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George Eric Rowe Gedye
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George Eric Rowe Gedye : ウィキペディア英語版
George Eric Rowe Gedye

George Eric Rowe Gedye () (
*27 May 1890 in Clevedon, Somerset, †21 March 1970; often cited as G. E. R. Gedye), was a British journalist, author and intelligence officer.
==Life and work==
Gedye, the foreign correspondent for eminent British and American newspapers, was the son of grocer George Edward Gedye. He was an early proponent for democracy and against Nazism in Germany and Austria. Personally, he was described as reserved, cold, and distantly polite.
Gedye attended an officer's course at London University, but then fought in the First World War as a simple infantryman on the Western Front. After he was wounded in 1916, Gedye worked as an officer in the British Army Intelligence from 1917. He was first assigned to the staff of the British military governor of Cologne where, because of his excellent knowledge of German and French, was in charge of interrogating prisoners of war. Later he worked for the Allied High Commissioner for the Rhineland.
In 1922, Gedye chose a career in journalism. He spent almost two decades working as a reporter for leading British and American newspapers in Central Europe. Based out of Cologne, he was soon known and recognised for his investigative reporting. Gedye's reports for The Times about the occupation of the Ruhr in 1923 were an indictment of the imperialist pursuits of Poincaré. Early on he recognised the severe economic restrictions on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles as providing fertile ground for the rise of National Socialism. Because of this reporting, he was recalled to London in 1924 to the foreign policy department of The Times.
1925, ''The Times'' sent him to Vienna. However, his reports did not toe the predetermined editorial line and he was fired. Soon after, he briefly worked for the Daily Express and then began his association with the Daily Telegraph. Gedye built an editorial office in Vienna that was soon responsible for covering several countries in Central and Eastern Europe.
In 1929 Gedye moved to New York Times, which in 1931 appointed him as head of the Office for Central and South Eastern Europe. He also wrote for other newspapers, including for The Nation and British newspapers, but kept a certain distance from the group of Anglo-Saxon correspondents that often gathered in Vienna's Café Louvre, including Marcel Fodor, John Gunther and Dorothy Thompson.
"In Vienna, he had witnessed the struggle of the young republic against inflation and economic crisis, he had witnessed the services of a social democratic local government – and the disastrous policies of a number of clerical governments. As a Democrat Gedye had come to Vienna. But, as he explained in his own words, under the thunder of Dollfuss cannons, under the experience of the February battles, he became a Social Democrat and as such he left Vienna." In 1934 Gedye helped the young Kim Philby rescue fighters of the Republican Defense Corps.
At times Gedye circumvented news censorship imposed by Austria by driving to Bratislava to submit his reports.
Three days after the Anschluss Gedye was deported by the Gestapo as an undesirable alien. After a short stay in London, he moved to Prague, where he completed his most famous book: ''Betrayal in Central Europe—Austria and Czechoslovakia: The Fallen Bastions''. In it, Gedye sharply attacked the British appeasement policy and putting into words "what the Austrians and Czechs sold to fascism felt and suffered, but under the thumb of Hitler, under the threat of the concentration camp could not say themselves."
Because of the book's passionate indictment and scathing condemnation of Chamberlain's course, the publisher that had originally planned to publish the work rejected it. The conservative British newspaper ''The Daily Telegraph'', for which Gedye had been working for a decade, gave him the choice of either publishing the book or continuing his post as Central Europe correspondent. Gedye decided in favour of publishing and gave up his position. The success of the work proved him right—it appeared within two months in five editions.
After the Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia on 14 March 1939, Gedye had to hide for ten days in the attic of the British Embassy in Prague, until receiving permission from the Germans to emigrate to Poland. Then until 1940, Gedye was the New York Times correspondent in Moscow. He spent several years in Turkey, where he worked for the British Secret War Special Operations Executive (SOE). Among other things, he served as an executive officer for the exiled Austrian Social Democrats Karl Hans Sailer and Stefan Wirlandner. The latter tried in 1943 to make connections from Istanbul to Austria. In 1942, Gedye was arrested by the Turkish police. German newspapers claimed that he was involved in a conspiracy to assassinate the German Ambassador Franz von Papen. But Gedye was quickly released and spent the rest of the war in the Middle East.
From 1945 Gedye was again a central Europe correspondent, this time for the socialist London newspaper Daily Herald. Among other things, he wrote a series of articles exposing conditions in starving Vienna. Gedye also wrote against the expulsion of the Sudeten German population from --Czechoslovakia after 1945.
Gedye's son Robin Gedye worked for many years, until 1996, in Bonn as German correspondent for the Daily Telegraph.

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