By Noah Rayman @noahrayman
This is the story of the "long-ailing, wornout, beaten
Nobelman" Carl von Ossietzky
In some years, and this year was no exception, there is no
obvious choice for the Nobel Peace Prize. Speculators can guess, pundits can
argue, but ultimately the Norwegian committee’s decision — if there is one —
comes as a surprise to many.
In 1935, however, the choice seemed obvious. The plight of
Carl von Ossietzky, a journalist and socialist activist held in a Nazi
concentration camp, had drawn international attention.
After serving during the First World War, von Ossietzky became a staunch pacifist and decried German rearmament, facing persecution under successive German governments but refusing to flee despite the threat to his safety. He had been put in a Nazi camp in 1933.
After serving during the First World War, von Ossietzky became a staunch pacifist and decried German rearmament, facing persecution under successive German governments but refusing to flee despite the threat to his safety. He had been put in a Nazi camp in 1933.
Albert Einstein and French author Romain Rolland were among
the period’s celebrity activists who supported Ossietzky’s nomination for the
peace prize. If ever a man worked, fought & suffered for Peace, it is
the sickly little German, Carl von Ossietzky. For nearly a year the Nobel Peace
Prize Committee has been swamped with petitions from all shades of Socialists,
Liberals and literary folk generally, nominating Carl von Ossietzky for the
1935 Peace Prize. Their slogan: “Send the Peace Prize into the Concentration
Camp.”
But the Third Reich was anything but pleased that one of its
prisoners might receive the high profile award. The Germans pressured the committee
against choosing him, with one Nazi state newspaper warning the Committee “not
to provoke the German people by rewarding this traitor to our nation. We hope
that the Norwegian Government is sufficiently familiar with the ways of the
world to prevent what would be a slap in the face of the German people.” Under
this Nazi pushback, the Committee announced it would not award anyone the prize
that year–citing violence in Africa and political instability in Asia. “The
time seems inappropriate for such a peace gesture,” the Committee said in a
statement.
The Committee would redeem itself a year later,
retroactively awarding von Ossietzky the 1935 prize, worth $40,000. The move
infuriated Hitler. German media called von Ossietzky a “traitor” and the award
an “insult” to Germany. The Führer threatened to cut off relations with Norway,
even after the Foreign Minister resigned from the Committee over the decision,
and declared that Germans would never again be allowed to receive Nobel Prizes.
(Several German scientists who were subsequently awarded Nobel Prizes were
unable to accept the award until after World War II.)
But by the time the award was announced, von Ossietzky’s
health had worsened. The Germans had already moved him from the prison camp to
a hospital in Berlin, perhaps aware of the impending international attention
that would soon befall him. When they unexpectedly allowed journalists to meet
with him, he was “looking thin and sounding tired,” TIME wrote after an
interview with him:
But in high spirits, Herr von Ossietzky chirped, ‘I count
myself as belonging to a party of sensible Europeans who regard the armaments
race as insanity. If the German Government will permit, I will be only too
pleased to go to Norway to receive the Prize and in my acceptance speech I will
not dig up the past or say anything which might result in discord between
Germany and Norway.’
Von Ossietzky was never allowed to accept his prize in
Norway, and his tortuous saga continued. Though he was eventually released from
prison supervision, it was widely assumed that the release was on the condition
that he refrain from activism. In an eerie TIME interview in 1937, von
Ossietzky praised the Nazi government and announced that he had been allowed to
accept the prize money. But the TIME article also made clear that von
Ossietzky’s words were not entirely freely spoken. “Hollow-eyed and pale,
Ossietzky knew that if he got himself imprisoned again, it would be his death,”
the article noted.
Still, the sickly Nobel Laureate’s troubles continued. A
swindler claiming to be a lawyer proposed to collect von Ossietzky’s prize
money for him, only to launder the funds and keep them for himself. Almost all
of the money was recovered by May of 1938 when von Ossietzky died at 48 of,
according to the official death record, meningitis — but by then he was, as TIME
wrote, a “long-ailing, wornout, beaten Nobelman.”
Read the 1935 story about the Nobel Peace Prize Committee
passing over von Ossietzky: Way of the World.
(This article was first published Time.com (http://time.com/3484975/nobel-peace-prize-ossietzky)
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