Fritz Max Cahén (alias Lynkeus) (born 8 December 1891 in Saarlouis; died 29 August 1966 in Bonn) was active in the Weimar Republic government and later founded the anti-Nazi political alliance Volkssozialistische Bewegung (Cahén later referred to it as, in English, the German Front Against Hitlerism).[1] He worked as a journalist and also authored the books Der Weg nach Versailles (1963)[2] and Men Against Hitler (1939).[3][4]
Fritz Max Cahén | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 29 August 1966 | (aged 74)
Occupation | journalist |
Spouse | Eugenie Caroline Auguste Stamm |
Children | Oscar Cahén & Ulrich (possible) |
Parent | Eugen Cahén |
Life
editFritz Max Cahén was born to a Jewish father; his mother was possibly Christian.[5] His father, Eugen Cahén, was a founder of the Saar Produce Exchange, and a member of the Hansabund. Fritz Max Cahén graduated from the College of Metz (Alsace-Lorraine) and Saarbruecken University Marburg/Lahn. He took postgraduate courses at the Sorbonne (Paris) and Haute Ecole des Sciences Politiques et Sociales (Paris).[1] In 1916 he married Eugenie Caroline Auguste Stamm, a Protestant, according to a marriage certificate in possession of the family. Fritz Max Cahén had one son that same year, artist Oscar Cahén. A reference work on Jewish émigrés also refers to a second son, Ulrich, born in 1925; if true, this child was not raised by Fritz Max and Eugenie.[6]
Before the first World War, Cahén moved in German avant-garde art circles, contributing translations of Apollinaire to the Expressionist periodical Der Sturm.[7][8] As a young critic, he saw a connection between politics and art, suggesting in 1914 that the First World War would be fought over the future of German Expressionism, rather than Belgium's neutrality or the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria of June 1914.[9]
As a civil servant in the German Legation in Copenhagen 1916 - 1918, Cahén became "personal advisor" to Count Brockdorff-Rantzau, High Commissioner at the Versailles Peace Conference. Cahén wrote articles for many newspapers and magazines, sometimes under the name Lynkeus, including Die Schaubuehne (Berlin), Deutsche Politik (Berlin), Politiken (Copenhagen), L'Europe Nouvelle (Paris), Die Bruecke (Prague), Berliner Tageblatt, Frankfurter Zeitung, Commentator (USA), Koelnische Zeitung, Skaanska Aftonbladet (Sweden), Deutsche Kunst und Decoration (Darmstadt).[1][4]
In 1933, Cahén took refuge in Prague, where he co-wrote the script for Kiss in the Snow (directed by Rudolf Katscher), the German-language version of the 1934 film Polibek ve sněhu (directed by Václav Binovec).[10] In Prague Cahén also intensified his political activities, and on 5 February 1936 he founded the Volkssozialistische Bewegung with Hans Jaeger and Arthur Arzt.[11] The British authorities, but not the Americans, suspected Cahén of being a Soviet spy.[12]
In 1937, Cahén traveled to the United States in order to raise awareness of Nazi activities and to write Men Against Hitler, which outlined the resistance activities he had participated in. Cahén asserted that half of German citizens did not actually support the Nazi regime and that their disaffection represented an opportunity to overthrow Hitler.[13] He had the support of Wythe Williams, editor of the Greenwich Times; Williams acted as a literary agent, and translator, and wrote the book's introduction as well.[14] Cahén also joined the New York-based group the German-American Council for the Liberation of Germany From Nazism, later renamed Association of Free Germans.[12]
With the outbreak of the Second World War, Fritz Max Cahén was stuck in the United States and he lived there until 1954, when he returned to Germany and resumed his civil service work and writing. Meanwhile, his wife and son Oscar Cahén had become Canadian citizens; his wife joined him in Germany in the 1950s.[6] Fritz Max Cahén died in Bonn on 29 August 1966.
References
edit- ^ a b c Cahén, Fritz Max (1939). Bobbs Merrill Questionnaire. Lilly Library Bobbs Merrill papers: Bobbs Merrill Company.
- ^ Cahén, Fritz Max (1963). Der Weg nach Versailles: Erinnerungen 1912-1919. Boppard/Rhein: Harald Boldt Verlag.
- ^ Cahén, Fritz Max (1939). Men Against Hitler. Indianapolis and New York: Bobbs-Merrill Company.
- ^ a b Kosch, Lang, and Feilchenfeldt (editors) (2003). Deutsches Literatur-Lexikon : das 20. Jahrhundert : biographisches-bibliographisches Handbuch. Fünfter Band, Butenschön-Dedo. Zürich: K.G. Saur Verlag. p. 22.
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has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Mackenzie Porter, “Volcano With a Paint Brush,” The Standard, 7 April 1951.
- ^ a b Röder and Strauss (editors) (1980). Biographisches Handbuch der deutschsprachigen Emigration nach 1933-1945. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3110970289.
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:|last=
has generic name (help) - ^ Bohn, Willard (1997). Apollinaire and the International Avant-Garde. State University of New York. pp. 103–106, 126. ISBN 978-0791431955.
- ^ Raabe, Paul, ed. (1974). The Era of German Expressionism. MacMillan of Canada. pp. 103–118. ISBN 978-0879510107.
- ^ Cahén, Fritz Max (30 December 1914). "Die neue Kunst und der Krieg". Vossische Zeitung.
- ^ Horak, Jan-Christopher; Jennifer Bishop (1996). "German Exile Cinema, 1933-1950". Film History. 8 (4): 373–389.
- ^ Langkau-Alex, Ursula (August 1996). "Der Parteivorstand der SPD im Exile. Protokolle der Sopade 1933-1940 (Review)". International Review of Social History. 41 (2): 248–251. doi:10.1017/s002085900011394x.
- ^ a b de Graaf, Bob (1991). "The Stranded Baron and the Upstart at the Crossroads: Wolfgang zu Politz and Otto John". Intelligence and National Security. 6 (4): 684. doi:10.1080/02684529108432127.
- ^ Smith, Joseph Hilton (July 22, 1939). "Underground in Germany (Review)". Saturday Review of Literature. 20: 7.
- ^ Staley, Eugene, ed. (August 1939). "World Economy in Transition: Men Against Hitler (review)". Banker's Magazine. 139 (2): 153.