Fürstner committed suicide with a pistol shot on 19 August 1936, three days after the end of the games. He had been awarded the Olympic Medal First Class and had attended a banquet for his successor, Gilsa, but Fürstner, a career officer, had learned that according to the
Nuremberg Laws, he was classified as a Jew and was to be dismissed from the Wehrmacht. (His grandfather Dr.
Karl Fürstner was a Jewish convert to Christianity.) To cover up Fürstner's suicide and to protect the international reputation of Germany, the Nazis said that Fürstner had died from a car accident. However, word of the cover up leaked out to foreign journalists, who reported that he had shot himself. For example,
The Sydney Morning Herald in Australia reported he had been found dead with a gun by his side. He was buried in the
Invalidenfriedhof, section F, alongside the honoured dead of Germany's wars. The grave was listed in the Official Berlin Invalidenfriedhof Guidebook (
Der Invalidenfriedhof in Berlin – Ein Ehrenhain preußisch-deutscher Geschichte), which appeared between 1936 and 1940 in several editions.
Restoration of grave A new stone marker for Fürstner's grave was donated by the German Olympic Committee and dedicated in June 2002 by the Committee President, Walther Tröger. The stone lists Fürstner as "Deputy Commandant of the Olympic Village 1936" (
stellvertretender Kommandant des Olympischen Dorfes 1936). ==References==