Hans Philipp Ehrenberg

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Hans Philipp Ehrenberg

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Altona, Hamburg, Germany
Death: March 21, 1958 (74)
Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Place of Burial: Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Immediate Family:

Son of Maximilian Otto Ehrenberg and Emilie Ehrenberg (Fischel)
Husband of Else Anna Ehrenberg
Father of Juliane John and Andrew Ehrenberg
Brother of Paul Ehrenberg and Victor Ehrenberg

Occupation: Philosoph
Managed by: Itai Hermelin
Last Updated:

About Hans Philipp Ehrenberg

Hans Philipp Ehrenberg (June 4, 1883, Altona – March 21, 1958, Heidelberg) was a German theologian. One of the co-founders of the Confessing Church, he was forced to emigrate to England because of his Jewish ancestry and his opposition to National Socialism.

Contents

   * 1 Life
         o 1.1 1883-1914
         o 1.2 1914-1933
         o 1.3 1933-1945
         o 1.4 1945-1958
   * 2 Legacy
   * 3 Hans Ehrenberg Prize
   * 4 See also
   * 5 Further reading
   * 6 External links
   * 7 References

Life

1883-1914

Hans Ehrenberg was born into a liberal Jewish family,[1] the eldest of three children.[2] His parents were Emilie (née Fischel) and Otto Ehrenberg, brother of Victor Ehrenberg, the German jurist. His younger brother was the historian Victor Ehrenberg, father of British historian Geoffrey and physicist Lewis Elton.[2] From 1898 to 1900, he attended the Christianeum in Altona.[3] After his graduation exam at the Wilhelm Gymnasium in Hamburg in 1902, he studied law and political studies (Rechtswissenschaften und Staatswissenschaften) in Göttingen, Berlin, Heidelberg and Munich.[4] His attitude towards workers was already clear by 1906, when he wrote his dissertation on the situation of steel workers (Hüttenarbeiter) in the Ruhr Valley.[1] After his military service in 1907–1908, he continued his studies in philosophy and completed his doctorate in Heidelberg in 1909 and habilitation in 1910. He first became a private docent, then a professor of philosophy at the University of Heidelberg.[1] Ehrenberg was baptised as a Protestant Christian in Berlin in 1911.[5] Around this time, he developed a close friendship with his cousin Franz Rosenzweig,[4] and with Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy[6][7] Viktor von Weizsäcker, and Martin Buber.[8][9][10]Rosenzweig later claimed that "Ehrenberg was my real teacher in philosophy".[11] In 1913, he married Else Anna Zimmermann (1890–1970), a teacher.[4] They had two children, Juliane and Andreas.[12] One of his uncles was Victor Mordechai Goldschmidt.[13]

1914-1933

Ehrenberg volunteered for the First World War[1] and served as a non-commissioned officer, then a lieutenant after late 1914. He won the Iron Cross, 2nd Class as well as the Badische Offiziersorden (Zähringer Löwe 2.Klasse).

Ehrenburg had seen the war as a legitimate defensive war, but afterward, his view changed radically. He spoke of war crimes and German guilt.[14] He joined the Social Democratic Party (SPD) in 1918, and for 18 months, was a city councilman in Heidelberg, as well as a member of workers' and soldiers' committees. In the same year, he received an associate professorship in Heidelberg. At this time, working with Christian socialists, he began to think about becoming a Protestant minister. Hans Ehrenberg's marriage to Else Zimmerman, 1913. The wedding party included Franz Rosenzweig and Victor Ehrenberg.

Ehrenberg began his theological studies in Münster, in 1922, completing his second theological exam in 1924.[4] In 1923 and 1925, he and Nikolai Bubnov published two volumes of German translations of Russian theological writings which were acquired and read by Dietrich Bonhoeffer and twice quoted from an essay that was in the second volume.[15]

Abandoning a promising academic career, in 1925, he became the minister of Pauluskirche in Bochum,[16] in a heavily working-class area. He got involved in the Kampfbund christlicher Arbeiter (The Fighting Christian Workers), though he left the SPD, feeling that parish work was incompatible with political party activism. In 1927, he made speeches on church and anti-semitism in opposition to riots organised by Nazi brownshirts. One lecture he gave in Hattingen, entitled "Church and Anti-semitism" prompted a letter of complaint against him to the consistory in Münster.[1]

   "We cannot believe that the upper consistorial councilor of our church approves of a race-conscious Jew as Protestant clergyman, from a racist attitude, should lecture German protestant Christians about political anti-semitism.[17]

1933-1945 Pauluskirche (St. Paul's Church), where Ehrenberg began preaching in 1925, was completely destroyed in the war and was rebuilt in 1950.
After the Nazis seized power in 1933, more attacks followed and Ehrenberg's moral and pedagogical integrity were put in question.

Ehrenberg became one of the founders of the Confessing Church. He and four other Westphalian ministers had already formulated the "Bochum Confession" in May 1933. The first of its kind, it contained a denial of Nazi ideology and a confession of Christianity's Jewish origins. In July 1933, he published 72 Leitsätze zur judenchristlichen Frage (Seventy-Two Theses to the Jewish-Christian Question), clearly stating his own opposition to anti-semitism and calling on the Protestant church to do the same.[18] After he was the target of attacks in Der Stürmer, and facing pressure from the German Christian church authorities, Ehrenberg asked for early retirement in 1937.[18] He continued, however, to work for the Confessing Church, whose ministers in Bochum openly showed solidarity with him.

In September 1938, he was barred from delivering any speech or sermon. His home was destroyed in the pogroms of Kristallnacht[1] and a few days later, he was taken to Sachsenhausen concentration camp.[18] In 1939, he was able to emigrate to England, thanks to the intervention and pledges of George Bell, Anglican bishop of Chichester.[19] He had had a correspondence with Bell and was perhaps more significant than Franz Hildebrandt or Bonhoeffer in convincing Bell of the growing crisis in German churches under the Nazi state.[20] His family joined him shortly afterward.[1] Ecumenism, religious unity, became increasingly important to him here.[4]

Even though Ehrenberg was strictly anti-communist, his life was saved on several occasions by a communist trade union leader,[21] in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.

Ehrenberg spoke openly about the German confessional church in England in an effort to prevent the growing disaster in Germany. George Bell also spoke out about Nazi interference in the church.[22]

His close friends included Pastor Dr. Werner Koch, a member of the German resistance and the youngest brother of Hans Koch.[citation needed].

1945-1958

Ehrenberg returned to Germany in 1947, after the war, working as a minister at the Bethel Institution in Bielefeld. In 1953, he returned to Heidelberg, where he died in 1958.[1] His papers are archived at the Westphalian Protestant church archives in Bielefeld.

Legacy Entrance to Hans Ehrenberg Schule in Bielefeld

Hans Ehrenberg was one of the few German Protestant theologians, even within the Confessing Church, to publicly express his vehement opposition to the anti-semitism of the Nazis and publicly declare his support of the Jewish people. He strongly urged the Protestant church to take the same stand. He criticised Christian anti-semitism and emphasized the similarities between Judaism and Christianity. Also, his special attitude toward the problems of workers' put him in advance of the church of his times. In addition to his practical theological work, he wrote a number of philosophical and theological articles and treatises.

In Ehrenberg's honor and memory, the secondary school administered by the Protestant church in the Bielefeld neighborhood of Sennestadt was renamed the Hans-Ehrenberg-Schule in 1963.[14] There is also a square in Bochum named after him.[23]

Hans Ehrenberg Prize

The Protestant Church Parish of Bochum and the Hans Ehrenberg Society award a prize of €5000 every two years in Ehrenberg's honor. The Hans Ehrenberg Prize is awarded at the Protestant Christuskirche (Christ Church) in Bochum, where Ehrenberg had been pastor. Previous winners are:

   * 2000: Prof. Günter Brakelmann, theologian, Ruhr University Bochum (retired)
   * 2002: Praeses Manfred Kock and Cardinal Karl Lehmann
   * 2004: Prof. Dr. hc. Robert Leicht, University of Erfurt[24]
   * 2006: Action Reconciliation Service for Peace
   * 2009: Dr. Edna Brocke, teacher of Jewish studies, Ruhr University Bochum[25]
view all

Hans Philipp Ehrenberg's Timeline

1883
June 4, 1883
Altona, Hamburg, Germany
1923
1923
Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
1926
May 1, 1926
Bochum, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
1958
March 21, 1958
Age 74
Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
????
Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany