On 29 July 1945 an urn containing Seelenbinder's ashes was buried at the site of his old club, the Berolina 03 Sports Club stadium in
Neukölln, Berlin. At the same time, the stadium itself was named "Werner-Seelenbinder-Kampfbahn", but as the
Cold War escalated and the political climate in
West Germany became increasingly
anti-communist, it was renamed "Stadion Neukölln" in 1949. A number of schools, streets and sporting facilities in the former
East Germany were named after him. The Werner Seelenbinder Wrestling Tournament is still (2004) held once a year in Berlin. However, the lack of impartiality by both the anti-communist West Germans and the pro-communist East Germans, who raised Werner Seelenbinder to the status of an icon, means that today his historical importance is rather controversial. In an article in the socialist German newspaper
Neues Deutschland of 2 August 2004, the director of the Berlin Sports Museum Martina Behrendt said that his role in the resistance movement had been exaggerated in the
GDR, and that there were no reliable biographies. from
Syria looking at a bust of Seelenbinder in the
Werner-Seelenbinder-Halle, 1963 On 2 August 2004 a commemorative speech was held in front of the Neukölln stadium, where Seelenbinder's ashes were buried, by the
Party of Democratic Socialism, on the 100th anniversary of Seelenbinder's birth. Party members spoke of their regret that the stadium had been renamed. Others mentioned with sadness the renaming of the eastern German "Werner-Seelenbinder-Halle" as "Velodrom im Europasportpark" in 1990 and the renaming of the "Werner-Seelenbinder-Turm" in
Leipzig as the "Glockenturm". On 24 October 2004, the 60th anniversary of Seelenbinder's death, the Neukölln stadium was once again renamed the "Werner-Seelenbinder-Stadion" in his memory. In 1950, an indoor sporting arena named after Seelenbinder, the
Werner-Seelenbinder-Halle, was opened in the
Prenzlauer Berg district, then in
East Berlin. It had a capacity of 10,000 people, and was regularly used as a convention hall by East German mass organizations, such as the
Free German Youth and
Socialist Unity Party of Germany. It was also used as a concert arena, where musicians such as
Depeche Mode,
Jonathan Richman and
The Wedding Present, as well as German acts, such as
Feeling B and
Rio Reiser, performed. It was demolished in 1993, after the fall of East Germany, and replaced by the present-day
Velodrom. In 1964, the
Nordic Yards Warnemünde ship yard (the former Warnowwerft), launched a 7,704 gross tonnage cargo ship named
Werner Seelenbinder. She was scrapped in 1988 – before the collapse of the GDR. She remained named after the athlete throughout her career, apart from her final voyage to
Alang for breaking up, for which she was re-registered and renamed
MILOS-1. Seelenbinder was inducted to
Germany's Sports Hall of Fame in 2008. == Biography ==