Max Jordan


Max Jordan was a pioneering radio journalist for the NBC network in Europe in the 1930s. Later he became a Benedictine monk.
He received a PhD in Religious Philosophy from the University of Jena. He worked for William Randolph Hearst's newspapers in the 1920s.

Europe, 1930s, and the war

He covered many important stories in the 1930s when the medium of radio was still relatively new. His first report for NBC was on a 1931 speech by Germany's president Paul von Hindenburg. He also reported on the first Atlantic flight of the Hindenburg in 1936, the Anschluss of Austria in 1938, the text of the Munich Agreement in the same year, the 1940 invasion of Paris, and the 1945 surrender of Japan.
Since 1931 he was domiciled in Arlesheim, Canton of Basel-Landschaft. In 1939 he became a Citizen of the United States
He also hired Martin Agronsky in 1940 to cover the war.
Horten writes that part of Jordan's success was due to his networking with the governments of Germany, Austria, and Hungary, who provided NBC 'privileged use' of their broadcasting facilities.
During the war he worked on NBC's religious shows, which included prayers, bible stories, and a series about military Chaplainship, Chaplain Jim.

Monk

Around 1954 he joined the Beuron Abbey in Germany and became a monk, taking the name of Placid Jordan. He would later argue against Gordon Zahn's assertions that the Catholic Church had not properly resisted Nazism. Specifically Jordan wrote responses to Zahn's papers regarding the Catholic Church and Nazi Germany. He also wrote a letter to William F. Buckley Jr.'s magazine National Review that was critical of Zhan's book German Catholics and Hitler's Wars.
Jordan died in 1977.