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Between November 1941 and November 1943 she worked underground in Paris as a member of the local German Communist leadership, and was involved in illegally contributing to and producing newspapers and leaflets on behalf of the liberation movement (''"Komitee Freies Deutschland für den Westen"'').<ref name=PRlautGSJ/> At the end of November 1943 Paula Nuding was arrested by the [[Gestapo]]. She was pregnant at the time,<ref name=WiderstadPE>{{cite web| url=https://pauleuziere.wordpress.com/page/6/|title=Der deutsche Widerstand gegen Hitler|author=Paul Euzière, Grasse| accessdate=21 September 2016}}</ref> but as a result of physical mistreatment she lost her child. On 13 August 1944 she was taken, as part of the final transport of approximately 800 women, from France to the [[Ravensbrück concentration camp]], where she was registered as prisoner number 57,895.<ref name=PGlautBL/> The concentration camp was liberated by the [[Red army|Soviet army]] in April 1945, and Paula Nuding made her way, not without difficulties and hold-ups, to [[Esslingen am Neckar]], a town near [[Stuttgart]] which by the end of the war in May 1945 had ended up not in the [[Soviet occupation zone]] but in the [[Allied-occupied Germany|US zone]].<ref name=PGlautBL/>
Between November 1941 and November 1943 she worked underground in Paris as a member of the local German Communist leadership, and was involved in illegally contributing to and producing newspapers and leaflets on behalf of the liberation movement (''"Komitee Freies Deutschland für den Westen"'').<ref name=PRlautGSJ/> At the end of November 1943 Paula Nuding was arrested by the [[Gestapo]]. She was pregnant at the time,<ref name=WiderstadPE>{{cite web| url=https://pauleuziere.wordpress.com/page/6/|title=Der deutsche Widerstand gegen Hitler|author=Paul Euzière, Grasse| accessdate=21 September 2016}}</ref> but as a result of physical mistreatment she lost her child. On 13 August 1944 she was taken, as part of the final transport of approximately 800 women, from France to the [[Ravensbrück concentration camp]], where she was registered as prisoner number 57,895.<ref name=PGlautBL/> The concentration camp was liberated by the [[Red army|Soviet army]] in April 1945, and Paula Nuding made her way, not without difficulties and hold-ups, to [[Esslingen am Neckar]], a town near [[Stuttgart]] which by the end of the war in May 1945 had ended up not in the [[Soviet occupation zone]] but in the [[Allied-occupied Germany|US zone]].<ref name=PGlautBL/>
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Nach der Befreiung zog sie nach Esslingen.





Revision as of 14:47, 21 September 2016

Paula Rueß (born Paula Kopp: 3 May 1902 - 8 August 1980) was a German political activist (KPD). Forced into exile by the Nazi takeover, during the early 1940s she worked with the French Resistance.[1][2]

Leben

Paula Kopp was born in Lichtensteig, a small town in the Swiss Canton of St. Gallen, a short distance from the three-way frontier with Germany and Austria. At the age of 21 she was already a member of the Communist Party of Germany. From 1928 she was working at Berlin in the secretariat at the international office of the Young Communists. From here she moved on to a job as a typist in the press department of the party central committee's own secretariat.[3] She married Hermann Nuding in 1923 or 1925. The the Nazi takeover in January 1933 was quickly followed by the switch to a one-party state, and at the end of February 1933, following the Reichstag fire, Hermann Nuding was among the first of a large batch of German Communists to be arrested and placed in "protective custody".[4] Political work was now illegal and, as a paid official of the Communist Party, Paula Nuding accordingly lost her job and faced state persecution. She escaped via Copenhagen to France where Paris was rapidly becoming an ad hoc headquarters for the German Communist Party in exile.[1] In Paris she worked on distribution for the "illegally" produced German language Communist newspaper "Volk und Vaterland" and for the Comintern.[1]

Following the outbreak of the Second World War in the later summer of 1939, France was invaded by the German army in May/June 1940: the northern part of the country was directly occupied while the south was administered by a collaborationist government. In this context large numbers of exiled German communists in Paris were identified as enemy aliens and arrested in the summer of 1940. Paula Nuding was one of these, and was taken to the internment camp at Rieucros in the south. Under circumstances that remain far from clear she was nevertheless among those who escaped or were released from Rieucros during 1941, and she returned to Paris.[5]

Between November 1941 and November 1943 she worked underground in Paris as a member of the local German Communist leadership, and was involved in illegally contributing to and producing newspapers and leaflets on behalf of the liberation movement ("Komitee Freies Deutschland für den Westen").[1] At the end of November 1943 Paula Nuding was arrested by the Gestapo. She was pregnant at the time,[6] but as a result of physical mistreatment she lost her child. On 13 August 1944 she was taken, as part of the final transport of approximately 800 women, from France to the Ravensbrück concentration camp, where she was registered as prisoner number 57,895.[3] The concentration camp was liberated by the Soviet army in April 1945, and Paula Nuding made her way, not without difficulties and hold-ups, to Esslingen am Neckar, a town near Stuttgart which by the end of the war in May 1945 had ended up not in the Soviet occupation zone but in the US zone.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Dr. Gudrun Silberzahn-Jandt (18 October 2010). "Paula Rueß - Widerstandskämpferin". Staatsanzeiger für Baden-Württemberg GmbH, Stuttgart. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  2. ^ Robert Steigerwald (28 June 2002). "Staatsanzeiger für Baden-Württemberg GmbH". Buchempfehlung: Paula und Hans Rueß. DKP-Parteivorstand, Essen ("Unsere Zeit"). Retrieved 20 September 2016.
  3. ^ a b c Beate Latendorf. "Paula Rueß geb. Kopp verh. Nuding". Fraueninformationssystem Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  4. ^ Bernd-Rainer Barth. "Nuding, Hermann * 3.7.1902, † 31.12.1966 KPD/SED-Funktionär". Wer war wer in der DDR? (The appropriate extract from "Handbuch der Deutschen Kommunisten" by Hermann Weber and Andreas Herbst is published on the same webpage.). Ch. Links Verlag, Berlin & Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur,Berlin. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  5. ^ Klaus J. Becker; Annette Roser. "Das Parteiverfahren gegen Lex Ende im Sommer 1945 in Paris" (PDF). Dokumente aus dem Nachlaß Herbert Müller. Dr. Klaus Jürgen Becker. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  6. ^ Paul Euzière, Grasse. "Der deutsche Widerstand gegen Hitler". Retrieved 21 September 2016.

Further reading

  • Heidi Großmann: Paula Rueß - Kommunistin und Widerstandskämpferin. In: Friedrich Pospiech (Hrsg.): Unbelehrbar auf der Wahrheit beharrende... Paula und Hans Rueß Pahl-Rugenstein-Verlag: Köln 2002
  • Heidi Großmann: Paula Rueß – Kommunistin und Widerstandskämpferin. In: Stadt Esslingen (Hg.): WeiblichES. Frauengeschichte gesucht und entdeckt. Esslingen 1999, pp. 89-112.
  • Frauen aus Deutschland in der französischen Résistance. Reihe Arbeiterbewegung: Forschungen, Dokumente, Biografien, compiler-editor Ulla Plener. Berlin 2005 ISBN 3-929390-80-9 p 120ff
  • Friedrich Pospiech: Unbelehrbar auf der Wahrheit Beharrende...: Paula und Hans Ruess: zwei Leben im Widerstand gegen Krieg und Faschismus. Pahl-Rugenstein Verlag Nachfolger: Bonn 2002