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・ Gesellenverein
・ Gesellius, Lindgren, and Saarinen
・ Gesellschaft der Associierten
・ Gesellschaft der Freunde alter Musikinstrumente
・ Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde
・ Gesellschaft der Ärzte in Wien
・ Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker
・ Gesellschaft für Angewandte Mathematik und Mechanik
・ Gesellschaft für das Gute und Gemeinnützige
・ Gesellschaft für deutsche Sprache
・ Gesellschaft für Didaktik der Mathematik
・ Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin
・ Gesellschaft für Informatik
・ Gesellschaft für Internationale Geldgeschichte
・ Gesellschaft für Nuklear-Service
Gesellschaft für Sport und Technik
・ Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung
・ Gesellschaft zu Fraumünster
・ Gesellschaft zur Beförderung gemeinnütziger Tätigkeit
・ Gesellschaft zur Erhaltung alter und gefährdeter Haustierrassen
・ Gesellschaft zur Verbreitung wissenschaftlicher Kenntnisse
・ Gesellschaft zur wissenschaftlichen Untersuchung von Parawissenschaften
・ Gesellschafts- und Wirtschaftsmuseum
・ Gesellschafts-Walzer
・ Gesell’s Maturational Theory
・ Gesenius
・ Geser
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・ Gesetz zur Beschränkung des Brief-, Post- und Fernmeldegeheimnisses
・ Gesetzlose Gesellschaft zu Berlin


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Gesellschaft für Sport und Technik : ウィキペディア英語版
Gesellschaft für Sport und Technik



The Gesellschaft für Sport und Technik (GST), lit. “Sport and Technology Association”, was one of the East German “Mass Organizations”.〔These were organizations under the control of the East German Communist Party, created to influence and supervise large segments of the population at large and integrate them into the East German social system.〕 Officially, it was established to structure the free time of young people interested in sports and technology in group activities, provide the required technical equipment (for example, motorcycles, aircraft, radios), cultivate and support technical sport disciplines, and arrange for events like motor and shooting competitions. The association also contributed to the militarization of East German society by organizing together with the National People’s Army the country’s mandatory pre-military training (VA, ''vormilitärische Ausbildung'') in schools, universities and workplaces. It was established on 7 August 1952 and disbanded in early 1990. The association published a monthly, 32-page periodical, S+T (''Sport und Technik'').
==Mission==
The Gesellschaft für Sport und Technik (GST) was originally established to structure through group activities the free time of people of all ages who were interested in sports and technology. This included adolescents, who were to be given an opportunity to engage in meaningful leisure activities. Older, more experienced members were expected to take beginners under their wing and give them support. Most of the required equipment (such as motorcycles, boats, automobiles, trucks, airplanes, radios, rifles, workshops and even animals) was provided, and maintained and serviced by both the members themselves and permanent employees. But the mission soon changed; military sports became increasingly predominant, and the organization evolved into a “school for tomorrow’s soldiers”. It operated training bases, shooting ranges and military training camps, and held competitions.
Even if they were not members, almost all young men and women came into contact with the GST because it organized the pre-military training exercises mandated by East Germany's Military Service Law. Without participating in this training, access to university and career training was usually blocked.
Some secondary school students were GST members, which was also the case for trainees in large concerns. They paid only a token membership fee. How much emphasis was placed on military matters depended to a great extent on the trainers at the schools. In addition to general pre-military training there were also military camps (taking place for boys over two weeks at the end of the 9th grade), a so-called “Qualification March” (''Marsch der Bewährung'') for about five days each year either in the course of vocational training or once at the end of the 11th grade in secondary schools, and competitions.
But the organization also united in its ranks young people and adults of both sexes with the goal of improving their physical fitness, equipping them with technical knowledge, and in general cultivating expertise and abilities useful for military and international sports competitions. It frequently offered the only possibility to legally engage in certain sports, like gliding, flying motorized aircraft, shooting, and diving.
The range of leisure activities was reduced more and more starting in the 1970s, for example, sport gliding in locations near the West German border after a number of GDR citizens successfully escaped to West Germany using various types of flying machines.
GST members had an opportunity to obtain a driver's license for trucks, cars, motorcycles or mopeds. For many young people this was a primary reason for joining the GST.
About one percent of the expenses were covered in the country’s defense budget; the rest had to be financed by other state institutions, as the income from membership fees was insignificant. Members received uniforms,〔http://www.ddr-binnenschifffahrt.de/symbolefarben-Dateien/effekten-gst.GIF〕 ranks, performance badges and medals. The governing board was dominated by full-time personnel with military background, usually former career soldiers.
In 1979 the GST had about 530,000 members in over 9,000 local divisions, a number that had risen to 600,000 by 1988.〔Dirk Jurich, ''Staatssozialismus und gesellschaftliche Differenzierung: eine empirische Studie'', p.32. LIT Verlag Münster, 2006, ISBN 3825898938〕 In addition to these divisions, which usually had their own areas of specialization, GST as an East German mass organization was organized according to the rules of what was called “democratic centralism” as to its basic organizations, county and district boards, and central governing board. The basic organizations existed in factories and workplaces, vocational schools, secondary schools, universities and colleges, administrative bodies and producers’ cooperatives. The highest organ of the Gesellschaft für Sport und Technik was according to its statutes a congress which usually met every five years and had the task of electing the central governing board.
One goal of the organization was to obtain voluntary, well-qualified and dedicated recruits for career service in the National People’s Army. This became increasingly difficult to achieve starting in the 1980s as most members were uninterested in volunteering for extended military service.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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