Ronen Steinke (born 1983) is a German political journalist and author whose essays and books on issues of law and society have been discussed in The Times , [1] The Guardian , [2] Haaretz, [3] De Volkskrant , [4] Le Figaro , [5] The Asahi Shimbun and The New York Review of Books . [6] In 2013, Steinke published the biography of the German-Jewish prosecutor Fritz Bauer, who secretly worked with the Mossad and brought Nazi war criminals to justice in the 1960s. [7] The book, which received a preface by the President of the German Supreme Court, inspired the award-winning 2015 film The People vs. Fritz Bauer. [8]
Steinke was educated at Bucerius Law School, Hamburg, and Temple University, Japan Campus, Tokyo, and holds a doctorate in international criminal law, praised as a "masterpiece" by the European Journal of International Law . [9] From 2012 to 2013 he was a visiting scholar at Frankfurt University's Institute for Holocaust Research.
As legal affairs editor with Germany's leading broadsheet, Süddeutsche Zeitung , he since frequently writes columns and essays on German politics and society. [10] Along with a group of lawyers and scholars, Steinke edits an annual report on right-wing extremism in Germany. [11] The Legal Tribune [12] referred to him as „currently the most important and most productive legal journalist in Germany." [13]
After the Halle synagogue shooting in 2019, Steinke, who is himself a German Jew, published a critique of what he claims is the failure of the German state to address violent antisemitism. [14] This was named one of the top 3 non-fiction books by Die Zeit . [15]
„Ronen Steinke (…) studied the issue in depth after the Halle attack, and found that too often Jews are left to avert the danger of possible assaults themselves. In his book "Terror Against Jews," published earlier this year after he visited more than 20 Jewish communities around the country, Steinke found that while authorities are helpful with making security assessments, the communities themselves are often left to implement the official suggestions." [16] – Times of Israel
Asked whether Jews should consider emigrating to Israel, Steinke said in an interview with public broadcaster Bayerischer Rundfunk:
„I am in favour of people leaving Germany due to rising antisemitism. But it should be the antisemites who leave. I hear there's room on the North Pole." [17]
This was followed by a book-length essay by Steinke in 2020 on antisemitic tropes in the present-day German language. [18]
Steinke's account of the story of Mohammed Helmy, [19] the first Arab to be honoured as Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem, [20] was translated into seven languages and named book of the week by the Observer in 2021. [21]
His most recent work, an exploration of social injustices in the German prison system, which Steinke published in 2022, rekindled a wider debate on the need for criminal justice reform in Germany. Reacting in July 2022, the Minister of Justice, Marco Buschmann, announced he would soften the rules on imprisonment for failure to pay a fine. Calls for more radical reform persist, though. [22] Steinke advocates to stop imprisoning offenders who are unable to pay a fine through no fault of their own, as in Sweden, [23] and to make the right of an accused to a public defender unconditional, as in the US. [24]
Fritz Bauer was a German Jewish judge and prosecutor. He played an instrumental role in the post-war capture of former Holocaust planner Adolf Eichmann and the beginning of the Frankfurt Auschwitz trials.
Theodor Dannecker was a German SS-captain, a key aide to Adolf Eichmann in the deportation of Jews during World War II.
Joel Brand was a member of the Budapest Aid and Rescue Committee, an underground Zionist group in Budapest, Hungary, that smuggled Jews out of German-occupied Europe to the relative safety of Hungary, during the Holocaust. When Germany invaded Hungary in March 1944, Brand became known for his efforts to save the Jewish community from deportation to the Auschwitz concentration camp in occupied Poland and the gas chambers there.
Henryk Marcin Broder, self-designation Henryk Modest Broder, is a Polish-born German journalist, author, and television personality. He was born into a Jewish family in Katowice, Poland.
Monarchie und Alltag was the 1980 debut album of German rock band Fehlfarben, released on the Welt-rekord-label, a subsidiary of EMI. The album was not well-received initially, but developed a following over time, entering the charts seven months after its release and gradually climbing to peak at #37. The album belatedly spawned a hit single in 1982, "Ein Jahr ", and certified gold in 2000, after a re-release during the post-punk revival.
The Institute for the Study and Elimination of Jewish Influence on German Church Life was a cross-church establishment by eleven German Protestant churches in Nazi Germany, founded at the instigation of the German Christian movement. It was set up in Eisenach under Siegfried Leffler and Walter Grundmann. Georg Bertram, professor of New Testament at the University of Giessen, who led the Institute from 1943 until the Institute's dissolution in May 1945, wrote about its goals in March 1944: "'This war is Jewry's war against Europe.' This sentence contains a truth which is again and again confirmed by the research of the Institute. This research work is not only adjusted to the frontal attack, but also to the strengthening of the inner front for attack and defence against all the covert Jewry and Jewish being, which has oozed into the Occidental Culture in the course of centuries, ... thus the Institute, in addition to the study and elimination of the Jewish influence, also has the positive task of understanding the own Christian German being and the organisation of a pious German life based on this knowledge."
Alfred Grosser was a German-born French writer, sociologist and political scientist. Although his Jewish family had to move from Frankfurt to France in 1933, he focused on Franco-German cooperation after World War II, was instrumental in the Élysée Treaty in 1963, and writing books towards better understanding between the Germans and the French. He was professor at the Institut d'études politiques de Paris from 1955 to 1995, and contributed to newspapers and broadcasts including La Croix and Ouest-France. He was critical of Israeli politics which caused controversies. His work was honoured with notable awards.
Mohammed ″Mod″ Helmy was an Egyptian-German physician who was recognized by Israel as one of the Righteous Among the Nations in 2013, with his name being listed at Yad Vashem in the city of Jerusalem. Born in Sudan, he moved to Berlin to study medicine and was later involved in saving many Jews from being exterminated by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust. After World War II he was finally allowed to marry his love Emmi. In 2013 Helmy was the first Arab to be recognized as a Righteous Among the Nations; his nephews were summoned by Yad Vashem to receive the honour on his behalf, but were reluctant to do so because of the Arab–Israeli conflict, though they eventually attended the ceremony at the German foreign ministry.
Paul Merker was an activist member of Germany's Communist Party who later became a politician and a top official of East Germany's ruling SED .
Ruth Peggy Sophie Parnass is a German-Swedish actress, columnist, court reporter, short story writer and non-fiction writer who now lives in Hamburg.
Michael Degen was a German-Israeli actor, in film and theatre, as well as a theatre director and writer.
The People vs. Fritz Bauer is a 2015 German biographical drama film directed by Lars Kraume, chronicling the German Jewish prosecutor Fritz Bauer's post-war capture of former Holocaust planner Adolf Eichmann. It was screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival.
Ernst Heinrichsohn was a German lawyer and member of the SS who participated in the deportation of French Jews to Auschwitz during World War II.
Monika Richarz is a German historian. The focus of her work is on the social history of the Jewish minority in Germany, and the relationships between the Germans and the Jews. In talking about her area of expertise, she likes to explain that there is a whole lot more to "Jewish history" than Auschwitz.
Rudolf Robert was a German-Jewish survivor of the holocaust and a Gabbai of the Jewish community of Berlin.
Luisa-Marie Neubauer is a German climate activist, politician and author. She is one of the main organizers of the school strike for climate movement in Germany, where it is commonly referred to under its alternative name Fridays for Future. She advocates a climate policy that complies with and surpasses the Paris Agreement and endorses de-growth. Neubauer is a member of Alliance 90/The Greens and the Green Youth.
Lothar Hermann was a German Jew and concentration camp survivor who contributed to the identification and arrest of Adolf Eichmann, one of the major organizers of the Holocaust.
Rachel Zipora Dror is a German Jewish teacher and Holocaust survivor. After returning from Israel to live in Germany in 1957, and more intensively since her retirement from teaching in 1986, she has come to wider prominence because of her engagement for Christian-Jewish-Islamic co-existence, and as an advocate for religious openness and mutual tolerance. She turned 100 on 19 January 2021.
Regina Scheer is a German writer and historian.
Monika Schwarz-Friesel is a German cognitive scientist, professor at Technische Universität Berlin and one of Europe's most distinguished antisemitism researchers according to Marc Neugröschel from the newspaper The Times of Israel. She is often interviewed by media outlets like Haaretz, Der Standard or Der Tagesspiegel on her research on current forms of antisemitism, which often take place on the internet.
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