After the Second World War, Becher returned to Germany with a KPD team, where he settled in the Soviet zone of occupation. There he was appointed to various cultural-political positions. He took part in the establishment of the
Cultural Association, to "revive German culture", and founded the
Aufbau Verlag publishing house and the literature magazine,
Sinn und Form. He also contributed to the satirical magazine,
Ulenspiegel. In 1946, Becher was selected for the Party Executive Committee and the Central Committee of the
Socialist Unity Party. After the establishment of the
German Democratic Republic (GDR) on 7 October 1949, he became a member of the
Volkskammer. He wrote the lyrics to
Hanns Eisler's melody "
Auferstanden aus Ruinen" which became the national anthem of the GDR. That year, he helped establish the DDR
Academy of Arts, Berlin. He served as its president from 1953 to 1956, succeeding
Arnold Zweig. In January 1953 he received the Stalin Peace Prize (later renamed the
Lenin Peace Prize) in Moscow. In Leipzig in 1955, the
German Institute for Literature was founded and originally named in Becher's honor. The institute's purpose was to train socialist writers. Institute graduates include
Erich Loest,
Volker Braun,
Sarah Kirsch and
Rainer Kirsch. From 1954 to 1958, Becher served as
Minister of Culture of the GDR. During the
Khrushchev thaw, Becher fell out of favor. Internal struggles of the party eventually led to his political demotion in 1956. Late in his life, Becher began to renounce socialism. His book
Das poetische Prinzip (The Poetic Principle) wherein he calls socialism the fundamental error of his life ["Grundirrtum meines Lebens"] was only published in 1988. The following year, in declining health, Becher gave up all his offices and functions in September 1958. He died of
cancer on 11 October 1958 in the
East Berlin government hospital. Becher was buried at the
Dorotheenstadt Cemetery in central Berlin, with his gravesite designated as a
grave of honor () of Berlin. Becher lived at
Majakowskiring 34,
Pankow,
East Berlin. ==Legacy and honours==