“A name etched in stone but a life etched in history.” This is John Schehr. He was a man of the people and a leader in tumultuous times. Today we stand before this memorial to remember him. Who was John Schehr? What did he stand for? Why does his name still echo in Rostock?
John Schehr was born in Altona in 1896. He rose through the ranks of the Communist Party of Germany or KPD. By 1933, he became its chairman. This was after Ernst Thälmann’s arrest. The Nazis were gaining power. The KPD was outlawed. Leading the party became a dangerous game of shadows.
Schehr’s early life shaped his political path. He came from a working-class family. He trained as a metalworker. He joined the Social Democratic Party in 1912. The Transport Workers’ Union followed soon after. Working at the Hamburg docks he met Ernst Thälmann.
His political involvement deepened after World War I. He joined the Independent Social Democratic Party. Then he joined the Communist Party. He became a municipal councillor in Altona in 1924. He steadily climbed the party ladder. By 1932, he was a member of the Prussian Landtag and the Reichstag.
The rise of the Nazis cast a dark shadow. After the Reichstag fire, the KPD was banned. Many leaders were arrested. Schehr took the helm of the underground party. But his time was short.
In November 1933, Schehr was arrested. He was betrayed by a Gestapo informant. He was taken to Columbia concentration camp. He faced brutal torture. Yet he revealed nothing about the party’s secrets.
The Nazis sought revenge for the killing of the informant Alfred Kattner. On February 1, 1934, John Schehr and three other communists were murdered. The official story was that they were shot while trying to escape. The reality was far darker.
After World War II, John Schehr became a hero in East Germany. Streets and buildings were named in his honor. This memorial stands as a testament to his courage and sacrifice. His story is a reminder of the dangers of extremism. It is a symbol of resistance against oppression.
Even now a street in Rostock still bears his name. His legacy lives on. Consider the man John Schehr. Remember his fight for what he believed in. Reflect on the price he paid.