Abstract
Starting in 1947, the SED and the economic authorities of the Soviet
occupation zone attempted to raise economic productivity. Outdated
machinery, in-kind reparations sent to the Soviet Union, and the
concentration of scarce resources in a few heavy-industry complexes
meant that this goal was to be achieved primarily through increases in
labor productivity. To this end, the ruling powers – following the
Soviet model (Alexei G. Stakhanov) – initiated an “activist movement,”
in which particular production sites and “activists” were honored with
medals and prizes. The campaign was launched with the record-breaking
yield of miner Adolf Hennecke, who, after careful preparation, brought
in 24.4 cubic meters of coal during a single shift in October 1948,
thereby exceeding the standard quota by 387%. Subsequently, the
“Hennecke movement” came to be synonymous with the “activist movement”
in the GDR’s industrial parlance. The image shows Adolf Hennecke inside
the mine of the publicly owned Oelsnitz Coal Mine in the Ore Mountains
(Erzgebirge) [VEB Steinkohlewerk
Oelsnitz (Erzgebirge)].