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Cordt Georg Wilhelm Schnibben ( * July 28, 1952 in Bremen) is a German journalist. == Life == Both Schnibben's father Georg and his mother Elfriede Schnibben who died when he was twelve years old, were dedicated Nazis. Only after the death of his father did Schnibben learn that both of his parents were involved shortly before the war ended in a politically motivated murder of an unarmed civilians, in which the father was a volunteer of "Freikorps Adolf Hitler" to which the main perpetrators belonged, as Schnibben reported in a detailed essay in the magazine "Der Spiegel" in April 2014 〔Cordt Schnibben: ''Mein Vater, ein Werwolf.'' In: ''Der Spiegel'' vom 14. April 2014, S. 62ff〕 Schnibben was a student at Bremen High School at Barkhof . He was influenced by the 1968 movement, and he demonstrated against the German emergency legislation (adopted on 30 May 1968), joined the German Communist Party and spent a year studying social sciences at the Franz-Mehring-Institute in Berlin-Biesdorf in East Berlin.〔Cordt Schnibben: (''Das große Sackhüpfen''; ) in: Der Spiegel 5/2001 of 29. Januar 2001, S. 172–176.〕 After that academic year he started studying economics at the University of Bremen. For a time he worked as a copywriter, and after two tries was accepted into the prestigious Henri-Nannen-Schule. Between 1984 and 1988 he was an editor at the weekly German newspaper ''Die Zeit'' Since then he has worked with the magazine ''Spiegel'', where he is currently one of the two heads of the editorial board. In 1991, Schnibben wrote an article 〔Cordt Schnibben: (''Das große Sackhüpfen''; )〕 in Der Spiegel on extreme right-wing violence in Germany and the arson attack on the asylum center in Hunxe. Schnibben founded in 2007 together with the journalists Stephan Lebert and Ariel Hauptmeier the German Reporter-Forum. Schnibben has received numerous German journalism awards. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Cordt Schnibben」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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