KURT SCHUMACHER.
Kurt Schumacher, alias BEK.

Was an agent of Schulze-Boysen's group in Berlin, working in close personal association with Schulze-Boysen himself.

In November 1941 Gurevich, during a visit to Berlin, visited Schumacher and/or his wife Elisabeth and arranged with them a courier service to carry Schulze-Boysen's material to Brussels for onward WT transmission to Moscow.

In August 1942 he received and sheltered the WT operator Hössler, parachuted from the USSR to supply a WT link for Schulze-Boysen.


Personal particulars.

Nationality: German.

Occupation: Sculpter

Relatives: Married to Elisabeth, nee Hohenemser.



History.

A Communist of long standing, who had been held in a German concentration camp before the war for several years by the Nazis.

Was called up into the army during the war.

Was arrested in the autumn of 1942 and ultimately executed.



Source: KV3/351.





Kurt Schumacher (6 May 1905 - 22 December 1942) was a German sculptor and Communist member of the German Resistance fighter who was a member of the anti-fascist resistance group that was later called the Red Orchestra by the Gestapo. He was married to the painter and graphic designer, Elisabeth Schumacher who was also an anti-fascist.

Schumacher was born in Stuttgart. As a 14-year-old, he moved to Berlin to begin an apprenticeship with a wood carver. He first worked with Berlin wood carver Alfred Böttcher. Subsequently, he worked and studied with Ludwig Gies, first at the School of the Museum of Decorative Arts (Unterrichtsanstalt des Kunstgewerbemuseums), then in 1935, as a master student at the Vereinigten Staatsschulen für Freie und Angewandte Kunst (VSS), the State School of Free and Applied Arts in Berlin.

Beginning in 1932, he worked at the journal, Der Gegner ("The Adversary"), where he met Harro Schulze-Boysen. Schulze-Boysen and his wife, Libertas introduced him to Hans Coppi, Heinrich Scheel and Eugen Neutert. Political discussions strengthened their growing resistance to Nazism.

The atelier at the VSS became a "conspiracy bulletin board," where people from the Resistance were able to associate under the guise of working as models. In 1934, Schumacher married painter and graphic artist, Elisabeth Hohenemser.

In 1939, Schumacher helped an escapee from Aschendorf-Moor Prison, Rudolf Bergtel, flee to Switzerland. In 1941, he was drafted to serve in the Wehrmacht, where, risking great danger, he published a leaflet called "Open Letter to the Eastern Front," in 1942. He also gave shelter to a parachute agent, Albert Hößler, who arrived from Moscow in early August 1942.

In protest of the National Socialist attack on Gies, Schumacher resigned his privileged position as master student. (The designation meant he had his "own" atelier - albeit shared - with Fritz Cremer.)

During Schumacher's arrest on 12 September 1942, the Gestapo destroyed his studio in Berlin, including a large amount of his artwork. Surviving works by Schumacher include two medallions he designed on the Schleusenbrücke (bridge) in Berlin, a basalt head and a printing block for the illustration, "Dance of the Dead" (Totentanz) at the German Historical Museum (Deutsche Historische Museum).

There is a 1941 painting by Carl Baumann called "Rote Kapelle Berlin" at the Academy of the Arts (Akademie der Künste), where Schumacher's Resistance group often met.

On 19 December 1942 Schumacher was sentenced to death by the Reichskriegsgericht. Three days later, on 22 December 1942, he was hanged at Plötzensee Prison, just forty-five minutes before his wife was executed.



Source: Wikipedia.