Paul Franken


Paul Franken was a German Socialist politician.
Following regime change in 1933, his party was banned and he fled. He lived in various countries before settling in the Soviet Union, where in 1936 he was briefly arrested. He was arrested again in 1937 in one of Stalin's political purges. He was detained for the next seven years and is believed to have died in a labour camp in the northern part of European Russia during the Autumn of 1944.

Life

Paul Franken was born in Höhscheid, some 40 km east of Düsseldorf in the by this time heavily industrialised Ruhr region of Germany. His father was a foundry worker. Franken attended school locally and in 1908 started training as a specialist metal worker. In 1911 he joined the Social Democratic Party and in 1914 he was conscripted for military service. In 1917 he joined the newly formed Independent Social Democratic Party which had broken away from the mainstream SPD, primarily over the issue of whether or not to continue supporting funding for the war which had broken out in July/August 1914.
During the revolutionary period that followed the end of the war Franken was a member of Workers' and Soldiers' Councils in the Solingen district. On the political left there was further factionalism and fragmentation during the years that followed, and by 1920 Franken was an activist member of the Communist Party. It was probably around this time, in 1920, that he married the fellow left-wing activist, Flora Goldberg. In June 1920 he stood, unsuccessfully, for election to the Reichstag as a Communist Party candidate. In January 1921 he joined the :de:Kommunistische Arbeitsgemeinschaft|Communist Work Community but this movement proved short-lived, and by May 1922 he was back in the USPD. In the meantime, he was elected a member of the Prussian Landtag where he sat till 1924, and again between 1928 and 1933. In the meantime, in 1922 he switched his party affiliation back to the SPD. In addition, between 1922 he was working as a writer and newspaper editor in Solingen.
In 1924 the couple relocated to Zeitz, some 450 km to the east, where Flora Franken, who joined the SPD in 1925 sat on the district council till 1933. Paul Franken became a member of the SPD local leadership team in Zeitz where from November 1924 he was also editing the SPD daily newspaper, "Volksbote". He was active in the cultural and educational fields, working in the SPD's :de:Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft der Kinderfreunde|Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft der Kinderfreunde / RAG. In 1928, after a break of four years, he returned to the Landtag.
The Nazi Party took power in January 1933 and lost little time in transforming the country into a one-party state. During 1933 Paul Franken's membership of the Landtag, like the assembly itself, came to an end after a few months. Flora Franken, who was both Jewish and a Socialist, had even more reason to fear the Nazis than her husband, and emigrated to Riga, joining her mother in Latvia. Paul Franken either accompanied her or emigrated via Czechoslovakia. Either way, they were both in Latvia when Kārlis Ulmanis in May 1934 :de:Staatsstreich vom 15. Mai 1934 in Lettland|took power, obliging them to escape from a new single party right-wing dictatorship for the second time in less than two years. They moved to Sweden, and applied for permission to emigrate to the Soviet Union. The Soviet authorities granted their application in August 1934 and they moved to Leningrad.
In Leningrad Paul Franken worked at the vast Putilov Factory. In May 1936 he was accepted back into the German Communist Party, now overwhelmingly exiled, its members based mostly in Paris or Moscow. In November 1937 he was arrested by the NKVD and detained, in the context of a great surge in political purges taking place that year. He was taken to one of the network of Labour Camps located inside the Arctic Circle. Here, under appalling conditions, his life ended in the Autumn of 1944 in the labour camp at Adak near Vorkuta.
Flora Franken, who had accompanied her husband to the Soviet Union in 1934, was permitted to return to the German Democratic Republic with her son, Peter, in May 1955. She took a job with :de:Karl Dietz Verlag Berlin|Dietz Verlag, later switching to the Marxism-Leninism Institute of East Germany's ruling Socialist Unity Party.