Alfred Grosser | |
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Died | 7 February 2024 Paris, France | (aged 99)
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Alfred Grosser (1 February 1925 – 7 February 2024) was a German-born French writer, sociologist and political scientist. Although his Jewish family had to move from Frankfurt to France in 1933, he focused on Franco-German cooperation after World War II, was instrumental in the Élysée Treaty in 1963, and writing books towards better understanding between the Germans and the French. He was professor at the Institut d'études politiques de Paris from 1955 to 1995, and contributed to newspapers and broadcasts including La Croix and Ouest-France. He was critical of Israeli politics which caused controversies. His work was honoured with notable awards.
Grosser was born in Frankfurt on 1 February 1925.[1] His father, Paul Grosser , was born in 1880 in Berlin and died in 1934 in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France. A director of a children's hospital in Frankfurt, socialist, freemason, and Jew,[2] he was forced to immigrate to France in 1933[1] due to the increasing antisemitism in Nazi Germany.[2] He died only weeks after the family arrived in Paris.[3] Alfred, his mother, Lily Grosser, and his sister were given French citizenship in 1937[3] through a decree by the Minister of Justice, Vincent Auriol, in 1937;[2] as a result, they were spared possible internment in a French camp following France's declaration of war on Germany, in September 1939, when, under the government of Daladier, German refugees from Nazism were treated as enemy aliens like other German residents.[2] During the war he joined the French Resistance.[4] His sister Margarethe[3] died after an accident with her bicycle in 1941, when she tried to escape German soldiers.[5] In 1944 Grosser lived in Marseille and taught at a Catholic school;[6] he learned then that part of his family in Germany had probably been deported to Auschwitz, but refused to think of a collective German guilt.[6][7]
After the war Grosser studied political science and the German language in Aix-en-Provence[6] and Paris.[1] After 1955, he became a professor at the Institut d'études politiques de Paris. In 1965, Grosser began contributing to many newspapers and broadcasts, including La Croix and Ouest-France.[3] He was very involved in improving the Franco-German cooperation, and paved the road for the Élysée Treaty in 1963.[1][8] He wrote around 30 books towards better understanding between the Germans and French.[3] He received the Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels in 1975 for his role as "middle man between French and Germans, non-believers and believers, Europeans and people from other continents";[9] this gave him an early opportunity to speak at St. Paul's Church.[3][10] In 1992, he retired as the director of studies and research at the Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques (Sciences Po).[5]
He later turned to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, arguing that exactly because his parents and four grandparents were Jewish he felt more strongly that Israel's settlement policy violated human rights.[6] He wrote a book in 2009, Von Auschwitz nach Jerusalem (From Auschwitz to Jerusalem), questioning the policies and politics of Israel.[7] He was invited to deliver the keynote for a yearly memorial event for the November pogroms of 1938 at St. Paul's Church in 2010, which caused controversy already when it was announced.[3]
He gave a speech in the German parliament in 2014 in memory of the outbreak of the First World War.[5] Grosser was a regular guest of the Frankfurt Book Fair. He held his speeches with only a few notes, reacting in excellent rhetoric to his audience.[9]
He received the honour of a Grand Officier of the Legion of Honour personally from President Macron in June 2019.[11]
Grosser died in Paris on 7 February 2024, at age 99.[1][3][5]
Grosser was sceptical of symbolic meetings of French and German politicians, Adenauer and de Gaulle at the Reims Cathedral, Mitterrand and Kohl in Verdun, and Merkel and Sarkozy at the Arc de Triomphe, finding these places symbols of the First World War, while a better symbolic location after the Second World War, in his opinion, would have been Dachau concentration camp where French and Germans were held prisoners together. He was critical of French policies giving little chances to young people with migration background.[6]
Grosser opposed many Israeli government policies, as well as parts of the French government.[3] When asked to describe the way his statements were received, he referred to the "moral cudgel" (Moralkeule), a phrase coined by writer Martin Walser. In 1998, when one of Walser's speeches created huge controversy, Grosser publicly sided with Walser.
At this I am supporting Martin Walser's idea of the Auschwitz-club [as a stick]. Yes, I see that club, that is waved constantly against Germans when they say something against Israel. When they do so still, then the club says directly: "I hit you with Auschwitz". I find that unbearable. I have always fought anti-Semitism. And I will do it again! But equalizing criticizing Israel with anti-Semitism directly — that is dishonest and leads to mistakes.
— Alfred Grosser, 2007[12]
Grosser was also of the opinion that Israel's politics inherently invoke anti-semitism.[13] In 2003, Grosser left the board of magazine L'Express because he believed its reporting on the Middle East was unbalanced. He stated that the editor had reluctantly published his positive critique on a book that criticized Israel, while later printing multiple readers' letters attacking Grosser.[14]
Grosser criticized awarding the 2007 Ludwig Börne Prize to Henryk M. Broder through Focus publisher Helmut Markwort, feeling that both were worthy neither of the prize nor of the presentation at St. Paul's Church.[15]
Grosser was invited by the city of Frankfurt to give the main speech at a Kristallnacht commemorative meeting on 9 November 2010 at St. Paul's Church. Mayor Petra Roth was criticized for inviting him by members of the Central Council of Jews in Germany and others, but she stood by her invitation.[7][16] They threatened to walk out should Grosser "fail regarding Israel".[17] In the end, the speech was delivered without disturbance.[18][19]
Grosser's publications include:[20]
A chair at the Sciences Po, where he had taught, was named after him.[5] The Goethe University Frankfurt established a visiting professorship for civic society research in his name, focused on German-French relations.[21]
Grosser's awards include: