Nikolaus Ehlen was a Germanpacifist teacher. He was a Catholic of the Selbsthilfe-Siedlungsbau, which was a movement to help workers get their own home.
One day, there was a well-drawn caricature of a teacher on the blackboard in my Obertertia . The director comes to me outraged: "What a disgrace for this class and the school! We will find the author. Otherwise he will be punished very hard." I asked the director for full freedom in the investigation. Then I talked to my class. I praised the well-made painting. - "But this whole thing must be very painful for the old Professor who is depicted on the blackboard! You are way to decent for such an insult to him. This afternoon, I expect the student who drew this in my flat". And he came. Together, we decided on his punishment. From this day on, I had the unrestricted trust of the old director and of my class. .
Family
He had eight children from his marriage to Maria Stummel.
Political Positions
His older friend and mentor Ernst Thrasolt introduced Ehlen to the ideas of the catholic youth movement that formed shortly before WW I, parallel to the already existing groups of the Wandervogel. Ehlen distinguished himself with lasting effect in this young movement. His maxims were based on the Lebensreform and the sermon on the mount as well as on closeness to nature and an attachment to his home-country. Under the influence of Tharsolt, he found his way to the Friedensbund Deutscher Katholiken, and was also a member of the Internationaler Versöhnungsbund. At first, he was also a member of the Zentrumspartei, but was expelled later. He was the leading candidate for the radically pacifist Christlich-Soziale Reichspartei in the Reichstag election of 1928. The 11.000 votes he got were however not sufficient for a seat in the parliament. Because of his pacifist attitude which aimed at the reconciliation of nations, he was taunted, detained and banned from writing by the Nazis. In 1933, he was detained for a short period, and signed a declaration to drop the pacifist outlook of the journal Lotsenrufe he published, but remained unbroken, which can be seen from his speech for the defence, which was posthumously published in fragments. From World War II, he returned as a lieutenant of the artillery. He became important as a pioneer of the Selbsthilfe-Siedlungsbau. Thousands of workers, organised in his Ring Deutscher Siedler, owe him their family-friendly home on their own parcel of land. State and church recognised his merits. After his death in Velbert on 16 October 1965, then-Wohnungsbauminster Paul Lücke commemorated his influence on western German housing politics in the post-war period.
Quotation
Nobody must be forced to join the military service against the majesty of his personal conscience.