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Richard von Weizsäcker

Richard Karl Freiherr von Weizsäcker (German: [ˈʁɪçaʁt fɔn ˈvaɪtszɛkɐ] ; 15 April 1920 – 31 January 2015) was a German politician (CDU), who served as President of Germany from 1984 to 1994. Born into the aristocratic Weizsäcker family, who were part of the German nobility, he took his first public offices in the Protestant Church in Germany.

Richard Freiherr von Weizsäcker
Weizsäcker in 1984
President of Germany
In office
1 July 1984 – 30 June 1994[a]
ChancellorHelmut Kohl
Preceded byKarl Carstens
Succeeded byRoman Herzog
Governing Mayor of West Berlin
In office
11 June 1981 – 9 February 1984
MayorHeinrich Lummer
Preceded byHans-Jochen Vogel
Succeeded byEberhard Diepgen
Leader of the Christian Democratic Union
in West Berlin
In office
21 March 1981 – December 1983
Preceded byPeter Lorenz
Succeeded byEberhard Diepgen
Vice President of the Bundestag
(on proposal of the CDU/CSU-group)
In office
21 June 1979 – 21 March 1981
PresidentRichard Stücklen
Preceded byRichard Stücklen
Succeeded byHeinrich Windelen
Parliamentary constituencies
Member of the
Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin
for Neukölln
In office
11 June 1981 – 15 June 1984
Preceded byHans Ludwig Schoenthal
Succeeded byNorbert Tietz
ConstituencyNeukölln 2
In office
26 April 1979 – 17 December 1979
Preceded bymulti-member district
Succeeded byRainer Giesel
ConstituencyNeukölln
Member of the Bundestag
for West Berlin
(Rhineland-Palatinate; 1969–1980)
In office
20 October 1969 – 15 June 1981
Preceded bymulti-member district
Succeeded byWerner Dolata
ConstituencyChristian Democratic Union List
Personal details
Born
Richard Karl Freiherr von Weizsäcker

(1920-04-15)15 April 1920
New Palace, Stuttgart, Württemberg, Weimar Republic
Died31 January 2015(2015-01-31) (aged 94)
Berlin, Federal Republic of Germany
Political partyChristian Democratic Union (1954–2015)
SpouseMarianne von Kretschmann
Children4
Parent(s)Ernst von Weizsäcker
Marianne von Graevenitz
Alma materBalliol College, Oxford
University of Göttingen (Dr. jur.)
Signature

A member of the CDU since 1954, Weizsäcker was elected as a member of parliament at the 1969 elections. He continued to hold a mandate as a member of the Bundestag until he became Governing Mayor of West Berlin, following the 1981 state elections. In 1984, Weizsäcker was elected as President of the Federal Republic of Germany and was re-elected in 1989 for a second term. As yet, he and Theodor Heuss are the only two Presidents of the Federal Republic of Germany who have served two complete five-year-terms. On 3 October 1990, during his second term as president, the reorganized five states of the German Democratic Republic and East Berlin joined the Federal Republic of Germany, which made Weizsäcker President of a reunified Germany.

Weizsäcker is considered the most popular of Germany's presidents,[1] held in high regard particularly for his impartiality.[2][3] His demeanor often saw him at odds with his party colleagues, particularly longtime Chancellor Helmut Kohl. He was famous for his speeches, especially one he delivered at the 40th anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe on 8 May 1985. Upon his death, his life and political work were widely praised, with The New York Times calling him "a guardian of his nation's moral conscience".[4]

Early life edit

Childhood, school and family edit

 
Richard von Weizsäcker (left) with his father at the latter's post-war trial

Richard von Weizsäcker was born on 15 April 1920 in the New Palace in Stuttgart,[5] the son of diplomat Ernst von Weizsäcker, a member of the Weizsäcker family, and his wife Marianne von Graevenitz, a daughter of Friedrich von Graevenitz (1861–1922), a General of the Infantry of the Kingdom of Württemberg.[6] Ernst von Weizsäcker was a career diplomat and a high-ranking official in the Foreign Ministry in the 1930s.[7] The youngest of four children, Weizsäcker had two brothers, the physicist and philosopher Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker and Heinrich von Weizsäcker who fell as a soldier in Poland at the beginning of World War II. The sister Adelheid (1916–2004) married Botho-Ernst Graf zu Eulenburg-Wicken (1903–1944), a landowner in East Prussia. Richard's grandfather Karl von Weizsäcker had been Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Württemberg, and was ennobled in 1897 and raised to the hereditary title of Baron (Freiherr) in 1916.[8] His term in office ended in 1918, shortly before the monarchy was abolished in the German Revolution of 1918–1919. However, during the following years, he still occupied an apartment in the former royal palace where his grandson was born in an attic room.

Because his father was a career diplomat, Weizsäcker spent much of his childhood in Switzerland and Scandinavia. The family lived in Basel 1920–24, in Copenhagen 1924–26, and in Bern 1933–36, where Richard attended the Swiss Gymnasium Kirchenfeld. The family lived in Berlin, in an apartment in the Fasanenstraße in Wilmersdorf, between 1929 and 1933 and again from 1936 until the end of the Second World War.[9] Weizsäcker was able to miss the third class of his elementary school, and entered a secondary school at the young age of nine, the Bismarck-Gymnasium (now the Goethe-Gymnasium) in Wilmersdorf.[10] When he was 17 years old, Weizsäcker travelled to England to study philosophy and history at Balliol College, Oxford. In London, he witnessed the coronation of King George VI.[11] He spent the winter semester of 1937/38 at the University of Grenoble in France to improve his French.[12] He was mustered for the army there in 1938 and moved back to Germany the same year to start his Reichsarbeitsdienst.[13]

Second World War edit

After the outbreak of the Second World War, Weizsäcker joined the Wehrmacht, ultimately rising to the rank of captain in the reserves. He joined his brother Heinrich's regiment, the Infantry Regiment 9 Potsdam. He crossed over the border to Poland with his regiment on the very first day of the war.[14] His brother Heinrich was killed about a hundred meters away from him on the second day. Weizsäcker watched over his brother's body through the night, until he was able to bury him the next morning.[15] His regiment, consisting in a large part of noble and conservative Prussians, played a significant part in the 20 July plot, with no fewer than nineteen of its officers involved in the conspiracy against Hitler.[16] Weizsäcker himself helped his friend Axel von dem Bussche in an attempt to kill Hitler at a uniform inspection in December 1943, providing Bussche with travel papers to Berlin. The attempt had to be called off when the uniforms were destroyed by an air raid. Upon meeting Bussche in June 1944, Weizsäcker was also informed of the imminent plans for 20 July and assured him of his support, but the plan ultimately failed.[17] Weizsäcker later described the last nine months of the war as "agony".[18] He was wounded in East Prussia in 1945 and was transported home to Stuttgart, to see out the end of the war on a family farm at Lake Constance.[19]

Education, marriage and early work life edit

 
Weizsäcker, his wife Marianne and daughter Beatrice in Moscow, 1987

At the end of the war Weizsäcker continued his study of history in Göttingen and went on to study law,[20] but he also attended lectures in physics and theology.[21] In 1947, when his father Ernst von Weizsäcker was a defendant in the Ministries Trial for his role in the deportation of Jews from occupied France, Richard von Weizsäcker served as his assistant defence counsel.[22][23] He took his first legal Staatsexamen in 1950, his second in 1953, and finally earned his doctorate (doctor juris) in 1955. In 1953 he married Marianne von Kretschmann. They had met when she was an 18-year-old schoolgirl and he was thirty. In 2010, Weizsäcker described the marriage as "the best and smartest decision of my life".[24] They had four children:[25] Robert Klaus von Weizsäcker, a professor of economics at the Technical University of Munich,[26] Andreas von Weizsäcker, an art professor at the Academy of Fine Arts Munich,[27] Beatrice von Weizsäcker, a lawyer and journalist,[28] and Fritz Eckhart von Weizsäcker [de], chief physician at the Schlosspark-Klinik in Berlin.[29][30] In the late 1970s, his son Andreas was a student at the Odenwaldschule. When reports about sexual abuse there surfaced in 2010, it was speculated in the media that Andreas might have been one of the victims, but this was denied by the family.[31] Andreas died of cancer in June 2008, aged 51.[27] Weizsäcker's son Fritz was murdered by a man armed with a knife on 19 November 2019, while holding a lecture at the Schlosspark-Klinik in Berlin, where he worked.[32][33]

Weizsäcker worked for Mannesmann between 1950 and 1958, as a scientific assistant until 1953, as a legal counsel from 1953, and as head of the department for economic policy from 1957.[34] From 1958 to 1962, he was head of the Waldthausen Bank, a bank owned by relatives of his wife. From 1962 to 1966, he served on the board of directors of Boehringer Ingelheim, a pharmaceutical company.[35] It was involved in production of the Agent Orange. This fact is speculated to be the motive behind the murder of his son in 2019, though the suspect has been sent to a secure hospital unit due to a "delusional general aversion" against the victim's family.[36][37]

German Evangelical Church Assembly edit

Between 1964 and 1970, Weizsäcker served as president of the German Evangelical Church Assembly. He was also a member of the Synod and the Council of the Protestant Church in Germany from 1967 to 1984.[38] During his early tenure as president, he wrote a newspaper article supporting a memorandum written by German evangelical intellectuals including Werner Heisenberg and his brother Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker who had spoken out in favour of accepting the Oder–Neisse line as the western border of Poland as an indispensable precondition for lasting peace in Europe. While this was met by negative reactions from politicians, especially in Weizsäcker's own party, he nevertheless led the Evangelical Church on a way to promoting reconciliation with Poland, leading to a memorandum by the Church in both West and East Germany. The paper was widely discussed and met with a significantly more positive response.[39]

Political career edit

 
Weizsäcker addressing a CDU party convention in 1972

Weizsäcker joined the CDU in 1954. Some years later, Helmut Kohl offered him a safe seat for the 1965 elections, even going so far as to have Chancellor Konrad Adenauer write two letters urging him to run, but Weizsäcker declined, due to his work in the German Evangelical Church Assembly, wanting to avoid a conflict of interest.[40] However, he became a member of the Bundestag (Federal Diet) in the 1969 federal elections, serving until 1981.[41]

In 1974, Weizsäcker was the Presidential candidate of his party for the first time, but he lost to Walter Scheel of the FDP, who was supported by the ruling center-left coalition.[42] Ahead of the 1976 elections, CDU chairman Helmut Kohl included him in his shadow cabinet for the party's campaign to unseat incumbent Helmut Schmidt as chancellor. Between 1979 and 1981, Weizsäcker served as Vice President of the Bundestag.[5]

Governing Mayor of West Berlin (1981–84) edit

 
Richard von Weizsäcker, as Mayor of West Berlin, with US President Ronald Reagan and West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, at Checkpoint Charlie in 1982

Weizsäcker served as the Governing Mayor (Regierender Bürgermeister) of West Berlin from 1981 to 1984. During his years in office, he tried to keep alive the idea of Germany as a cultural nation, divided into two states. In his speeches and writings, he repeatedly urged his compatriots in the Federal Republic to look upon themselves as a nation firmly anchored in the Western alliance, but with special obligations and interests in the East.[42] Weizsäcker irritated the United States, France and Britain, the half-city's occupying powers, by breaking with protocol and visiting Erich Honecker, the East German Communist Party chief, in East Berlin.[43]

From 1981 to 1983, Weizsäcker headed a minority government in West Berlin, after the CDU had only won 48 percent of seats in the state assembly. His government was tolerated by the Free Democratic Party, who were in a coalition with the Social Democrats at the federal level at the time. After Helmut Kohl had won the federal election in 1983 and had formed a government with the Free Democrats, Weizsäcker did the same in West Berlin.[44]

President of the Federal Republic of Germany (1984–94) edit

In 1984, Weizsäcker was elected as President of West Germany by the German Federal Convention, succeeding Karl Carstens and drawing unusual support from both the governing center-right coalition and the opposition Social Democratic Party;[42] he defeated the Green party candidate, Luise Rinser.[45]

First term (1984–89) edit

Richard von Weizsäcker took office as president on 1 July 1984. In his inaugural address, he appealed to his nation's special consciousness, saying: "Our situation, which differs from that of most other nations, is no reason to deny ourselves a national consciousness. To do so would be unhealthy for ourselves and eerie to our neighbors."[46] He dedicated his first years in office mainly to foreign policy, travelling widely with Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher and choosing former Foreign Office employees as his personal advisors.[47]

Speech on the 40th anniversary of the end of World War II edit

Weizsäcker, who was known as a great speaker,[48] delivered his most famous speech in 1985, marking the 40th anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe on 8 May 1945.[49][50] This came at a difficult time in West German politics. The country was caught up in a debate about whether Holocaust denial should be criminalized. At the same time, chancellor Helmut Kohl had accepted an invitation to visit a congress of the Silesian association of expellees which was to take place under the slogan "Silesia is ours!" ("Schlesien ist unser!"). This seemed to contradict the official position of the federal diet and government so that Kohl needed to lobby for the intended slogan to be changed.[51][52]

It was originally planned that United States President Ronald Reagan should take part in the Second World War memorial event in the Bundestag, shifting the emphasis from remembering the past to highlighting West Germany in its partnership with the Western Bloc. On Weizsäcker's strong urging, the occasion was marked without Reagan, who visited West Germany several days earlier instead, surrounding the G7summit in Bonn.[52] Reagan's visit nevertheless sparked controversy, especially in the United States. In an attempt to reproduce the gesture made by Kohl and French President François Mitterrand a year earlier at Verdun, the chancellor and Reagan were set to visit the military cemetery in Bitburg. This raised objections, since the cemetery included the last resting place for several members of the Waffen-SS.[51][53]

It was in this climate that Weizsäcker addressed parliament on 8 May 1985. Here, he articulated the historic responsibility of Germany and Germans for the crimes of Nazism. In contrast to the way the end of the war was still perceived by a majority of people in Germany at the time, he defined 8 May as a "day of liberation".[54] Weizsäcker pointed out the inseparable link between the Nazi takeover of Germany and the tragedies caused by the Second World War.[49] In a passage of striking boldness, he took issue with one of the most cherished defenses of older Germans. "When the unspeakable truth of the Holocaust became known at the end of the war," he said, "all too many of us claimed they had not known anything about it or even suspected anything."[54]

We must not regard the end of the war as the cause of flight, expulsion and deprivation of freedom. The cause goes back to the start of the tyranny that brought about war. We must not separate 8 May 1945 from 30 January 1933.[49]

Weizsäcker during his speech on 8 May 1985

Most notably, Weizsäcker spoke of the danger of forgetting and distorting the past. "There is no such thing as the guilt or innocence of an entire nation. Guilt is, like innocence, not collective but personal. There is discovered or concealed individual guilt. There is guilt which people acknowledge or deny. [...] All of us, whether guilty or not, whether young or old, must accept the past. We are all affected by the consequences and liable for it. [...] We Germans must look truth straight in the eye – without embellishment and without distortion. [...] There can be no reconciliation without remembrance."[54]

Weizsäcker declared that younger generations of Germans "cannot profess a guilt of their own for crimes they did not commit."[43] With his speech, Weizsäcker was also one of the first representatives of Germany to remember the homosexual victims of Nazism as a "victim group."[55] This was also the case with his recognition of the Sinti and Roma as another victim group, a fact that was highlighted by the long-time head of the Central Council of German Sinti and Roma, Romani Rose.[56]

Weizsäcker's speech was praised both nationally and internationally.[57] The New York Times called it a "sober message of hope to the uneasy generations of young West Germans".[54] The president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Werner Nachmann, thanked Weizsäcker for his strong words,[58] as did Karl Ibach, a former member of the German Resistance, who called his speech a "moment of glory (Sternstunde) of our republic".[59] Weizsäcker was however criticized for some of his remarks by members of his own party. Lorenz Niegel, a politician of the sister party CSU, who had not taken part in the ceremony, objected to the term "day of liberation", referring to it instead as a "day of deepest humiliation".[60] The Greens were also absent during the speech, choosing instead to visit Auschwitz.[60] A year later, the Green politician Petra Kelly called the speech "correct, but not more than self-evident", pointing to speeches president Gustav Heinemann had made during his presidency.[61] The harshest criticism came from the Federation of Expellees, whose president Herbert Czaja, while thanking the president for highlighting the expellees' fate,[62] criticized his remark that "conflicting legal claims must be subordinated under the imperative of reconciliation".[63]

The speech was later released on vinyl and sold around 60,000 copies. Two million printed copies of its text were distributed globally, translated into thirteen languages, with 40,000 being sold in Japan alone. This does not include copies of the speech printed in newspapers, such as The New York Times, which reproduced it in full.[57]

Role in the historians' dispute edit

Speaking to a congress of West German historians in Bamberg on 12 October 1988, Weizsäcker rejected the alleged attempts by some historians to compare the systematic murder of Jews in Nazi Germany to mass killings elsewhere – such as Stalin's purges – or to seek external explanations for it.[64] Thereby he declared an end to the Historikerstreit ('historians' dispute') that had sharply divided German scholars and journalists for two years, stating "Auschwitz remains unique. It was perpetrated by Germans in the name of Germany. This truth is immutable and will not be forgotten."[65]

In his remarks to the historians, Weizsäcker said their dispute had prompted accusations that they sought to raise a "multitude of comparisons and parallels" that would cause "the dark chapter of our own history to disappear, to be reduced to a mere episode."[65] Andreas Hillgruber, a historian at Cologne University, whose 1986 book in which he linked the collapse of the eastern front and the Holocaust was one of the subjects of the dispute, declared himself in full agreement with Weizsäcker, insisting that he had never tried to "relativize" the past.[65]

Second term (1989–94) edit

Unification of Germany

In free self-determination we want to complete Germany's unity and freedom; for our task, we are aware of our responsibility before God and the people; in a united Europe, we want to serve the peace of the world.

Weizsäcker's words in front of the Reichstag on 3 October 1990, which were drowned in the noise of the celebrating crowd.[66]

 
Weizsäcker delivering a speech during the act of state for the Reunification of Germany on 3 October 1990 at Berliner Philharmonie

Because of the high esteem in which he was held by Germany's political establishment and in the population,[67] Weizsäcker is so far the only candidate to have stood for elections for the office of President unopposed; he was elected in that way to a second term of office on 23 May 1989.[68]

Weizsäcker took office for his second presidential term on 1 July 1989, and in the course of it he oversaw the end of the Cold War and the Reunification of Germany. Thereupon, Weizsäcker became the first all-German Head of State since Karl Dönitz in May 1945. At midnight on 3 October 1990, during the official festivities held before the Reichstag building in Berlin to mark the moment of the reunification of Germany, President Weizsäcker delivered the only speech of the night, immediately after the raising of the flag, and before the playing of the National Anthem. His brief remarks, however, were almost inaudible, due to the sound of the bells marking midnight, and of the fireworks that were released to celebrate the moment of reunification.[69] In those remarks he praised the accomplishment of German unity in freedom and in peace. He gave a longer speech at the act of state at the Berliner Philharmonie later that day.[70]

President of a unified Germany edit

In 1990, Weizsäcker became the first head of state of the German Federal Republic to visit Poland. During his four-day visit, he reassured Poles that the newly unified German state would treat their western and northern borders, which included prewar German lands, as inviolable.[71]

In 1992, Weizsäcker gave the eulogy at the state funeral of former Chancellor Willy Brandt at the Reichstag, the first state funeral for a former chancellor to take place in Berlin since the death of Gustav Stresemann in 1929. The funeral was attended by an array of leading European political figures, including French President François Mitterrand, Spanish Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez and former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.[72]

Weizsäcker stretched the traditionally ceremonial position of Germany's president to reach across political, national, and age boundaries to address a wide range of controversial issues. He is credited with being largely responsible for taking the lead on an asylum policy overhaul after the arson attack by neo-Nazis in Mölln, in which three Turkish citizens died in 1993.[73] He also earned recognition at home and abroad for attending memorial services for the victims of neo-Nazi attacks in Mölln and Solingen. The services were snubbed by Chancellor Helmut Kohl, who dismayed many Germans by saying it was not necessary for the government to send a representative.[74]

In March 1994, Weizsäcker attended the Frankfurt premiere of the film Schindler's List along with the Israeli ambassador, Avi Primor, and the head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Ignatz Bubis.[75]

During the debate over the change of the seat of the German government from Bonn to Berlin, the president spoke out in favor of Berlin. In a memorandum released in February 1991, he declared that he would not act as a mere "decoration of a so-called capital",[76] urging the diet to move more constitutional organs to Berlin.[77][78] To compensate for a delay in the transfer to Berlin of the government and the federal parliament, Weizsäcker declared in April 1993 that he would be performing an increased share of his duties in Berlin.[79] He decided not to wait for the renovation and conversion as the presidential seat of the Kronprinzenpalais (Crown Prince's Palace) at Berlin's Unter den Linden boulevard, and to use instead his existing official residence in West Berlin, the Bellevue Palace beyond Tiergarten park.[79]

Critique of party politics edit

In an interview book released in 1992, midway through his second term, Weizsäcker voiced a harsh critique of the leading political parties in Germany, claiming that they took a larger role in public life than was awarded to them by the constitution. He criticized the high number of career politicians (Berufspolitiker), who "in general are neither expert nor dilettante, but generalists with particular knowledge only in political battle".[80] The immediate reactions toward this interview were mixed. Prominent party politicians such as Rainer Barzel and Johannes Rau criticized the remarks, as did Minister of Labour Norbert Blüm, who asked the president to show more respect towards the work done by party members. Former chancellor Helmut Schmidt, on the other hand, conceded that Weizsäcker was "essentially right". While comments from politicians were mainly negative, a public poll conducted by the Wickert-Institut in June 1992 showed that 87.4 percent of the population agreed with the president.[81] Political commentators generally interpreted the remarks as a hidden attack on the incumbent chancellor Helmut Kohl, since Weizsäcker's relationship with his former patron had cooled over the years.[81] In a column for the German newspaper Der Spiegel, chief-editor Rudolf Augstein criticized the president for his attack, writing: "You cannot have it both ways: on the one hand giving a right and seminal political incentive, but on the other hand insulting the governing class and its chief".[82]

Travels edit
 
Richard von Weizsäcker and his wife visiting Jordan in 1985

On his trip to Israel in October 1985, Weizsäcker was greeted on arrival by his Israeli counterpart, President Chaim Herzog. The president was given a full honor-guard welcome at Ben-Gurion Airport; among Cabinet ministers who lined up to shake his hand were right-wingers of the Herut party, the main faction of Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir's Likud party, who had previously refused to greet German leaders. Weizsäcker's visit was the first by a head of state, but not the first by a West German leader, as Chancellor Willy Brandt had paid a visit to Israel in June 1973.[83] During a four-day state visit to the United Kingdom in July 1986, Weizsäcker addressed a joint session of the Houses of Parliament, the first German to be accorded that honor.[84]

In 1987, he travelled to Moscow to meet Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in what was perceived as a difficult time in West German-Soviet relations, after chancellor Kohl had angered Moscow by comparing Gorbachev to Joseph Goebbels.[85][86] During a speech at the Kremlin, Weizsäcker said: "The Germans, who today live separated into East and West, have never stopped and will never stop to feel like one nation."[87] His speech was, however, censored in the official Communist Party newspaper Pravda. However, when German foreign minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher protested against this to his Soviet counterpart Eduard Shevardnadze, the speech was then printed unabridged in the lesser paper Izvestia. Weizsäcker also appealed to the Soviet authorities to agree to a pardon for the last inmate in the Spandau Prison, former Deputy Führer Rudolf Hess. This proved unsuccessful, and Hess committed suicide six weeks later.[88] The visit was nevertheless considered a success, as Gorbachev was quoted afterwards saying that "a new page of history was opened",[89] after the two had discussed matters of disarmament.[90] Also in 1987, Erich Honecker became the first East German leader to visit the Federal Republic. While state guests in Germany are usually welcomed by the President, Honecker was still not greeted officially by Weizsäcker, but by chancellor Kohl, since the Federal Republic did not consider the GDR a foreign state. Weizsäcker did however receive Honecker later at his seat of office, the Hammerschmidt Villa.[91]

Post-presidency edit

 
Richard von Weizsäcker in 2009

As an elder statesman, Weizsäcker long remained involved in politics and charitable affairs in Germany after his retirement as president. He chaired a commission established by the Social Democratic-Green government of the day for reforming the Bundeswehr.[92] Along with Henry Kissinger, in 1994 he supported Richard Holbrooke in creating the American Academy in Berlin.[93] He was also a member of the Board of Trustees of the Robert Bosch Stiftung.

Weizsäcker served as a member of the Advisory Council of Transparency International.[94] In a letter addressed to Nigeria's military ruler Sani Abacha in 1996, he called for the immediate release of General Olusegun Obasanjo, the former head of state of Nigeria, who had become the first military ruler in Africa to keep his promise to hand over power to an elected civilian government but was later sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.[95]

Weizsäcker also served on many international committees. He was chairman of the Independent Working Group on the future of the United Nations and was one of three "Wise Men" appointed by European Commission President Romano Prodi to consider the future of the European Union. From 2003 until his death, he was a member of the Advisory Commission on the return of cultural property seized as a result of Nazi persecution, especially Jewish property, led by the former head of the Federal Constitutional Court, Jutta Limbach. In November 2014, Weizsäcker retired as chairman of the Bergedorf Round Table, a discussion forum on foreign policy issues.[96]

Death and funeral edit

 
Weizsäcker's grave at Waldfriedhof Dahlem

Weizsäcker died in Berlin on 31 January 2015, aged 94. He was survived by his wife, Marianne, and three of their four children.[4] Upon his death, there was general praise for his life and political career. In its obituary, The New York Times called Weizsäcker "a guardian of his nation's moral conscience",[4] while The Guardian commented that Germany was "uniquely fortunate" in having had him as a leader.[97]

He was honored with a state funeral on 11 February 2015 at Berlin Cathedral. Eulogies were given by incumbent president Joachim Gauck, foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (SPD), finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble (CDU) and former vice president of the Bundestag Antje Vollmer (Green Party). Steinmeier praised Weizsäcker's role in foreign relations, where he had worked towards reconciliation with France and Poland and supported a dialogue with the communist regimes in the East, often against his own party.[98] The funeral was attended by many serving high-ranking politicians in Germany, including chancellor Angela Merkel. Also in attendance were former presidents Roman Herzog, Horst Köhler, and Christian Wulff, as well as former chancellors Helmut Schmidt and Gerhard Schröder. Princess Beatrix, former Queen of the Netherlands, was also present, as was former Polish president Lech Wałęsa.[99] After the ceremony, soldiers stood to attention as Weizsäcker's coffin was brought to its resting place at Waldfriedhof Dahlem.[98] In the subsequent days, many Berliners visited Weizsäcker's grave to pay tribute and lay down flowers.[100] On 15 April 2020, von Weizsäcker's 100th birthday, incumbent Governing Mayor of Berlin Michael Müller and Ralf Wieland, president of the Abgeordnetenhaus, Berlin's state parliament, laid down a wreath at his grave in honour of his services to the city of Berlin.[101]

Relationship with his party and Helmut Kohl edit

 
Von Weizsäcker (center) and Kohl (right) during a CDU press conference in June 1975

Weizsäcker, who had joined the CDU in 1954, was known for often publicly voicing political views different from his own party line, both in and out of the presidential office. While he was himself sceptical of Willy Brandt's Ostpolitik, he urged his party not to block it entirely in the lower house, the Bundestag, since rejection would be met with dismay abroad. When the CDU gained a sweeping victory in the state elections in Baden-Württemberg in April 1972, his party decided to take the opportunity to dispose of chancellor Brandt with a vote of no confidence, replacing him with Rainer Barzel, and Weizsäcker was one of only three elect CDU politicians to speak out against the proposal.[102] He maintained an easy-going and open demeanor towards members of all other parties. In 1987, at a time when the CDU actively tried to label the Green Party as unconstitutional, the President had regular contact with high-ranking Green politicians such as Antje Vollmer, who was also active in the Protestant Church in Germany, and Joschka Fischer, who said that with his understanding of state "he [Weizsäcker] is closer to the Green Party than to Kohl, not NATO, but Auschwitz as reason of state (Staatsräson)."[103]

Helmut Kohl, who served as Chancellor of Germany from 1982 to 1998, was an early patron of Weizsäcker's, effectively helping him into parliament. However, their relationship took a first strain in 1971, when Weizsäcker supported Rainer Barzel over Kohl for the CDU-chairmanship. Subsequently, Kohl unsuccessfully tried to deny Weizsäcker the chance to become president in 1983.[104] After he had taken office, Weizsäcker criticized Kohl's government on numerous occasions, taking liberties not previously heard of from someone in a ceremonial role such as his. For instance, he urged the chancellor to recognize the Oder–Neisse line[105] and spoke out for a more patient approach to the journey towards German reunification.[104] Other examples include the aforementioned speech in 1985 and his critique of party politics in 1992. Following a critical interview Weizsäcker gave to Der Spiegel magazine in September 1997, Kohl reacted during a meeting of his parliamentary group by saying that Weizsäcker (whom he called "that gentleman")[76] was no longer "one of us".[106] This was followed by CDU spokesman Rolf Kiefer stating that the CDU had removed Weizsäcker from its membership database, since the former president had not paid his membership fees in a long time. Weizsäcker then took the matter to the party's arbitrating body and won. The tribunal ruled that he was allowed to let his membership rest indefinitely.[106] After his death, Spiegel editor Gerhard Spörl called Weizsäcker the "intellectual alternative medicine to Kohl".[107]

It was specifically Berlin's Turks from whom I won my view that the German citizenship law was in urgent need for reform. [...] The longer it lasted, the more the jus sanguinis lost its sense compared to a jus soli. Should it really be made difficult for children of foreigners in the third generation to become Germans, even though it would not be a return, but emigration for them to go to the country of their ancestors [...]?[108]

Weizsäcker on his years as Governing Mayor of West Berlin and his views on citizenship.

After his presidency came to an end, Weizsäcker remained vocal in daily politics, e.g. speaking for a more liberal immigration policy, calling the way his party handled it "simply ridiculous".[109] He also spoke out in favour of dual citizenship and a change of German citizenship law from jus sanguinis to jus soli, a view not generally shared by his party colleagues.[110] Towards the former East-German leading party, the PDS (today called Die Linke), Weizsäcker urged his party colleagues to enter into a serious political discussion. He went as far as speaking in favor of a coalition government between Social Democrats and the PDS in Berlin after the 2001 state election.[111]

Publications edit

Weizsäcker's publications include Die deutsche Geschichte geht weiter (German History Continues), first published in 1983;[86] Von Deutschland aus (From Germany Abroad), a collection of speeches first published in 1985;[112] Von Deutschland nach Europa (From Germany to Europe, 1991)[113] and his memoirs Vier Zeiten (Four Times), published in German in 1997[114] and in English as From Weimar to the Wall: My Life in German Politics in 1999.[115] In a review in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Friedrich Karl Fromme wrote that the memoirs tell nothing new about the times he lived in, but "something about the person".[116] In 2009, he published a book on his recollections of German reunification, titled Der Weg zur Einheit (The Path to Unity). German newspaper Die Welt dismissed the book as "boring", accusing the account of being too balanced.[117]

Other activities and recognition edit

 
Richard von Weizsäcker at a Transparency International event in November 2013

Weizsäcker received many honors in his career, including honorary membership in the Order of Saint John;[118] an honorary doctorate from Johns Hopkins University in 1993; creation of the Richard von Weizsäcker Professorship at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) of Johns Hopkins University and the Robert Bosch Foundation of Stuttgart in 2003; and more than eleven other honorary doctorates, ranging from the Weizmann Institute in Israel to Oxford, Cambridge, and Harvard universities, the Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Law (1995) at Uppsala University[119] and the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras,[120] the Leo Baeck Prize from the Central Council of Jews in Germany, and the Buber-Rosenzweig Medallion from the Society for Christian-Jewish Cooperation. After his death, deputy director of Poland's international broadcaster, Rafal Kiepuszewski, called Weizsäcker "the greatest German friend Poland has ever had".[121]

Both Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Joachim Gauck praised Weizsäcker, with the latter declaring upon the news of his death: "We are losing a great man and an outstanding head of state."[122] French president François Hollande highlighted Weizsäcker's "moral stature."[122]

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ From 1 July 1984 to 2 October 1990, Richard von Weizsäcker was President of West Germany only. From 3 October 1990 until 30 June 1994, he was President of the reunified Germany. The term West Germany is only the common English name for the Federal Republic of Germany between its formation on 23 May 1949 and the German reunification through the accession of East Germany (GDR) in October 1990.

References edit

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Bibliography edit

Editions edit

  • Richard von Weizsäcker. Reden und Interviews (vol. 1), 1. Juli 1984 – 30. Juni 1985. Bonn: Presse- und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung. 1986.
  • Richard von Weizsäcker. Reden und Interviews (vol. 5), 1. Juli 1988 – 30. Juni 1989. Bonn: Presse- und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung. 1989.
  • Richard von Weizsäcker. Reden und Interviews (vol. 7), 1. Juli 1990 – 30. Juni 1991. Bonn: Presse- und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung. 1992.

Monographs and miscellanies edit

  • Gill, Ulrich, ed. (1986). Eine Rede und ihre Wirkung. Die Rede des Bundespräsidenten Richard von Weizsäcker vom 8. Mai 1985 anläßlich des 40. Jahrestages der Beendigung des Zweiten Weltkrieges (in German). Berlin: Verlag Rainer Röll. ISBN 3-9801344-0-7.
  • Hofmann, Gunter (2010). Richard von Weizsäcker. Ein deutsches Leben (in German). Munich: C.H. Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-59809-8.
  • Rudolph, Hermann (2010). Richard von Weizsäcker. Eine Biographie (in German). Berlin: Rowohlt. ISBN 978-3-87134-667-5.
  • Weizsäcker, Richard von (1997). Vier Zeiten. Erinnerungen (in German). Berlin: Siedler Verlag. ISBN 3-88680-556-5.

External links edit

  • Correspondence between President Weizsacker and the Israeli President Chaim Herzog during the First Gulf War, published by the blog of Israel State Archives
  • Richard von Weizsäcker on the official website of the President's Office
Political offices
Preceded by Governing Mayor of West Berlin
1981–1984
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of West Germany
1984–1990
Germany reunifies
Recreated President of Germany
1990–1994
Succeeded by

richard, weizsäcker, richard, karl, freiherr, weizsäcker, german, ˈʁɪçaʁt, fɔn, ˈvaɪtszɛkɐ, april, 1920, january, 2015, german, politician, served, president, germany, from, 1984, 1994, born, into, aristocratic, weizsäcker, family, were, part, german, nobility. Richard Karl Freiherr von Weizsacker German ˈʁɪcaʁt fɔn ˈvaɪtszɛkɐ 15 April 1920 31 January 2015 was a German politician CDU who served as President of Germany from 1984 to 1994 Born into the aristocratic Weizsacker family who were part of the German nobility he took his first public offices in the Protestant Church in Germany Richard Freiherr von WeizsackerWeizsacker in 1984President of GermanyIn office 1 July 1984 30 June 1994 a ChancellorHelmut KohlPreceded byKarl CarstensSucceeded byRoman HerzogGoverning Mayor of West BerlinIn office 11 June 1981 9 February 1984MayorHeinrich LummerPreceded byHans Jochen VogelSucceeded byEberhard DiepgenLeader of the Christian Democratic Unionin West BerlinIn office 21 March 1981 December 1983Preceded byPeter LorenzSucceeded byEberhard DiepgenVice President of the Bundestag on proposal of the CDU CSU group In office 21 June 1979 21 March 1981PresidentRichard StucklenPreceded byRichard StucklenSucceeded byHeinrich WindelenParliamentary constituenciesMember of theAbgeordnetenhaus of Berlin for NeukollnIn office 11 June 1981 15 June 1984Preceded byHans Ludwig SchoenthalSucceeded byNorbert TietzConstituencyNeukolln 2In office 26 April 1979 17 December 1979Preceded bymulti member districtSucceeded byRainer GieselConstituencyNeukollnMember of the Bundestag for West Berlin Rhineland Palatinate 1969 1980 In office 20 October 1969 15 June 1981Preceded bymulti member districtSucceeded byWerner DolataConstituencyChristian Democratic Union ListPersonal detailsBornRichard Karl Freiherr von Weizsacker 1920 04 15 15 April 1920New Palace Stuttgart Wurttemberg Weimar RepublicDied31 January 2015 2015 01 31 aged 94 Berlin Federal Republic of GermanyPolitical partyChristian Democratic Union 1954 2015 SpouseMarianne von KretschmannChildren4Parent s Ernst von Weizsacker Marianne von GraevenitzAlma materBalliol College OxfordUniversity of Gottingen Dr jur SignatureA member of the CDU since 1954 Weizsacker was elected as a member of parliament at the 1969 elections He continued to hold a mandate as a member of the Bundestag until he became Governing Mayor of West Berlin following the 1981 state elections In 1984 Weizsacker was elected as President of the Federal Republic of Germany and was re elected in 1989 for a second term As yet he and Theodor Heuss are the only two Presidents of the Federal Republic of Germany who have served two complete five year terms On 3 October 1990 during his second term as president the reorganized five states of the German Democratic Republic and East Berlin joined the Federal Republic of Germany which made Weizsacker President of a reunified Germany Weizsacker is considered the most popular of Germany s presidents 1 held in high regard particularly for his impartiality 2 3 His demeanor often saw him at odds with his party colleagues particularly longtime Chancellor Helmut Kohl He was famous for his speeches especially one he delivered at the 40th anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe on 8 May 1985 Upon his death his life and political work were widely praised with The New York Times calling him a guardian of his nation s moral conscience 4 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Childhood school and family 1 2 Second World War 1 3 Education marriage and early work life 2 German Evangelical Church Assembly 3 Political career 3 1 Governing Mayor of West Berlin 1981 84 3 2 President of the Federal Republic of Germany 1984 94 3 2 1 First term 1984 89 3 2 1 1 Speech on the 40th anniversary of the end of World War II 3 2 1 2 Role in the historians dispute 3 2 2 Second term 1989 94 3 2 2 1 President of a unified Germany 3 2 2 2 Critique of party politics 3 2 2 3 Travels 4 Post presidency 4 1 Death and funeral 5 Relationship with his party and Helmut Kohl 6 Publications 7 Other activities and recognition 8 Ancestry 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 11 1 Editions 11 2 Monographs and miscellanies 12 External linksEarly life editChildhood school and family edit nbsp Richard von Weizsacker left with his father at the latter s post war trialRichard von Weizsacker was born on 15 April 1920 in the New Palace in Stuttgart 5 the son of diplomat Ernst von Weizsacker a member of the Weizsacker family and his wife Marianne von Graevenitz a daughter of Friedrich von Graevenitz 1861 1922 a General of the Infantry of the Kingdom of Wurttemberg 6 Ernst von Weizsacker was a career diplomat and a high ranking official in the Foreign Ministry in the 1930s 7 The youngest of four children Weizsacker had two brothers the physicist and philosopher Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker and Heinrich von Weizsacker who fell as a soldier in Poland at the beginning of World War II The sister Adelheid 1916 2004 married Botho Ernst Graf zu Eulenburg Wicken 1903 1944 a landowner in East Prussia Richard s grandfather Karl von Weizsacker had been Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Wurttemberg and was ennobled in 1897 and raised to the hereditary title of Baron Freiherr in 1916 8 His term in office ended in 1918 shortly before the monarchy was abolished in the German Revolution of 1918 1919 However during the following years he still occupied an apartment in the former royal palace where his grandson was born in an attic room Because his father was a career diplomat Weizsacker spent much of his childhood in Switzerland and Scandinavia The family lived in Basel 1920 24 in Copenhagen 1924 26 and in Bern 1933 36 where Richard attended the Swiss Gymnasium Kirchenfeld The family lived in Berlin in an apartment in the Fasanenstrasse in Wilmersdorf between 1929 and 1933 and again from 1936 until the end of the Second World War 9 Weizsacker was able to miss the third class of his elementary school and entered a secondary school at the young age of nine the Bismarck Gymnasium now the Goethe Gymnasium in Wilmersdorf 10 When he was 17 years old Weizsacker travelled to England to study philosophy and history at Balliol College Oxford In London he witnessed the coronation of King George VI 11 He spent the winter semester of 1937 38 at the University of Grenoble in France to improve his French 12 He was mustered for the army there in 1938 and moved back to Germany the same year to start his Reichsarbeitsdienst 13 Second World War edit After the outbreak of the Second World War Weizsacker joined the Wehrmacht ultimately rising to the rank of captain in the reserves He joined his brother Heinrich s regiment the Infantry Regiment 9 Potsdam He crossed over the border to Poland with his regiment on the very first day of the war 14 His brother Heinrich was killed about a hundred meters away from him on the second day Weizsacker watched over his brother s body through the night until he was able to bury him the next morning 15 His regiment consisting in a large part of noble and conservative Prussians played a significant part in the 20 July plot with no fewer than nineteen of its officers involved in the conspiracy against Hitler 16 Weizsacker himself helped his friend Axel von dem Bussche in an attempt to kill Hitler at a uniform inspection in December 1943 providing Bussche with travel papers to Berlin The attempt had to be called off when the uniforms were destroyed by an air raid Upon meeting Bussche in June 1944 Weizsacker was also informed of the imminent plans for 20 July and assured him of his support but the plan ultimately failed 17 Weizsacker later described the last nine months of the war as agony 18 He was wounded in East Prussia in 1945 and was transported home to Stuttgart to see out the end of the war on a family farm at Lake Constance 19 Education marriage and early work life edit nbsp Weizsacker his wife Marianne and daughter Beatrice in Moscow 1987At the end of the war Weizsacker continued his study of history in Gottingen and went on to study law 20 but he also attended lectures in physics and theology 21 In 1947 when his father Ernst von Weizsacker was a defendant in the Ministries Trial for his role in the deportation of Jews from occupied France Richard von Weizsacker served as his assistant defence counsel 22 23 He took his first legal Staatsexamen in 1950 his second in 1953 and finally earned his doctorate doctor juris in 1955 In 1953 he married Marianne von Kretschmann They had met when she was an 18 year old schoolgirl and he was thirty In 2010 Weizsacker described the marriage as the best and smartest decision of my life 24 They had four children 25 Robert Klaus von Weizsacker a professor of economics at the Technical University of Munich 26 Andreas von Weizsacker an art professor at the Academy of Fine Arts Munich 27 Beatrice von Weizsacker a lawyer and journalist 28 and Fritz Eckhart von Weizsacker de chief physician at the Schlosspark Klinik in Berlin 29 30 In the late 1970s his son Andreas was a student at the Odenwaldschule When reports about sexual abuse there surfaced in 2010 it was speculated in the media that Andreas might have been one of the victims but this was denied by the family 31 Andreas died of cancer in June 2008 aged 51 27 Weizsacker s son Fritz was murdered by a man armed with a knife on 19 November 2019 while holding a lecture at the Schlosspark Klinik in Berlin where he worked 32 33 Weizsacker worked for Mannesmann between 1950 and 1958 as a scientific assistant until 1953 as a legal counsel from 1953 and as head of the department for economic policy from 1957 34 From 1958 to 1962 he was head of the Waldthausen Bank a bank owned by relatives of his wife From 1962 to 1966 he served on the board of directors of Boehringer Ingelheim a pharmaceutical company 35 It was involved in production of the Agent Orange This fact is speculated to be the motive behind the murder of his son in 2019 though the suspect has been sent to a secure hospital unit due to a delusional general aversion against the victim s family 36 37 German Evangelical Church Assembly editBetween 1964 and 1970 Weizsacker served as president of the German Evangelical Church Assembly He was also a member of the Synod and the Council of the Protestant Church in Germany from 1967 to 1984 38 During his early tenure as president he wrote a newspaper article supporting a memorandum written by German evangelical intellectuals including Werner Heisenberg and his brother Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker who had spoken out in favour of accepting the Oder Neisse line as the western border of Poland as an indispensable precondition for lasting peace in Europe While this was met by negative reactions from politicians especially in Weizsacker s own party he nevertheless led the Evangelical Church on a way to promoting reconciliation with Poland leading to a memorandum by the Church in both West and East Germany The paper was widely discussed and met with a significantly more positive response 39 Political career edit nbsp Weizsacker addressing a CDU party convention in 1972Weizsacker joined the CDU in 1954 Some years later Helmut Kohl offered him a safe seat for the 1965 elections even going so far as to have Chancellor Konrad Adenauer write two letters urging him to run but Weizsacker declined due to his work in the German Evangelical Church Assembly wanting to avoid a conflict of interest 40 However he became a member of the Bundestag Federal Diet in the 1969 federal elections serving until 1981 41 In 1974 Weizsacker was the Presidential candidate of his party for the first time but he lost to Walter Scheel of the FDP who was supported by the ruling center left coalition 42 Ahead of the 1976 elections CDU chairman Helmut Kohl included him in his shadow cabinet for the party s campaign to unseat incumbent Helmut Schmidt as chancellor Between 1979 and 1981 Weizsacker served as Vice President of the Bundestag 5 Governing Mayor of West Berlin 1981 84 edit nbsp Richard von Weizsacker as Mayor of West Berlin with US President Ronald Reagan and West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt at Checkpoint Charlie in 1982Weizsacker served as the Governing Mayor Regierender Burgermeister of West Berlin from 1981 to 1984 During his years in office he tried to keep alive the idea of Germany as a cultural nation divided into two states In his speeches and writings he repeatedly urged his compatriots in the Federal Republic to look upon themselves as a nation firmly anchored in the Western alliance but with special obligations and interests in the East 42 Weizsacker irritated the United States France and Britain the half city s occupying powers by breaking with protocol and visiting Erich Honecker the East German Communist Party chief in East Berlin 43 From 1981 to 1983 Weizsacker headed a minority government in West Berlin after the CDU had only won 48 percent of seats in the state assembly His government was tolerated by the Free Democratic Party who were in a coalition with the Social Democrats at the federal level at the time After Helmut Kohl had won the federal election in 1983 and had formed a government with the Free Democrats Weizsacker did the same in West Berlin 44 President of the Federal Republic of Germany 1984 94 edit In 1984 Weizsacker was elected as President of West Germany by the German Federal Convention succeeding Karl Carstens and drawing unusual support from both the governing center right coalition and the opposition Social Democratic Party 42 he defeated the Green party candidate Luise Rinser 45 First term 1984 89 edit Richard von Weizsacker took office as president on 1 July 1984 In his inaugural address he appealed to his nation s special consciousness saying Our situation which differs from that of most other nations is no reason to deny ourselves a national consciousness To do so would be unhealthy for ourselves and eerie to our neighbors 46 He dedicated his first years in office mainly to foreign policy travelling widely with Foreign Minister Hans Dietrich Genscher and choosing former Foreign Office employees as his personal advisors 47 Speech on the 40th anniversary of the end of World War II edit Weizsacker who was known as a great speaker 48 delivered his most famous speech in 1985 marking the 40th anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe on 8 May 1945 49 50 This came at a difficult time in West German politics The country was caught up in a debate about whether Holocaust denial should be criminalized At the same time chancellor Helmut Kohl had accepted an invitation to visit a congress of the Silesian association of expellees which was to take place under the slogan Silesia is ours Schlesien ist unser This seemed to contradict the official position of the federal diet and government so that Kohl needed to lobby for the intended slogan to be changed 51 52 It was originally planned that United States President Ronald Reagan should take part in the Second World War memorial event in the Bundestag shifting the emphasis from remembering the past to highlighting West Germany in its partnership with the Western Bloc On Weizsacker s strong urging the occasion was marked without Reagan who visited West Germany several days earlier instead surrounding the G7 summit in Bonn 52 Reagan s visit nevertheless sparked controversy especially in the United States In an attempt to reproduce the gesture made by Kohl and French President Francois Mitterrand a year earlier at Verdun the chancellor and Reagan were set to visit the military cemetery in Bitburg This raised objections since the cemetery included the last resting place for several members of the Waffen SS 51 53 It was in this climate that Weizsacker addressed parliament on 8 May 1985 Here he articulated the historic responsibility of Germany and Germans for the crimes of Nazism In contrast to the way the end of the war was still perceived by a majority of people in Germany at the time he defined 8 May as a day of liberation 54 Weizsacker pointed out the inseparable link between the Nazi takeover of Germany and the tragedies caused by the Second World War 49 In a passage of striking boldness he took issue with one of the most cherished defenses of older Germans When the unspeakable truth of the Holocaust became known at the end of the war he said all too many of us claimed they had not known anything about it or even suspected anything 54 We must not regard the end of the war as the cause of flight expulsion and deprivation of freedom The cause goes back to the start of the tyranny that brought about war We must not separate 8 May 1945 from 30 January 1933 49 Weizsacker during his speech on 8 May 1985 Most notably Weizsacker spoke of the danger of forgetting and distorting the past There is no such thing as the guilt or innocence of an entire nation Guilt is like innocence not collective but personal There is discovered or concealed individual guilt There is guilt which people acknowledge or deny All of us whether guilty or not whether young or old must accept the past We are all affected by the consequences and liable for it We Germans must look truth straight in the eye without embellishment and without distortion There can be no reconciliation without remembrance 54 Weizsacker declared that younger generations of Germans cannot profess a guilt of their own for crimes they did not commit 43 With his speech Weizsacker was also one of the first representatives of Germany to remember the homosexual victims of Nazism as a victim group 55 This was also the case with his recognition of the Sinti and Roma as another victim group a fact that was highlighted by the long time head of the Central Council of German Sinti and Roma Romani Rose 56 Weizsacker s speech was praised both nationally and internationally 57 The New York Times called it a sober message of hope to the uneasy generations of young West Germans 54 The president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany Werner Nachmann thanked Weizsacker for his strong words 58 as did Karl Ibach a former member of the German Resistance who called his speech a moment of glory Sternstunde of our republic 59 Weizsacker was however criticized for some of his remarks by members of his own party Lorenz Niegel a politician of the sister party CSU who had not taken part in the ceremony objected to the term day of liberation referring to it instead as a day of deepest humiliation 60 The Greens were also absent during the speech choosing instead to visit Auschwitz 60 A year later the Green politician Petra Kelly called the speech correct but not more than self evident pointing to speeches president Gustav Heinemann had made during his presidency 61 The harshest criticism came from the Federation of Expellees whose president Herbert Czaja while thanking the president for highlighting the expellees fate 62 criticized his remark that conflicting legal claims must be subordinated under the imperative of reconciliation 63 The speech was later released on vinyl and sold around 60 000 copies Two million printed copies of its text were distributed globally translated into thirteen languages with 40 000 being sold in Japan alone This does not include copies of the speech printed in newspapers such as The New York Times which reproduced it in full 57 Role in the historians dispute edit Speaking to a congress of West German historians in Bamberg on 12 October 1988 Weizsacker rejected the alleged attempts by some historians to compare the systematic murder of Jews in Nazi Germany to mass killings elsewhere such as Stalin s purges or to seek external explanations for it 64 Thereby he declared an end to the Historikerstreit historians dispute that had sharply divided German scholars and journalists for two years stating Auschwitz remains unique It was perpetrated by Germans in the name of Germany This truth is immutable and will not be forgotten 65 In his remarks to the historians Weizsacker said their dispute had prompted accusations that they sought to raise a multitude of comparisons and parallels that would cause the dark chapter of our own history to disappear to be reduced to a mere episode 65 Andreas Hillgruber a historian at Cologne University whose 1986 book in which he linked the collapse of the eastern front and the Holocaust was one of the subjects of the dispute declared himself in full agreement with Weizsacker insisting that he had never tried to relativize the past 65 Second term 1989 94 edit Unification of Germany In free self determination we want to complete Germany s unity and freedom for our task we are aware of our responsibility before God and the people in a united Europe we want to serve the peace of the world Weizsacker s words in front of the Reichstag on 3 October 1990 which were drowned in the noise of the celebrating crowd 66 nbsp Weizsacker delivering a speech during the act of state for the Reunification of Germany on 3 October 1990 at Berliner PhilharmonieBecause of the high esteem in which he was held by Germany s political establishment and in the population 67 Weizsacker is so far the only candidate to have stood for elections for the office of President unopposed he was elected in that way to a second term of office on 23 May 1989 68 Weizsacker took office for his second presidential term on 1 July 1989 and in the course of it he oversaw the end of the Cold War and the Reunification of Germany Thereupon Weizsacker became the first all German Head of State since Karl Donitz in May 1945 At midnight on 3 October 1990 during the official festivities held before the Reichstag building in Berlin to mark the moment of the reunification of Germany President Weizsacker delivered the only speech of the night immediately after the raising of the flag and before the playing of the National Anthem His brief remarks however were almost inaudible due to the sound of the bells marking midnight and of the fireworks that were released to celebrate the moment of reunification 69 In those remarks he praised the accomplishment of German unity in freedom and in peace He gave a longer speech at the act of state at the Berliner Philharmonie later that day 70 President of a unified Germany edit In 1990 Weizsacker became the first head of state of the German Federal Republic to visit Poland During his four day visit he reassured Poles that the newly unified German state would treat their western and northern borders which included prewar German lands as inviolable 71 In 1992 Weizsacker gave the eulogy at the state funeral of former Chancellor Willy Brandt at the Reichstag the first state funeral for a former chancellor to take place in Berlin since the death of Gustav Stresemann in 1929 The funeral was attended by an array of leading European political figures including French President Francois Mitterrand Spanish Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez and former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev 72 Weizsacker stretched the traditionally ceremonial position of Germany s president to reach across political national and age boundaries to address a wide range of controversial issues He is credited with being largely responsible for taking the lead on an asylum policy overhaul after the arson attack by neo Nazis in Molln in which three Turkish citizens died in 1993 73 He also earned recognition at home and abroad for attending memorial services for the victims of neo Nazi attacks in Molln and Solingen The services were snubbed by Chancellor Helmut Kohl who dismayed many Germans by saying it was not necessary for the government to send a representative 74 In March 1994 Weizsacker attended the Frankfurt premiere of the film Schindler s List along with the Israeli ambassador Avi Primor and the head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany Ignatz Bubis 75 During the debate over the change of the seat of the German government from Bonn to Berlin the president spoke out in favor of Berlin In a memorandum released in February 1991 he declared that he would not act as a mere decoration of a so called capital 76 urging the diet to move more constitutional organs to Berlin 77 78 To compensate for a delay in the transfer to Berlin of the government and the federal parliament Weizsacker declared in April 1993 that he would be performing an increased share of his duties in Berlin 79 He decided not to wait for the renovation and conversion as the presidential seat of the Kronprinzenpalais Crown Prince s Palace at Berlin s Unter den Linden boulevard and to use instead his existing official residence in West Berlin the Bellevue Palace beyond Tiergarten park 79 Critique of party politics edit In an interview book released in 1992 midway through his second term Weizsacker voiced a harsh critique of the leading political parties in Germany claiming that they took a larger role in public life than was awarded to them by the constitution He criticized the high number of career politicians Berufspolitiker who in general are neither expert nor dilettante but generalists with particular knowledge only in political battle 80 The immediate reactions toward this interview were mixed Prominent party politicians such as Rainer Barzel and Johannes Rau criticized the remarks as did Minister of Labour Norbert Blum who asked the president to show more respect towards the work done by party members Former chancellor Helmut Schmidt on the other hand conceded that Weizsacker was essentially right While comments from politicians were mainly negative a public poll conducted by the Wickert Institut in June 1992 showed that 87 4 percent of the population agreed with the president 81 Political commentators generally interpreted the remarks as a hidden attack on the incumbent chancellor Helmut Kohl since Weizsacker s relationship with his former patron had cooled over the years 81 In a column for the German newspaper Der Spiegel chief editor Rudolf Augstein criticized the president for his attack writing You cannot have it both ways on the one hand giving a right and seminal political incentive but on the other hand insulting the governing class and its chief 82 Travels edit nbsp Richard von Weizsacker and his wife visiting Jordan in 1985On his trip to Israel in October 1985 Weizsacker was greeted on arrival by his Israeli counterpart President Chaim Herzog The president was given a full honor guard welcome at Ben Gurion Airport among Cabinet ministers who lined up to shake his hand were right wingers of the Herut party the main faction of Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir s Likud party who had previously refused to greet German leaders Weizsacker s visit was the first by a head of state but not the first by a West German leader as Chancellor Willy Brandt had paid a visit to Israel in June 1973 83 During a four day state visit to the United Kingdom in July 1986 Weizsacker addressed a joint session of the Houses of Parliament the first German to be accorded that honor 84 In 1987 he travelled to Moscow to meet Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in what was perceived as a difficult time in West German Soviet relations after chancellor Kohl had angered Moscow by comparing Gorbachev to Joseph Goebbels 85 86 During a speech at the Kremlin Weizsacker said The Germans who today live separated into East and West have never stopped and will never stop to feel like one nation 87 His speech was however censored in the official Communist Party newspaper Pravda However when German foreign minister Hans Dietrich Genscher protested against this to his Soviet counterpart Eduard Shevardnadze the speech was then printed unabridged in the lesser paper Izvestia Weizsacker also appealed to the Soviet authorities to agree to a pardon for the last inmate in the Spandau Prison former Deputy Fuhrer Rudolf Hess This proved unsuccessful and Hess committed suicide six weeks later 88 The visit was nevertheless considered a success as Gorbachev was quoted afterwards saying that a new page of history was opened 89 after the two had discussed matters of disarmament 90 Also in 1987 Erich Honecker became the first East German leader to visit the Federal Republic While state guests in Germany are usually welcomed by the President Honecker was still not greeted officially by Weizsacker but by chancellor Kohl since the Federal Republic did not consider the GDR a foreign state Weizsacker did however receive Honecker later at his seat of office the Hammerschmidt Villa 91 Post presidency edit nbsp Richard von Weizsacker in 2009As an elder statesman Weizsacker long remained involved in politics and charitable affairs in Germany after his retirement as president He chaired a commission established by the Social Democratic Green government of the day for reforming the Bundeswehr 92 Along with Henry Kissinger in 1994 he supported Richard Holbrooke in creating the American Academy in Berlin 93 He was also a member of the Board of Trustees of the Robert Bosch Stiftung Weizsacker served as a member of the Advisory Council of Transparency International 94 In a letter addressed to Nigeria s military ruler Sani Abacha in 1996 he called for the immediate release of General Olusegun Obasanjo the former head of state of Nigeria who had become the first military ruler in Africa to keep his promise to hand over power to an elected civilian government but was later sentenced to 15 years imprisonment 95 Weizsacker also served on many international committees He was chairman of the Independent Working Group on the future of the United Nations and was one of three Wise Men appointed by European Commission President Romano Prodi to consider the future of the European Union From 2003 until his death he was a member of the Advisory Commission on the return of cultural property seized as a result of Nazi persecution especially Jewish property led by the former head of the Federal Constitutional Court Jutta Limbach In November 2014 Weizsacker retired as chairman of the Bergedorf Round Table a discussion forum on foreign policy issues 96 Death and funeral edit nbsp Weizsacker s grave at Waldfriedhof Dahlem nbsp Wikinews has related news Richard von Weizsacker former President of Germany dies Weizsacker died in Berlin on 31 January 2015 aged 94 He was survived by his wife Marianne and three of their four children 4 Upon his death there was general praise for his life and political career In its obituary The New York Times called Weizsacker a guardian of his nation s moral conscience 4 while The Guardian commented that Germany was uniquely fortunate in having had him as a leader 97 He was honored with a state funeral on 11 February 2015 at Berlin Cathedral Eulogies were given by incumbent president Joachim Gauck foreign minister Frank Walter Steinmeier SPD finance minister Wolfgang Schauble CDU and former vice president of the Bundestag Antje Vollmer Green Party Steinmeier praised Weizsacker s role in foreign relations where he had worked towards reconciliation with France and Poland and supported a dialogue with the communist regimes in the East often against his own party 98 The funeral was attended by many serving high ranking politicians in Germany including chancellor Angela Merkel Also in attendance were former presidents Roman Herzog Horst Kohler and Christian Wulff as well as former chancellors Helmut Schmidt and Gerhard Schroder Princess Beatrix former Queen of the Netherlands was also present as was former Polish president Lech Walesa 99 After the ceremony soldiers stood to attention as Weizsacker s coffin was brought to its resting place at Waldfriedhof Dahlem 98 In the subsequent days many Berliners visited Weizsacker s grave to pay tribute and lay down flowers 100 On 15 April 2020 von Weizsacker s 100th birthday incumbent Governing Mayor of Berlin Michael Muller and Ralf Wieland president of the Abgeordnetenhaus Berlin s state parliament laid down a wreath at his grave in honour of his services to the city of Berlin 101 Relationship with his party and Helmut Kohl edit nbsp Von Weizsacker center and Kohl right during a CDU press conference in June 1975Weizsacker who had joined the CDU in 1954 was known for often publicly voicing political views different from his own party line both in and out of the presidential office While he was himself sceptical of Willy Brandt s Ostpolitik he urged his party not to block it entirely in the lower house the Bundestag since rejection would be met with dismay abroad When the CDU gained a sweeping victory in the state elections in Baden Wurttemberg in April 1972 his party decided to take the opportunity to dispose of chancellor Brandt with a vote of no confidence replacing him with Rainer Barzel and Weizsacker was one of only three elect CDU politicians to speak out against the proposal 102 He maintained an easy going and open demeanor towards members of all other parties In 1987 at a time when the CDU actively tried to label the Green Party as unconstitutional the President had regular contact with high ranking Green politicians such as Antje Vollmer who was also active in the Protestant Church in Germany and Joschka Fischer who said that with his understanding of state he Weizsacker is closer to the Green Party than to Kohl not NATO but Auschwitz as reason of state Staatsrason 103 Helmut Kohl who served as Chancellor of Germany from 1982 to 1998 was an early patron of Weizsacker s effectively helping him into parliament However their relationship took a first strain in 1971 when Weizsacker supported Rainer Barzel over Kohl for the CDU chairmanship Subsequently Kohl unsuccessfully tried to deny Weizsacker the chance to become president in 1983 104 After he had taken office Weizsacker criticized Kohl s government on numerous occasions taking liberties not previously heard of from someone in a ceremonial role such as his For instance he urged the chancellor to recognize the Oder Neisse line 105 and spoke out for a more patient approach to the journey towards German reunification 104 Other examples include the aforementioned speech in 1985 and his critique of party politics in 1992 Following a critical interview Weizsacker gave to Der Spiegel magazine in September 1997 Kohl reacted during a meeting of his parliamentary group by saying that Weizsacker whom he called that gentleman 76 was no longer one of us 106 This was followed by CDU spokesman Rolf Kiefer stating that the CDU had removed Weizsacker from its membership database since the former president had not paid his membership fees in a long time Weizsacker then took the matter to the party s arbitrating body and won The tribunal ruled that he was allowed to let his membership rest indefinitely 106 After his death Spiegel editor Gerhard Sporl called Weizsacker the intellectual alternative medicine to Kohl 107 It was specifically Berlin s Turks from whom I won my view that the German citizenship law was in urgent need for reform The longer it lasted the more the jus sanguinis lost its sense compared to a jus soli Should it really be made difficult for children of foreigners in the third generation to become Germans even though it would not be a return but emigration for them to go to the country of their ancestors 108 Weizsacker on his years as Governing Mayor of West Berlin and his views on citizenship After his presidency came to an end Weizsacker remained vocal in daily politics e g speaking for a more liberal immigration policy calling the way his party handled it simply ridiculous 109 He also spoke out in favour of dual citizenship and a change of German citizenship law from jus sanguinis to jus soli a view not generally shared by his party colleagues 110 Towards the former East German leading party the PDS today called Die Linke Weizsacker urged his party colleagues to enter into a serious political discussion He went as far as speaking in favor of a coalition government between Social Democrats and the PDS in Berlin after the 2001 state election 111 Publications editWeizsacker s publications include Die deutsche Geschichte geht weiter German History Continues first published in 1983 86 Von Deutschland aus From Germany Abroad a collection of speeches first published in 1985 112 Von Deutschland nach Europa From Germany to Europe 1991 113 and his memoirs Vier Zeiten Four Times published in German in 1997 114 and in English as From Weimar to the Wall My Life in German Politics in 1999 115 In a review in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Friedrich Karl Fromme wrote that the memoirs tell nothing new about the times he lived in but something about the person 116 In 2009 he published a book on his recollections of German reunification titled Der Weg zur Einheit The Path to Unity German newspaper Die Welt dismissed the book as boring accusing the account of being too balanced 117 Other activities and recognition edit nbsp Richard von Weizsacker at a Transparency International event in November 2013Weizsacker received many honors in his career including honorary membership in the Order of Saint John 118 an honorary doctorate from Johns Hopkins University in 1993 creation of the Richard von Weizsacker Professorship at the Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies SAIS of Johns Hopkins University and the Robert Bosch Foundation of Stuttgart in 2003 and more than eleven other honorary doctorates ranging from the Weizmann Institute in Israel to Oxford Cambridge and Harvard universities the Charles University in Prague Faculty of Law 1995 at Uppsala University 119 and the Indian Institute of Technology Madras 120 the Leo Baeck Prize from the Central Council of Jews in Germany and the Buber Rosenzweig Medallion from the Society for Christian Jewish Cooperation After his death deputy director of Poland s international broadcaster Rafal Kiepuszewski called Weizsacker the greatest German friend Poland has ever had 121 Both Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Joachim Gauck praised Weizsacker with the latter declaring upon the news of his death We are losing a great man and an outstanding head of state 122 French president Francois Hollande highlighted Weizsacker s moral stature 122 Weizsacker s many awards and honors include 1986 Knight Collar of the Order of Charles III Spain 123 1987 Honorary Recipient of the Order of the Crown of the Realm Malaysia 124 1987 Order of the Quetzal of Guatemala 125 1987 Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion 126 1987 Ataturk International Peace Prize 127 1988 Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of the Falcon Iceland 4 July 1988 128 1988 Knight of the Swedish Royal Order of the Seraphim 129 1990 Harnack medal 130 1990 Honorary citizenship of Berlin 131 1991 Heinrich Heine Prize of the City of Dusseldorf 132 1992 The Royal Victorian Chain United Kingdom 133 1992 Nansen Refugee Award of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 134 1994 Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland 1994 135 1997 Honorary citizenship of the City of Gdansk Danzig 136 2005 Mercator Professorship Award University of Duisburg Essen 137 2003 Collar and Grand Cross of the Czech Order of the White Lion 138 2009 Henry A Kissinger Prize of the American Academy in Berlin 139 2012 Prize for Understanding and Tolerance of the Jewish Museum Berlin 140 141 nbsp Coat of arms as member of the Order of the Seraphim Sweden His post presidency activities include Aktion Deutschland Hilft Patron 2003 2013 142 Bergedorf Round Table Chairman 1994 2014 143 Club of Budapest Honorary Member 144 Club of Rome Honorary Member 145 Freya von Moltke Foundation Member of the Board of Trustees 146 Hannah Arendt Center of the University of Oldenburg Member of the Board of Trustees 147 Humboldt University of Berlin Member of the Board of Trustees 2006 2010 148 Humboldt Viadrina School of Governance Member of the Advisory Board 149 International Commission on the Balkans Member 2004 2006 150 International Nuremberg Human Rights Award Member of the Jury 1995 2000 151 Philharmonic Orchestra of Europe Member of the Advisory Board 152 Political Science Quarterly Honorary Member of the Board of Directors 153 Theodor Heuss Foundation Member of the Board of Trustees 154 Viktor von Weizsacker Society Member of the Advisory Board 155 Ancestry editAncestors of Richard von Weizsacker16 Christian Ludwig Friedrich Weizsacker8 Carl Heinrich Weizsacker17 Sophie Rossle4 Karl von Weizsacker18 Ludwig Ferdinand Heinrich Dahm9 Sophie Auguste Dahm19 Sophie Auguste von Weckherlin2 Ernst von Weizsacker20 Heinrich von Meibom10 Viktor von Meibom21 Susette Ries5 Paula von Meibom22 Wolfgang Louis Christoph Ries11 Amalie Ries23 Amalie Ruprecht1 Richard von Weizsacker24 Theodor Heinrich Gustav von Graevenitz12 Carl Alexander Franz von Graevenitz25 Johanna Caroline Margarethe Martin6 General Friedrich von Graevenitz26 Christian Friedrich Horing13 Sophie Ernestine Horing27 Elisabeth Barbara Grunewald3 Marianne von Graevenitz28 Johann Ehrenfried Klotz14 Johann Karl Klotz29 Charlotte Herbort7 Marianne Klotz30 Carl Wilhelm von Sprosser15 Marie Luise Sprosser31 Luise Amalie Friederike SprosserNotes edit From 1 July 1984 to 2 October 1990 Richard von Weizsacker was President of West Germany only From 3 October 1990 until 30 June 1994 he was President of the reunified Germany The term West Germany is only the common English name for the Federal Republic of Germany between its formation on 23 May 1949 and the German reunification through the accession of East Germany GDR in October 1990 References edit Augstein Franziska 15 April 2010 Erster Burger seines Staates in German Suddeutsche Zeitung Retrieved 20 April 2015 Gauck wurdigt grossen Deutschen in German Deutschlandfunk 11 February 2015 Retrieved 20 April 2015 Schauble Wolfgang 11 February 2015 Er ist immer unser Prasident geblieben Faz net in German Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Retrieved 20 April 2015 a b c Saxon Wolfgang 31 January 2015 Richard von Weizsacker 94 Germany s First President After Reunification Is Dead The New York Times Retrieved 1 February 2015 a b Richard von Weizsacker 1984 1994 bundespraesident de Bundesprasidialamt Retrieved 1 February 2015 Hofmann 2010 p 23 Hofmann 2010 p 19 Rudolph 2010 p 24 Rudolph 2010 p 25 Weizsacker 1997 pp 49 51 Weizsacker 1997 p 71 Hofmann 2010 p 30 Weizsacker 1997 pp 72 73 Rudolph 2010 p 39 Rudolph 2010 p 40 Finker Kurt 1993 Das Potsdamer Infanterieregiment 9 und der konservativ militarische Widerstand in Kroener Bernhard R ed Potsdam Staat Armee Regiment Berlin a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Weizsacker 1997 p 90 Weizsacker 1997 p 91 Weizsacker 1997 p 95 Rudolph 2010 p 54 Weizsacker 1997 pp 98 102 Rudolph 2010 p 61 Hofmann 2010 p 88 Richard von Weizsacker Seine Familie war bis zuletzt bei ihm in German B Z Berlin 1 February 2015 Retrieved 6 October 2015 Marianne von Weizsacker in German Bundesprasidialamt Retrieved 6 October 2015 Lehrstuhl fur Volkswirtschaftslehre Finanzwissenschaft und Industrieokonomik in German Technical University of Munich Retrieved 6 October 2015 a b Richard von Weizsacker trauert um seinen Sohn Die Welt in German 15 June 2008 Retrieved 6 October 2015 Kaiser Carl Christian 29 January 1993 Unter Brudern Die Zeit in German Retrieved 6 October 2015 Chefarzt Prof Dr med Fritz von Weizsacker schlosspark klinik de in German Retrieved 6 October 2015 Richard von Weizsacker Ein Zeuge des 20 Jahrhunderts in German Bayrischer Rundfunk 31 January 2015 Archived from the original on 6 October 2015 Retrieved 6 October 2015 Odenwaldschule Familie Weizsacker bricht Schweigen Spiegel Online in German 27 March 2010 Retrieved 6 October 2015 Was wir uber den todlichen Angriff auf Fritz von Weizsacker wissen Der Spiegel in German 20 November 2019 Retrieved 20 November 2019 Son of former German President Richard von Weizsacker stabbed to death BBC News 20 November 2019 Rudolph 2010 p 83 Rudolph 2010 p 91 German president s son Fritz von Weizsacker stabbed to death in lecture in Berlin The Times in German 21 November 2019 Retrieved 21 November 2019 What we know about the killing of former German president s son Deutsche Welle 21 November 2019 Retrieved 21 November 2019 Rudolph 2010 p 98 Weizsacker 1997 pp 179 185 Rudolph 2010 p 116 Rudolph 2010 p 119 a b c Markham James M 24 May 1984 A Patrician President in Bonn Richard von Weizsacker Published 1984 The New York Times a b James M Markham 23 June 1994 Facing Up To Germany s Past The New York Times Magazine Thomas Sven 2005 Die informelle Koalition Richard von Weizsacker und die Berliner CDU Regierung 1981 1983 Wiesbaden Deutscher Universitats Verlag ISBN 3 8244 4614 6 Die Bundesversammlungen 1949 bis 2010 PDF in German Deutscher Bundestag Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 8 September 2015 Richard von Weizsacker Reden und Interviews vol 1 1 Juli 1984 30 Juni 1985 Bonn Presse und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung 1986 p 16 Weizsacker 1997 pp 308 316 Andresen Dirk J 31 January 2015 Richard von Weizsacker Der Prasident den die Deutschen liebten in German Berliner Kurier Retrieved 11 May 2015 a b c Richard von Weizsacker Speech in the Bundestag on 8 May 1985 during the Ceremony Commemorating the 40th Anniversary of the End of War in Europe and of National Socialist Tyranny PDF Baden Wurttemberg Landesmedienzentrum Archived from the original PDF on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 31 January 2014 Saxon Wolfgang 31 January 2015 Richard von Weizsacker 94 Germany s First President After Reunification Is Dead The New York Times Retrieved 1 February 2015 a b Gill 1986 p 7 a b Weizsacker 1997 p 317 Weinraub Bernard 6 May 1985 Reagan Joins Kohl in Brief Memorial at Bitburg Graves The New York Times Retrieved 11 May 2015 a b c d James M Markham 9 May 1985 All of Us Must Accept the Past The German President Tells M P s The New York Times Denkmal fur die im Nationalsozialismus verfolgten Homosexuellen gedenkort de Memorial site for the persecuted homosexual victims of National Socialism Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 1 February 2015 Gill 1986 p 27 a b Gill 1986 p 8 Gill 1986 p 13 Gill 1986 p 37 a b Leinemann Jurgen 13 May 1985 Moglichkeiten das Gewissen abzulenken Der Spiegel Retrieved 11 May 2015 Gill 1986 pp 137 138 Gill 1986 p 91 Gill 1986 p 94 Richard von Weizsacker Reden und Interviews vol 5 1 Juli 1988 30 Juni 1989 Bonn Presse und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung 1989 pp 69 79 a b c Serge Schmemann 22 October 1988 Bonn Journal Facing the Mirror of German History The New York Times Richard von Weizsacker Reden und Interviews vol 7 1 Juli 1990 30 Juni 1991 Bonn Presse und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung 1992 p 66 Translated by User Zwerg Nase Studemann Frederick 31 January 2015 Richard von Weizsacker German president 1920 2015 Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2015 Die Bundesversammlungen 1949 bis 2010 PDF in German Deutscher Bundestag Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 6 October 2015 Rudolph 2010 p 245 Ansprache von Bundesprasident Richard von Weizsacker beim Staatsakt zum Tag der deutschen Einheit bundespraesident de Bundesprasidialamt Retrieved 11 April 2015 Borders Will Stay Bonn s President Says in Poland Los Angeles Times 3 May 1990 Tyler Marshall 18 October 1992 Germans Lay Beloved Statesman Brandt to Rest Los Angeles Times Jochen Thies 14 January 1993 A New German Seriousness on the Asylum Problem International Herald Tribune Mary Williams Walsh 23 May 1994 German Electoral College to Pick New President Los Angeles Times Germans Applaud Schindler s List International Herald Tribune 2 March 1994 a b Translated by User Zwerg Nase Rudolph 2010 p 261 Richard von Weizsacker Reden und Interviews vol 7 1 Juli 1990 30 Juni 1991 Bonn Presse und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung 1992 pp 391 397 a b Michael Farr 21 April 1993 Economic Slide Rekindles Debate on Capitals International Herald Tribune Rudolph 2010 p 256 a b Rudolph 2010 p 257 Augstein Rudolf 29 June 1992 Weizsacker und sein Traditionsbruch Der Spiegel in German Retrieved 11 April 2015 Weizsaecker Urges Openness to Truth of the Past W German President Makes Rare Israel Visit Los Angeles Times 9 October 1985 Bonn Official in Britain Los Angeles Times 2 July 1986 Grothe Solveig 22 November 2010 Seit Goebbels der schlimmste Hetzer im Land Spiegel Online Retrieved 10 May 2015 a b Eine Kooperation auf neuem Niveau Der Spiegel in German Vol 1987 no 28 6 July 1987 pp 19 21 Retrieved 10 May 2015 Weizsacker 1997 p 343 Translated by User Zwerg Nase Weizsacker 1997 pp 343 344 Weizsacker 1997 p 346 Violations Von Weizsaecker Starts State Visit to Moscow End Bloc Thinking Bonn President Says Los Angeles Times Reuters 7 July 1987 Retrieved 11 May 2015 Weizsacker 1997 pp 349 350 Cohen Roger 24 May 2000 Germans Plan To Trim Army And Rely Less On the Draft The New York Times Retrieved 12 June 2020 Means Lohmann Sarah 25 December 2003 In Berlin a Showcase of American Talent and Thought Marks an Anniversary The New York Times Retrieved 12 June 2020 Advisory Council Archived 2 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Transparency International Kinkel Weizsacker call for release of Nigeria s Obasanjo An international campaign led by TI is to increase the pressure on Nigeria s rulers Transparency International press release of 29 September 1996 Abschiedsfeier fur Alt Bundesprasident von Weizsacker Hamburger Abendblatt 7 November 2014 Vat Dan van der 2 February 2015 Richard von Weizsacker obituary guardian co uk The Guardian Retrieved 11 April 2015 a b Conrad Naomi Berlin pays last respects to former president dw de Deutsche Welle Retrieved 11 April 2015 Die Gaste der Trauerfeier Abschied von Richard von Weizsacker handelsblatt com in German Handelsblatt Retrieved 11 April 2015 Ohmann Oliver 12 February 2015 Berliner pilgern zum Grab von Richard von Weizsacker bild de in German Bild Retrieved 11 April 2015 Zum 100 Geburtstag Muller ehrt Richard von Weizsacker Suddeutsche Zeitung in German Deutsche Presse Agentur 14 April 2020 Retrieved 14 April 2020 Rudolph 2010 p 131 Naher den Grunen als Kohl Der Spiegel in German Vol 1987 no 28 6 July 1987 pp 22 23 Retrieved 10 May 2015 a b Rudolph 2010 p 258 Rudolph 2010 p 259 a b Schmidt Klingenberg Michael 22 September 1997 Die Zierde der Partei Der Spiegel in German Retrieved 11 April 2015 Sporl Gerhard 31 January 2015 Erinnerungen an Richard von Weizsacker Er hat uns befreit Der Spiegel in German Retrieved 8 September 2015 Weizsacker 1997 p 288 Translated by User Zwerg Nase Rudolph 2010 p 269 Weizsacker 1997 p 288 Rudolph 2010 pp 270 271 Von Deutschland aus Richard von Weizsacker Corso bei Siedler in German Deutsche Nationalbibliothek 1985 ISBN 9783886801732 Retrieved 8 September 2015 Von Deutschland nach Europa die bewegende Kraft der Geschichte Richard von Weizsacker in German Deutsche Nationalbibliothek 1991 ISBN 9783886803781 Retrieved 8 September 2015 Vier Zeiten Erinnerungen Richard von Weizsacker in German Deutsche Nationalbibliothek 1997 ISBN 9783886805563 Retrieved 8 September 2015 From Weimar to the Wall my life in German politics Richard von Weizsacker Transl from the German by Ruth Hein in German Deutsche Nationalbibliothek 1999 ISBN 9780767903011 Retrieved 8 September 2015 Fromme Friedrich Karl 29 May 1998 Ein Mann der indirekten Sprache Faz net in German Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Retrieved 8 September 2015 Gauland Alexander 16 September 2009 Memoiren Richard von Weizsacker eckt nicht an Die Welt in German Retrieved 8 September 2015 Verzeichnis der Mitglieder der Balley Brandenburg des Ritterlichen Ordens St Johannis vom Spital zu Jerusalem Berlin Johanniterorden 2011 page 18 Honorary doctorates Uppsala University Sweden 9 June 2023 Landmarks 1991 Indian Institute of Technology Madras Retrieved 13 April 2015 Borrud Gabriel The greatest German friend Poland has ever had dw de Deutsche Welle Retrieved 1 February 2015 a b Reuters Merkel Gauck laud Richard von Weizsacker dw de Deutsche Welle Retrieved 1 February 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last1 has generic name help Royal Decree 389 1986 boe es in Spanish Spanish Official Journal Retrieved 18 October 2017 Senarai Penuh Penerima Darjah Kebesaran Bintang dan Pingat Persekutuan Tahun 1987 PDF istiadat gov my in Malay Ceremonial and International Conference Secretariat Prime Minister s Department of Malaysia Retrieved 6 June 2016 Muere Richard von Weizsacker primer presidente de la Alemania reunificada abc es in Spanish 31 January 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Inkomend staatsbezoek in Dutch Het Koninklijk Huis Archived from the original on 10 September 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Ataturk Uluslararasi Baris Odulu 3 July 2015 Icelandic Presidency Website Icelandic Order of the Falcon Weizsacker Richard von permanent dead link 4 July 1988 Grand Cross with Collar Hedersdoktor vid fakulteten avliden in Swedish Uppsala Universitet 31 January 2015 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Harnack Medal mpg de Max Planck Gesellschaft Retrieved 3 May 2015 Richard Freiherr von Weizsacker parlament berlin de Abgeordnetenhaus Berlin Archived from the original on 25 November 2016 Retrieved 25 November 2016 Literaturpreis Gewinner literaturpreisgewinner de in German Retrieved 3 May 2015 Ordenstrager auf Empfang Der Tagesspiegel Online in German Tagesspiegel 28 June 2012 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Past Laureates unhcr org United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Retrieved 3 May 2015 Order Zaslugi prezydent pl dead link Richard von Weizsacker gdansk pl in Polish 11 July 2008 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Dr Richard von Weizsacker ubernimmt Mercatorprofessur in German Universitat Duisburg Essen Retrieved 3 May 2015 List President of the Czech Republic Retrieved 3 May 2015 Richard von Weizsacker Receives 2009 Henry A Kissinger Prize The American Academy in Berlin Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Verleihung des Preises fur Verstandigung und Toleranz am 17 November 2012 in German Judisches Museum Berlin 6 November 2012 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Judisches Museum Berlin ehrt Richard von Weizsacker in German Judische Allgemeine 6 November 2012 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Zum Tode von Richard von Weizsacker Altbundesprasident und ehemaliger Schirmherr von Aktion Deutschland Hilft in German Aktion Deutschland Hilft 31 January 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Danke Richard von Weizsacker in German Korber Stiftung 2 February 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2015 permanent dead link Club of Budapest Club of Budapest Retrieved 3 May 2015 Honorary Members Club of Rome Archived from the original on 11 November 2013 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Kuratorium in German Freya von Moltke Stiftung Archived from the original on 10 September 2015 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Richard von Weizsacker Kuratoriumsmitglied des Hannah Arendt Zentrums in German Universitat Oldenburg 13 December 2002 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Keller Hans Christoph 31 January 2015 Humboldt Universitat trauert um Richard von Weizsacker in German Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin Retrieved 3 May 2015 permanent dead link Prof Dr Dr h c Gesine Schwan zur Prasidentin der HUMBOLDT VIADRINA School of Governance gewahlt PDF in German Gesine Schwan 15 June 2010 Retrieved 3 May 2015 International Commission on the Balkans Centre for Liberal Studies Sofia Archived from the original on 8 October 2017 Retrieved 3 May 2015 Human Rights Award gt Jury gt 1995 2000 nuernberg de Human Rights Office City of Nuremberg Retrieved 3 May 2015 The Boards amp Advisory Council Philharmonic Orchestra of Europe e V Philharmonic Orchestra of Europe Retrieved 3 May 2015 Board of Directors Political Science Quarterly Retrieved 3 May 2015 Kuratorium in German Theodor Heuss Stiftung Retrieved 3 May 2015 Beirat in German Viktor von Weizsacker Gesellschaft Retrieved 3 May 2015 Bibliography editEditions edit Richard von Weizsacker Reden und Interviews vol 1 1 Juli 1984 30 Juni 1985 Bonn Presse und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung 1986 Richard von Weizsacker Reden und Interviews vol 5 1 Juli 1988 30 Juni 1989 Bonn Presse und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung 1989 Richard von Weizsacker Reden und Interviews vol 7 1 Juli 1990 30 Juni 1991 Bonn Presse und Informationsamt der Bundesregierung 1992 Monographs and miscellanies edit Gill Ulrich ed 1986 Eine Rede und ihre Wirkung Die Rede des Bundesprasidenten Richard von Weizsacker vom 8 Mai 1985 anlasslich des 40 Jahrestages der Beendigung des Zweiten Weltkrieges in German Berlin Verlag Rainer Roll ISBN 3 9801344 0 7 Hofmann Gunter 2010 Richard von Weizsacker Ein deutsches Leben in German Munich C H Beck ISBN 978 3 406 59809 8 Rudolph Hermann 2010 Richard von Weizsacker Eine Biographie in German Berlin Rowohlt ISBN 978 3 87134 667 5 Weizsacker Richard von 1997 Vier Zeiten Erinnerungen in German Berlin Siedler Verlag ISBN 3 88680 556 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richard von Weizsacker Correspondence between President Weizsacker and the Israeli President Chaim Herzog during the First Gulf War published by the blog of Israel State Archives Richard von Weizsacker on the official website of the President s OfficePolitical officesPreceded byHans Jochen Vogel Governing Mayor of West Berlin1981 1984 Succeeded byEberhard DiepgenPreceded byKarl Carstens President of West Germany1984 1990 Germany reunifiesRecreatedGermany reunified President of Germany1990 1994 Succeeded byRoman Herzog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard von Weizsacker amp oldid 1202886878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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