Hans Reichelt (born 30 March 1925) is a former German politician of the Democratic Farmers' Party of Germany (DBD), a GDR-Bloc party. He was Minister of Agriculture and Forestry in 1953 and from 1955 to 1963, and from 1972 to January 1990, Minister of Environmental Protection and Water Management, as well as Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the GDR.

Hans Reichelt
Hans Reichelt at the Farmers' Forum 1961
Minister of Environmental Protection and Water Management of the German Democratic Republic
In office
1972–1990
Preceded byWerner Titel [de]
Succeeded byPeter Diederich [de]
Minister of Agriculture and Forestry of the German Democratic Republic
In office
1955–1963
Preceded byPaul Scholz
Succeeded byGeorg Ewald [de]
In office
1953–1953
Preceded byWilhelm Schröder (Politician, 1913) [de]
Succeeded byPaul Scholz
Member of the Volkskammer
In office
1950–1990
Personal details
Born (1925-03-30) March 30, 1925 (age 99)
Proskau, German Empire
Political partyDemocratic Farmers' Party of Germany (1949-1990)
Nazi Party (1943-1945)
Alma materBerlin School of Economics and Law
Military service
AllegianceNazi Germany
Branch/serviceWehrmacht
RankLieutenant
Battles/warsSecond World War

Life edit

 
Reichelt (right) in conversation with Federal Minister of the Environment Klaus Töpfer (left) and the Permanent Representative of the Federal Republic in the GDR Hans Otto Bräutigam, 1988

Hans Reichelt was born on March 30, 1925, in Proskau. He attended secondary school in Opole. He was a member of the Hitler Youth and the Reich Labour Service. On 20 April 1943 (Hitler's birthday), he joined the NSDAP (Membership Number 9,454,165). He served as a soldier in the German Wehrmacht (ultimately holding the rank of Lieutenant) and was in Soviet POW camps until 1949, during which he attended an Antifa school.[1]

Upon returning to Germany, he became a member of the Democratic Farmers' Party of Germany (DBD) and held various positions (president since 1955) in the party leadership. He was a member of the People's Chamber from 1950. In 1953, he briefly served as Minister of Agriculture and Forestry, succeeding Wilhelm Schröder. After attending the Central School for Agricultural Policy of the Central Committee of the SED in Schwerin, on 29 October 1953, he was appointed Secretary of State in the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry by Prime Minister Otto Grotewohl.[2] From 1955 to 1963, he again served as Minister of Agriculture, Procurement, and Forestry, succeeding Paul Scholz.[citation needed]

From 1963 to 1964, he pursued higher education studies, and in 1971, he earned his doctorate at the Berlin School of Economics and Law with the thesis The Role and Position of Land Improvement in the Intensification of Agricultural Production and the Social Development of Socialist Agriculture and Some Fundamental Problems of the Further Application of the Economic System of Socialism in the Period up to 1980. From 1963 to 1972, he was Deputy Chairman of the Agriculture Council, and in 1971/1972, he was Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Forestry, and Food. In this capacity, he was involved in what environmental activist Carlo Jordan called "environmentally disastrous decisions" in the areas of forced collectivization, agricultural industrialization, and land improvement.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Olaf Kappelt: Braunbuch DDR. Nazis in der DDR Berlin historica, 2009, pp. 482–483, ISBN 978-3-939929-12-3.
  2. ^ Protocol of the 142nd Meeting of the Government of the GDR on 29 October 1953 - Bundesarchiv DC 20-I/3/204.
  3. ^ Carlo Jordan: Environmental Destruction and Environmental Policy in the GDR, Enquete Commission on the reappraisal of the history and consequences of the SED dictatorship in Germany, published by the German Bundestag, 12th legislative period, Vol. II/3, p. 1785.