翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Kurt Gloor
・ Kurt Godlevske
・ Kurt Goldstein
・ Kurt Gottfried
・ Kurt Gouveia
・ Kurt Grasshoff
・ Kurt Grelling
・ Kurt Gribl
・ Kurt Grote
・ Kurt Großkurth
・ Kurt Gruber
・ Kurt Gruber (aviator)
・ Kurt Gröschke
・ Kurt Grüng
・ Kurt Gscheidle
Kurt Gustav Wilckens
・ Kurt Gutenbrunner
・ Kurt Gänzl
・ Kurt Gödel
・ Kurt Gödel Society
・ Kurt H. Becker
・ Kurt H. Debus
・ Kurt Haehling
・ Kurt Haertel
・ Kurt Hager
・ Kurt Haggerty
・ Kurt Hahn
・ Kurt Hamrin
・ Kurt Hancock
・ Kurt Hansen (footballer)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Kurt Gustav Wilckens : ウィキペディア英語版
Kurt Gustav Wilckens

Kurt Gustav Wilckens (1886-1923) was a militant German anarchist, known in Argentina for having avenged the massacre of hundreds of workers on strike in the repression unleashed by the Argentine government in response to the prolonged labor uprising later known as Patagonia rebelde-the Patagonia uprising. Wilckens assassinated Lieutenant Colonel Héctor Benigno Varela the military leader in charge of the brutal repression.
== Biography ==
The son of August Wilckens and Johanna Harms, he was born on November 3, 1886 in Bad Bramstedt, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. He studied gardening, entering into military service in 1906 in the first company of the Prussian Garde-Schutzen-Bataillons.
In 1910 he traveled to the United States to perfect his craft and encountered anarchist ideas. He worked in Arizona and New Mexico farms and soon he had his first conflict with repression. He was working in a pickling plant that produced two tiers of products, the higher priced product of good quality, and a lower priced product of lesser quality. The better products went to bourgeois neighborhoods and the lower quality products went to workers' neighborhoods. Kurt convinced his coworkers to reverse the delivery and was expelled from the factory. After joining the Industrial Workers of the World and participating in a series of strikes in his subsequent work as a coal miner, he was arrested along with other strikers and held in an internment camp for German immigrants. He escaped from the camp, was arrested again and deported to Germany on March 27, 1920.
At the start of the Argentine libertarian workers movement, on September 29, 1920, he arrived in Buenos Aires. There he worked as a correspondent for two German newspapers, the ''Alarm'' in Hamburg by Libertarian Anarchist Federation Libertarian Communities and Workers in Germany, and ''Der Syndikalist'' by Berlin, corresponding to the Freie Arbeiter Union Deutschlands (Libertarian Workers Union of Germany).
In Argentina, he worked on Cipolletti fruit farms in the Rio Negro Province. Later, as a longshoreman, he made contact with rural workers and labor organizations. Wilckens, while covering the facts of the workers shot in Patagonia, became convinced that they deserved justice and the idea of ''proletarian'' justice took root in his mind. According to Osvaldo Bayer, Andres Vazquez Paredes would have been the one who gave him the bomb since Wilckens had no idea how a bomb was made. His training in Tolstoy, pacifism, and vegetarianism, also included more violent peers who could not endure the violence of the bosses and governments.
On January 27, 1923, Lieutenant Colonel Héctor Benigno Varela left his home around 7 AM. Seventeen wounds, thirteen produced by the bomb and four shots, were inflicted on Varela.
Wilckens was also injured while shielding 10-year-old María Antonia Pelazzo, who crossed between them. The wounds forced him to remain until police arrived. In a letter written on May 2, 1923, Wilckens wrote his reasons for the event:
On June 15, 1923, Kurt Wilckens was killed in prison by Ernesto Pérez Millán Temperley, a member of the Liga Patriótica Argentina. Two years later, on November 9, 1925, Pérez Millán Temperley died after an attack from another inmate, Esteban Lucich, who acted on orders from the Russian anarchist Boris Wladimirovich.

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「Kurt Gustav Wilckens」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.