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WSWS : Obituary
Funeral for Ernst Schwarz held in Dortmund, Germany
By Marianne Arens
25 January 2001
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The funeral of Ernst Schwarz took place on January 22 at the
main cemetery in the German city of Dortmund. Schwarz was for
many years a member of the German Socialist Equality Party (Partei
für Soziale Gleichheit--PSG) and a longtime fighter for socialist
perspectives at the Krupp Hoesch steelworks. He died unexpectedly
of a heart attack on January 13 at the age of 43.
In attendance at the funeral ceremony were family and friends;
the number of mourners was unusually large. Long after all the
seats were taken, groups of steel workers continued to enter the
funeral hall, intent on expressing their condolences for a beloved
colleague. Also in attendance were the vast majority of members
of the trade union stewards committee which Ernst Schwarz was
voted onto in 1995 and with whom he had often had vigorous differences
of opinion.
The coffin towards the front of the hall was extensively covered
with candles and flowers and a large framed portrait of Ernst
rested against its side. The picture in the portrait was the same
as that which featured on many leaflets and appeals distributed
by Ernst in the course of communicating with his fellow workers
in the factory where he worked.
The funeral speech was also markedly different from the usual
type of obituary. The lay preacher abstained from the usual religious
pieties and instead paid tribute to the various stages of Ernst's
short but eventful and full life.
The preacher began by saying that if you want to understand
what was special about the life of Ernst Schwarz then it was necessary
to look briefly at the social developments which took place during
his childhood and youth.
When he was born in 1957 Germany was experiencing the beginning
of its post-war boom and so-called economic miracle.
The situation was also characterised, however, by an abundance
of social conflicts. Just a few months before his birth the Hungarian
Revolution was suppressed and in the German state of Schleswig-Holstein
a four-month strike by workers resulted in the introduction of
sick pay.
As a youth Ernst grew up with his mother and grandmother in
the pulsating steel town of Hattingen. At the age of 17 he began
a fitter's apprenticeship at the Heinrichshütte and at the
same time became interested in politics, joining the Trotskyist
movement. He took an active part in demonstrations and discussions
aimed at spreading socialist principles amongst workers. In the
years following he worked abroad: in South Africa, Venezuela,
Saudi Arabia and in the United States.
Back in Germany at the end of the eighties and employed as
a steel worker at the Hoesch factory in Dortmund he first made
the acquaintance of Almut who became his wife and who, together
with their daughter, was the subject of his attentive care up
until his death. It was no accident that as a convinced socialist
and internationalist he once again became politically active at
the time of the Gulf War.
In the years to follow he worked intensely on behalf of his
fellow workers as a member of the Hoesch trade union factory committee
fighting for socialist policies, while at the same time required
to work difficult and wearisome shifts. He never looked upon his
membership of the trade union committee as a sort of springboard
for his own career or securing his own job. He despised privileges.
He had many plans in mind for himself and his family when he
abruptly died from a heart attack at the early age of 43.
Everybody attending the ceremony was deeply moved when a party
comrade and professional musician played an exceeding fine, sensitive
and harmonious rendition of the Internationale on
the violin.
A number of those attending the funeral, together with his
wife and family, many friends and his closest work mates, gathered
afterwards in a nearby café to talk further with one another.
In a short speech the chairman of the German Socialist Equality
Party, Ulrich Rippert, re-invoked the figure of the comrade and
friend who had died so unexpectedly. He recalled that he had first
met Ernst as a young apprentice more than a quarter of a century
ago when there was widespread enthusiasm for socialist ideas among
young workers.
Ernst belonged to those who rejected a society based on exploitation
and suppression. At the same time his revulsion at such suppression
did not restrict itself to its more evident social expressions
such as war and fascism. He also saw it expressed in less obvious
forms in the factory where he worked and in everyday life.
He fought decisively against opportunism within the workers
movement, which he regarded as the main obstacle to the struggle
for a better future. Rippert described the events on a May Day
demonstration in the early 70s as Stalinist thugs from the DKP
(German Communist Party) and trade union bureaucrats sought to
rip down a banner of the Bund Sozialistischer Arbeiter protesting
against social cuts carried out by the Social Democratic government
of that time under Helmut Schmidt.
Ernst was surrounded by three aggressive stewards, but instead
of using the metal pole of the banner to beat them flatanyone
meeting Ernst knew that he possessed the physical strength to
do sohe sought to argue with them. Despite his physical
prowess he used words and arguments to resolve disputes, not his
fists.
When, at the beginning of the 90s, there was a rapid rise in
the incidence of xenophobic attacks against foreigners and asylum-seekers,
he threw all his energy into the struggle against racism and attempted
to mobilise workers in his factory to defend foreign workers.
Rippert emphasised that Ernst Schwarz embodied something which
is very rare today, he was proud to be a worker. He was firmly
convinced that the working class would play an important role
in the social developments to come and on that basis agitated
for a political and cultural development among workers.
Rippert concluded: If there had been a few thousand workers
like Ernst, then the political development of Germany over the
last 10 years would have taken a very different course.
See Also:
Messages of condolence for Ernst Schwartz
[25 January 2001]
On the death of Ernst Schwarz (1957-2001)
A fighter for socialist perspectives in the workplace
[19 January 2001]
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