Abstract
The KPD’s party organization was destroyed by the wave of Communist
arrests that followed the Reichstag fire. Thousands of party
functionaries were put into so-called protective custody. There are no
precise figures on the number of victims involved in this first massive
wave of violence, but according to the most conservative data, the Nazis
arrested at least 100,000 political opponents in 1933 alone, and of
those arrested, 600 died. The KPD leadership, however, put those
estimates at 130,000 and 2,500, respectively.
The first wanted poster (on top) shows, among others, Walter Ulbricht
(bottom row, middle) and Wilhelm Pieck (top row, middle). Both were KPD
deputies in the Reichstag in 1933; when the National Socialists came
after them, they went into exile, first in Paris, and later in Moscow.
After the war, both returned to Berlin and began their political careers
in the German Democratic Republic. Pieck first became chairman of the
Socialist Unity Party of Germany
[Sozialistische Einheitspartei
Deutschlands or SED] and then president of the GDR. After Pieck’s
death in 1960, the office of president was abolished and Ulbricht was
named chairman of the Council of State and the new head of state.
The second wanted poster (below) shows, among others, Ernst Thälmann
(top row, left), then chairman of the KPD. Thälmann had opposed Hitler
and Hindenburg in the presidential election of 1932. On March 3, 1933,
he was arrested and spent years in “protective custody” without trial.
The circumstances of his death have still not been fully explained.
Presumably he was shot in August 1944 in the Buchenwald concentration
camp.