Alan Posener


Alan Posener is a British-German journalist. He is the son of the architectural historian Julius Posener.

Biography

Posener is the son of a liberal German-Jewish family, while his mother is of Scottish-English ancestry. He grew up in England, Malaysia and Germany. He studied German studies and Anglican culture at the Free University of Berlin and the Ruhr University of Bochum. During this period he served as Executive of the Communist Students Association and the Maoist Communist Party active.
On graduation, Posener worked as a teacher at the Kant-Gymnasium and at the Martin Buber Comprehensive School in Berlin-Spandau. He left the teaching profession, as he says, from "boredom".

Journalism

In 1987 he wrote the Rowohlt monograph on John Lennon. This was followed by monographs on John F. Kennedy, Elvis Presley, William Shakespeare, Franklin Roosevelt, and finally Mary, the mother of Jesus. Posener also wrote a biography of the relationship of John F. and Jackie Kennedy.
From 1999 to 2004, he was a writer and then editor of "Die Welt." From 2004 to 2008 he was chief of commentary for "Welt am Sonntag." He now works as a correspondent for politics and society. When in 2005 the Berlin authorities proposed renaming Koch Road as Rudi Dutschke Strasse, he opposed the proposition. Posener stated that:
In May 2007, Posner used his blog at Welt Online to attack the editor of the tabloid "Bild," Kai Diekmann, accusing him of "hypocrisy" because the newspaper "serves the lowest instincts." The comment was removed a few hours later after colleagues at the Axel Springer publishing house noticed it. Axel Springer publishes both titles. Rival newspapers later printed their own critical commentaries on the tensions evident at Axel Springer Verlag.
In 2009 he published his book called "Pope Benedict's crusade" in which he criticized Benedict XVI's "crusade" against the Enlightenment. An expanded and retitled version, now also available as a paperback, appeared in 2011 under the punchier title "Der gefährliche Papst". Building on his criticism, he had now also stirred controversy by spelling out a more general thesis: "Religion ist schlecht für den Menschen".
Since 2009, Posener has conducted a weekly debate with Alexander Görlach on religious and ethical questions in The European.