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The murder of Rosa Luxemburg

Rosa Luxemburg was executed a hundred years ago today. This is an excerpt from ‘The Murder of Rosa Luxemburg’ by Klaus Gietinger, translated by Loren Balhorn and published by Verso.

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15 January 2019

Revolutionary socialist Rosa Luxemburg was executed 100 years ago today. Born in Poland in 1871, she was a renowned Marxist, economist and anti-war activist.

This is an excerpt from ‘The Murder of Rosa Luxemburg’ by Klaus Gietinger, translated by Loren Balhorn and published by Verso.

Karl Liebknecht was led through the main entrance and lobby and up to the first floor of the Hotel Eden in Berlin at around 21:30.

Captain Waldemar Pabst had installed his headquarters here across two spacious rooms, the Little Hall, the former casino, and the Little Salon, where he carried out his duties. Liebknecht was led into the Little Salon and presented to Captain Pabst.

The news that the Spartacus leader had arrived created a pogrom-like mood among the hotel’s guests and the officers and men of the Garde-Kavallerie-Schützen-Division (GKSD) who were there.

According to the highly vivid account given by the murderers’ defence lawyer, Fritz Grünspach, a kind of excitement broke out that he called “German fever”, as quoted in Republik, a left-wing magazine of the time.

A collective thrill quivered through the luxury hotel. Liebknecht, fully aware of what lay before him, continued to identify himself to Pabst as Marcusson, but was betrayed by the initials on his clothing. Pabst moved to the Little Hall next door and engaged in consultations with his adjutant, Captain von Pflugk-Harttung; his deputy, Captain Rühle von Lilienstern, was probably also present.

It was decided to summon the naval squadron of Captain Lieutenant Pflugk-Harttung from its quarters on In den Zelten Street, in aid of Liebknecht’s further “treatment”. The captain drove there in an open NSU, the same automobile in which Liebknecht would later be taken away, and returned with his brother and four young officers. These were First Naval Lieutenant Ulrich von Ritgen, Naval Lieutenant Heinrich Stiege, Naval Lieutenant Bruno Schulze, and Naval Lieutenant Hermann W. Souchon. All of them were veritable giants, measuring up to 1.90 metres.

These “shock troops” in military uniform arrived at the Hotel 
Eden around 21:45. Liebknecht
 was taken out of the Little Salon 
by these men at around 22:45. A
 brief and intense political debate 
had allegedly taken place shortly beforehand. Liebknecht was then 
led down the steps to the hotel’s
 side exit, while guests and men in uniform shouted insults and spat at him.

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Soldiers lined the streets in front of the hotel, which was securely cordoned off. Liebknecht and his guards stepped into the car. Liebknecht sat in the back; Stiege was next to him, Kaleu Pflugk-Harttung in front of him, next to the driver, Peschel. Schulze stood on the right foot board, infantryman Friedrich on the left.

Lieutenant Liepmann, also an aide-de-camp to Pabst but not one of the naval officers, boarded the car as well. He regarded himself as the leader of the transport, since everyone but him was wearing squad coats, but was disabused of that notion by Pflugk-Harttung. Another uniformed man, infantryman Runge, who stood guard inside the front entrance to the right of the revolving door, also felt duped – for one Captain Petri, unaware of the “decisions” reached above him on the first floor, had bribed Runge out of fear that Liebknecht would leave the hotel alive.

Runge watched through the glass of the revolving door as Liebknecht was led through the side exit. He ran around the Hotel Eden together with the chauffeur Güttinger, reaching the automobile just as Liebknecht sat down between the two disguised officers. Runge struck him with the butt of his rifle. Hit hard, Liebknecht instinctively ducked the second blow. As he did so, blood sprayed onto Stiege’s trousers. Liebknecht cried: “I’m bleeding!” The automobile started up.

A man wearing a sailor’s cap and a pilot’s jacket, Von Rzewuski, jumped onto the automobile, punched Liebknecht in the face with his fist, and jumped back off. The officers only thought to take Liebknecht to the first-aid station after he had been murdered and they returned from the Tiergarten.

Shortly after 22:00, Rosa 
Luxemburg and Wilhelm Pieck 
arrived at the hotel and were led 
through the lobby, mobbed by frenzied hotel guests and uniformed men – Luxemburg was insulted as a “whore” – and brought to the first floor. Pieck was made to wait in a cramped nook between the rooms, under heavy guard, while Luxemburg was presented to Pabst in the Little Hall. At this time, Liebknecht was still next door in the Salon.

Pabst recalls their encounter: “Are you Frau Luxemburg? In response, she said: Please decide for yourself. Then I said, according to this picture it must be you. To this she countered: If you say so! I thus knew just as much as I had beforehand.” Shortly thereafter – Liebknecht had just been ushered out of the Little Salon – she was most likely brought in through the side door to that room. In front of Pabst, whose office it was, she mended the hem of her skirt, which had been damaged during the journey and read a bit of Goethe’s Faust.

Liebknecht was left at the first-aid station near the Berlin Zoo, as an unidentified dead body, at 23:15. The naval officers drove back to the hotel and delivered their report to Pabst in the Little Hall. Luxemburg was taken away at around 23:40. Retired First Lieutenant Vogel, who had been appointed to lead the transport, picked her up and led her through the lobby to the main entrance.

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As he had with Liebknecht (and again unbeknownst to Pabst), Runge lay in wait, determined to earn Captain Petri’s promised reward. He had even refused the change of guard at 23:00. Vogel let Luxemburg walk ahead of him through the propped-open revolving doors. Runge struck her violently with the butt of his rifle. Knocked unconscious, she fell backwards, losing a shoe and her handbag. The soldier Kurt Becker took it as a trophy. One of the guarding officers, Albrecht Freiherr von Wechmar (later a military advisor on Dieter Ertel’s television film about the murder), stole out of the same bag a letter from Clara Zetkin, which he would sell to the historian Hermann Weber for several hundred marks in 1969.

Lying on the ground, Luxemburg received a second blow from Runge. Only then did Vogel feel obliged to “intervene”. She was dragged to the car, “hauled in” and thrown onto the back seat as “blood streamed from her nose and mouth”.

Infantryman Max Weber sat down to her left, while to her right sat infantryman Willy Grantke. Infantryman Hermann Poppe stood on the left footboard. The driver, Hermann Janschkow, sat in front (the steering wheel was on the right side), and the front-seat passenger and co-driver was Richard Hall. Vogel also boarded the car. As the open-topped Priamus rolled down the driveway, Von Rzewuski again leaped forward and punched the unconscious Luxemburg twice in the face, before jumping off. The automobile headed towards the Cornelius Bridge. At the level of Nürnberger Straße, roughly forty metres from the hotel entrance, a shot was fired at close range, which “entered on the left side before the ear and exited on the other side slightly lower down”, leading to a “separation of the base of the skull” and a “severing of the lower jaw”.

Rosa Luxemburg was killed instantly. It was 23:45 on 15 January 1919.

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