that melée, five Communists were injured, four of them seriously. The Communist newspaper accused the police of letting the Nazis get away, but arresting the injured Communists. The Nazi newspaper claimed that Wessel had been trying to give a speech when shadowy figures emerged and started the fight. Wessel was marked for death by the KPD, with his face and address featured on street posters. The slogan of the KPD and the Red Front Fighters' League became "Strike the fascists wherever you find them".
Erna Jänicke In September 1929, Wessel met , a 23-year-old ex-prostitute, in a tavern not far from Alexanderplatz. Later sources claim Wessel earned money as Jänicke's procurer, however this has never been substantiated. On 1 November, she moved into his room on the third floor of 62 Große Frankfurter Straße, today
Karl-Marx-Allee, which Wessel sublet from 29-year-old Elisabeth Salm, whose late husband had been an active Communist Red Front Fighter, although she described herself as apolitical. After a few months, there was a dispute between Salm and Wessel over unpaid rent in which Salm claimed that Wessel had threatened her. The landlady may have feared that she could lose her legal rights to the apartment, which she rented and did not own, if Jänicke, who she assumed was a working prostitute, was found to be living there. She had already been in danger of losing her legal claim when she moved out of Berlin to live, and then had to move back because she found out that living in Berlin was a legal requirement. The landlady asked Jänicke to leave but she refused. Salm stated that after having a “quiet word” with Wessel, she agreed to have the couple move out by 1 February, but then changed her mind and wanted the two tenants out immediately. A few hours later on the evening of 14 January 1930, Salm appealed to Communist friends of her late husband for help. At first, the Communists were not interested in helping Salm, as she was not well-liked by them because she had given her husband a church funeral instead of allowing the KPD to give him the standard burial rite used for members of the Red Front Fighters' League. When they realized that Horst Wessel was involved in the dispute, they agreed to beat him up and get him out of Salm's flat by force. Knowing they needed muscle, they sent word to a nearby tavern for
Albrecht "Ali" Höhler, an armed
pimp,
perjurer and
petty criminal. Höhler, a heavily tattooed cabinetmaker who had recently been released from prison, was a Communist and a member of the Red Front Fighters' League. == Death ==