His father, Paul Grosser, was born in 1880 in Berlin and died 1934 in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France. A director of a children's hospital in Frankfurt am Main, socialist, freemason, and Jew, he was forced to immigrate to France in 1933 due to the increasing antisemitism in Nazi Germany. Alfred and his mother, Lily Grosser, were given French citizenship through a decree by the Minister of Justice, Vincent Auriol, in 1937; 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, along with other German residents.
Career
Alfred studied political science and the German language. 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. He was very involved in improving the Franco-German cooperation, and paved the road for the Élysée Treaty in 1963. In 1992, he retired as the Director of Studies and Research at the Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques.
Political opinions
Grosser opposed many Israeli government policies, as well as parts of the French government. When asked to describe the way his statements are received, he referred to the "moral cudgel", a phrase coined by writer Martin Walser. In 1998, when one of Walser's speeches created huge controversy, Grosser publicly sided with Walser. Grosser also holds to the opinion that Israel's politics inherently invoke anti-semitism. 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. Alfred Grosser criticized awarding the Ludwig-Börne-Prize 2007 to Henryk M. Broder through Focus publisher Helmut Markwort, feeling that both were neither worthy of the prize nor the handing in the Paulskirche. Grosser was invited by the city of Frankfurt to give the main speech at a Kristallnacht commemorative meeting on 9 November 2010 in the Paulskirche. Mayor Roth was criticized for inviting him by members of the Central Council of Jews in Germany and others, but she stood by her invitation. They threatened to walk out should Grosser "fail regarding Israel". In the end, the speech was delivered without disturbance.
Selected publications
Deutschlandbilanz. Geschichte Deutschlands seit 1945, 1970
Die Früchte ihres Baumes. Ein atheistischer Blick auf die Christen, September 2005
Der Begriff Rache ist mir völlig fremd in: Martin Doerry : Nirgendwo und überall zu Haus. Gespräche mit Überlebenden des Holocaust, München 2006 pp. 120 – 129
Die Frage nach der Leitkultur in: Robertson-von Trotha, Caroline Y. : Kultur und Gerechtigkeit, Baden-Baden 2007,
Von Auschwitz nach Jerusalem , Rowohlt-Verlag 2009,
Honours
1975: Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels, for his role as "middle man between French and Germans, non-believers and believers, Europeans and people from other continents"; this gave him an earlier opportunity to speak in the Paulskirche.
Martina Doering interviews Alfred Grosser, Berliner Zeitung, 15 August 2006. German
Interview by Stefan Reinecke and Daniel Bax with Alfred Grosser in Die Tageszeitung, 4 April 2007. German
Tobias Kaufman interviews Alfred Grosser, following his new book "Von Auschwitz nach Jerusalem" , 18 September 2009. German
: Talk about "Von Auschwitz nach Jerusalem" with Moritz Reininghaus, Die Tageszeitung 28 September 2009. German
: Interview by Euronews. English
about his upcoming speech in the Paulskirche on 9 November 2010. 3sat "Kulturzeit": Kritik an Grosser. Zentralrat lehnt Politologen als Redner ab.'' German.
, Deutsche Welle. English.
Reviews
, Autor nicht genannt
über das Buch Wie anders ist Frankreich.
über das Buch Die Früchte ihres Baumes. Ein atheistischer Blick auf die Christen.