PHOTO: © Berliner Compagnie

ABER NICHT KÜSSEN IST AUCH KONTRAPRODUKTIV. Teil 4 Rosa Luxemburg in der Novemberrevolution (9. November 1918 - 15. Januar 1919)

In the organizer's words:

The world war is over, the Kaiser has been driven out, parliamentary democracy has been won - now the revolution must continue. After Rosa is released from prison in Breslau and arrives in Berlin on 10 November, she throws herself into the revolutionary process with verve; she campaigns for the power of the workers' and soldiers' councils and, as editor-in-chief of the Rote Fahne, criticizes the new SPD and USPD government with extreme severity. More clairvoyant than almost anyone else, she saw how the revolution was being betrayed. For her, however, the masses remain the decisive authority for the realization of socialism, for a revolution of society without terror. The fourth part of our project shows something like the proving of the great revolutionary's lifelong basic ideas in practice. The murder of Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, however, was the prelude to the thousands of murders in the following months of the Noske era and to the millions of murders in the following decades of the Hitler era. He was the starting signal for all the others. It is still unconfessed, still unpunished and still unrepentant. That is why it still cries out to the German sky.

This content has been machine translated.

Location

Berliner Compagnie, Muskauerstr. 20 A Muskauer Straße 20 10997 Berlin

Get the Rausgegangen App!

Be always up-to-date with the latest events in Berlin!