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Rudi Dutschke

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Rudi Dutschke
Rudi Dutschke born Alfred Willi Rudi Dutschke (March 7, 1940December 24, 1979, Århus, Denmark) was the most prominent spokesperson of the left-wing German student movement of the 1960s. In 1968, he survived an assassination attempt, living for another 12 years until related health problems caused his death.

Early life

Dutschke was born in Schönefeld, (Kreis Jüterbog-Luckenwalde, Brandenburg), Germany. He attended school in Luckenwalde and graduated from the Gymnasium there, but because he refused to join the army of the German Democratic Republic and convinced many of his fellow students to refuse as well, he was prevented from attending university in the GDR. He fled to West Berlin in August 1961, just one day before the Berlin Wall was built. He studied sociology at the Free University of Berlin under Richard Lowenthal and Klaus Meschkat where he became acquainted with alternative views of Marxism.

Dutschke joined the German SDS Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund (which was not the same as the SDS in the USA, but quite similar in goals) in 1965 and from that time on the SDS became the center of the student movement, growing very rapidly and organizing demonstrations against the war in Vietnam.

He married the American Gretchen Klotz () in 1966. They had three children.

Political views

Influenced by critical theory, Rosa Luxemburg and critical Marxists, Dutschke developed a theory and code of practice of social change which did not propose a final Utopian form of society like the Utopian Socialists Claude Henri de Rouvroy, Comte de Saint-Simon and Charles Fourier. He advocated the theory that democracy should be developed in the process of revolutionizing society.

Dutschke also advocated that the transformation of Western societies should go hand in hand with Third World liberation movements and with democratization in communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe. His socialism had strongly Christian roots; He called Jesus Christ the "greatest revolutionary", and in Easter 1963, he wrote that "Jesus is risen. The decisive revolution in world history has happened - a revolution of all-conquering love. If people would fully receive this revealed love into their own existence, into the reality of the 'now', then the logic of insanity could no longer continue."

Benno Ohnesorg's death in 1967 at the hands of German police pushed some in the student movement toward increasingly extremist violence and the formation of the Red Army Faction. The violence against Dutschke further radicalised parts of the student movement into committing several bombings and murders. Dutschke rejected this direction and feared that it would end dissolve the student movement.

Shooting and later life

On April 11, 1968 Dutschke was shot in the head by Josef Bachmann. After the attempted assassination, Dutschke and his family went to the United Kingdom in the hope that he could recuperate there. He was accepted at Cambridge University to finish his degree in 1969, but in 1971 the Tory government under Edward Heath expelled him and his family as an "undesirable alien" who had engaged in "subversive activity", causing a political storm in London. They then moved to Aarhus, Denmark.

Dutschke reentered the German political scene after protests against the building of nuclear power plants activated a new movement in the mid-1970s. He also began working with dissidents opposing the Communist governments in East Germany, Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia, including Robert Havemann, Wolf Biermann, Milan Horáček, Adam Michnik, Ota Šik and more.

Because of massive brain damage from the assassination attempt, Rudi Dutschke continued to suffer health problems. He died on 24 December 1979 in Aarhus, Denmark. He had an epileptic seizure while in the bathtub and drowned.

References in Literature and Music

The song "Rot" by Markus Henrik features a mention of Dutschke, who can also be seen in the music video of the same. The song uses Dutschke as a reminder of political activism in Germany in the 60s and 70s.

There's also a Finnish song about Rudi Dutschke, by Eero Ojanen. It's based on lyrics by Wolf Biermann.

See also

External links

Bibliography

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Aarhus ( Danish pronunciation  : [ˈɒːhus, ˈɒːhuːˀs]
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(Royal motto: Guds hjælp, Folkets kærlighed, Danmarks styrke
"The Help of God, the Love of the People, the Strength of Denmark" )
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left-wing or the left, on the left-right political spectrum, is associated with the interests of the working class. In France, where the term originated, the working class, or common people, were collectively known as the third estate, and their representatives sat to the
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The German student movement (in Germany commonly called "68er-Bewegung", "movement of 1968") was a protest movement that took place during the late 1960s in Germany.
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Schönefeld means "beautiful field" in German. There are several communes and places that have the name Schönefeld:

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Luckenwalde is a town in the district of Teltow-Fläming in the state of Brandenburg, Germany. Its cloth and wool factories were once among the most extensive in Germany. Among its other traditional industries were cotton printing and a dye works, brewing, and the making of metal
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A gymnasium (pronounced with /g-/ in several languages) is a type of school providing secondary education in some parts of Europe, comparable to English Grammar Schools
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German Democratic Republic (GDR; German: Deutsche Demokratische Republik, DDR; commonly and informally known in English as East Germany
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West Berlin was the name given to the western part of Berlin between 1949 and 1990. It consisted of the American, British, and French occupation sectors established in 1945. It was in many ways integrated with, although legally not a part of, West Germany.
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Free University of Berlin (FU Berlin, German: Freie Universität Berlin) is the largest university in Berlin. Research at the university is focused on humanities and social sciences and on health and natural science.
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Richard Löwenthal (April 15, 1908, Berlin, Germany-August 9, 1991, Berlin, Germany) was a German journalist and professor who wrote mostly on the problems of democracy, communism, and world politics.

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Der Sozialistische Deutsche Studentenbund (Socialist German Student Union) was founded 1946 in Hamburg, Germany, as the college organisation of the SPD (Social Democratic Party of Germany).
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The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) was, historically, a student activist movement in the United States that was one of the main iconic representations of the country's New Left.
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Rosa Luxemburg (Pol: Róża Luksemburg) (March 5, 1870/71 – January 15, 1919, was a Polish Marxist theorist, socialist philosopher, and revolutionary for the Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland, the German SPD, and the Independent Social
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Utopia (from Greek: οὐ no, and τόπος, place, i.e. "no place" or "place that does not exist," as well as "perfect place") is a fictional island near the coast of the Atlantic Ocean written about by Sir Thomas More as the
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Claude Henri de Rouvroy, comte de Saint-Simon, often referred to as Henri de Saint-Simon (October 17, 1760 – May 19, 1825) was born in Paris.

Early years

He belonged to a younger branch of the family of the duc de Saint-Simon.
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François Marie Charles Fourier (April 7, 1772 - October 10, 1837) was a French utopian socialist and philosopher. Fourier coined the word féminisme in 1837; as early as 1808, he had argued that the extension of women's rights was the general principle of all social
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and a chapter on the pivotal acts of violence respectively driving forward the radicalization--namely, the street execution of the student Benno Ohnesorg by a plain-clothes policeman during a West Berlin demonstration against the Shah of Iran on 2 June 1967; and the attempted assassination of Rudi Dutschke on 11 April 1968 by a rabidly anti-Communist Munich house painter.
From this work came what his German disciple, Rudi Dutschke, referred to as "the long march through the institutions"--that is, the gradual subversion of the existing structures of Western civilization by the application of various forms of dialectical materialist theory.
 
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