Willi Münzenberg

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Willi Münzenberg (1889-1940) was a German Communist. He was one of the most influential propagandists of the Twentieth Century, and was notable for his front organizations and other tactics which would go on to be developed by both East and West in the Cultural Cold War.[1]

As a young Communist, Münzenberg was recruited by Leon Trotsky into the circle of intellectuals around the exiled Vladimir Lenin in Geneva. With Lenin's return to Russia in 1917, Münzenberg moved to Berlin as the highest ranking Communist outside the Soviet Union.[2]

In 1921, Münzenberg established the [Internationale Arbeiterhilfe] to send famine relief to the Soviet Union.[3] This was the first major project in a vast propaganda network that would become known as the Münzenberg Trust.[4]

After the Reichstag Fire in January 1933, Münzenberg upstaged Hitler's show trial of Communist Marinus van der Lubbe by staging a mock counter-trial in London and publishing The Brown Book of the Hitler Terror and the Burning of the Reichstag.[5]

Münzenberg was expelled from the German Communist Party in 1938.[6]

He disappeared in France in June 1940, while fleeing the German advance.[7] His boy was found in the woods outside the town of Montagne, near Grenoble, in October 1940. French officials quickly concluded the death was suicide, a verdict which has been questioned because of the absence of a note or distinctive injuries associated with what appeared to be a self-inflicted hanging.[8]

Legacy

Of the six contributors to The God that Failed, three had worked with Münzenberg, Ignazio Silone, Arthur Koestler and Louis Fischer.[9] Koestler, notably, had helped to edit one of Münzenberg's 'brown books', The Nazi Terror in Spain.[10]

Several former members of the Münzenberg Trust were present at an August 1949 meeting in Frankfurt with Melvin Lasky which discussed plans for an anticommunist propaganda organisation.[11]

Affiliations

Connections

Notes

  1. Michael Scammell, The Mystery of Willi Münzenberg, 27 April 2010.
  2. Hugh Wilford, The Mighty Wulitzer: How the CIA played America, Harvard, 2008, p.12.
  3. Michael Scammell, The Mystery of Willi Münzenberg, 27 April 2010.
  4. Hugh Wilford, The Mighty Wulitzer: How the CIA played America, Harvard, 2008, p.12.
  5. Michael Scammell, The Mystery of Willi Münzenberg, 27 April 2010.
  6. Hugh Wilford, The Mighty Wulitzer: How the CIA played America, Harvard, 2008, p.15.
  7. Hugh Wilford, The Mighty Wulitzer: How the CIA played America, Harvard, 2008, p.15.
  8. Hugh Wilford, The Mighty Wulitzer: How the CIA played America, Harvard, 2008, p.11.
  9. Francis Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 1999, p.65.
  10. Michael Scammell, The Mystery of Willi Münzenberg, 27 April 2010.
  11. Francis Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 1999, p.71.