Abstract
The leftist weekly Worker's Illustrated
Newspaper [Arbeiter Illustrierte
Zeitung] was published from 1921 to 1938. At first, it focused on
the construction of the Soviet state in Russia. Later, it began
reporting on subjects pertinent to the German working class and settled
upon the goal of advancing the political education of workers. Founded
by the Communist Willi Münzenberg (1889-1940), the newspaper published
articles, illustrations, and photomontages by well-known writers and
artists such as George Grosz, Maxim Gorki, Käthe Kollwitz, John
Heartfield, Anna Seghers, Erich Kästner, and Kurt Tucholsky. By the time
Hitler was appointed chancellor, the paper's circulation had grown to
over 500,000. After the Nazi takeover in 1933,
Worker's Illustrated Newspaper had to
move its operations from Berlin to Prague, where it continued to appear
until the German invasion in 1938.
During its years in exile, the newspaper devoted itself chiefly to
scathing criticisms of the violence of Nazi rule. This photomontage by
Dada artist John Heartfeld, for example, offers a startlingly prescient
indictment of the death and destruction to which Nazi war-mongering
would soon lead. The image features a frightening skeletal hand,
presumably in the form of the Hitler salute. The fingers of the hand are
delineated by the dark exhaust of fighter planes. Bombed out, charred
buildings are visible on the right; civilian war victims (including
children) are seen on the left. The caption underneath reads: "This
is the Salvation They Are Bringing Us!" [“Das ist das Heil, das sie
bringen!”]. (Here, the word salvation
[Heil] is a pun on the Nazi “Sieg
Heil” used in conjunction with the Hitler salute.) Published a year
before the start of the Second World War, this photomontage unmasks
Hitler's missionary zeal to "unify of the Reich" as reckless
war-mongering.