Bieberbach joined the
Sturmabteilung in 1933 and the
NSDAP in 1937. He was enthusiastically involved in the efforts to dismiss his Jewish colleagues, including
Edmund Landau and his former coauthor
Issai Schur, from their posts. He also facilitated the
Gestapo arrests of some close colleagues, such as
Juliusz Schauder. Bieberbach was heavily influenced by
Theodore Vahlen, another German mathematician and anti-Semite, who along with Bieberbach founded the "
Deutsche Mathematik" ("German mathematics") movement and journal of the same name. The purpose of the movement was to encourage and promote a "German" (in this case meaning
intuitionistic) style in mathematics. For example, Bieberbach claimed that "the
Cauchy–Goursat theorem arouses intolerable displeasure" in Germans, and was representative of an abstract style of reasoning and "pronounced shrewdness" characteristic of "Jewish mathematics". Bieberbach's and Vahlen's idea of German mathematics was part of a wider trend in the scientific community in Nazi Germany towards giving the sciences racial character; there were also pseudoscientific movements for "
Deutsche Physik", "
German chemistry", and "
German biology". In 1945, Bieberbach was dismissed from all his academic positions because of his support of Nazism, but in 1949 was invited to lecture at the
University of Basel by
Ostrowski, who considered Bieberbach's political views irrelevant to his contributions to mathematics. ==See also==