Josef Julius Gerl (13 February 1912 – 24 July 1934) was an Austrian socialist and member of the Socialist Workers Youth (SAJ)

"Comrade Josef Gerl" a picture of Josef Gerl and Three Arrows in the backlground.
Picture of Josef Gerl with his last words before death

Life and political career

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Life until 1934

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Gerl's family originated from Bohemia and moved to Vienna during the Habsburg monarchy. Josef Gerl trained as a goldsmith; however, after completing his apprenticeship and the legally required retention period, he was dismissed. The economic crisis deprived him of any means of livelihood.[citation needed]

Gerl had been a member of the Socialist Workers Youth (SAJ) since 1929 and was active in the SAJ group named "Prater" in Vienna-Leopoldstadt.[citation needed]

February Uprising 1934

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In 1934, Gerl participated in the Austrian Civil War, fled to Czechoslovakia, and soon returned to Austria to continue the fight against Austrofascism.[citation needed]

Bomb attack

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On the evening of July 20, 1934, Gerl, together with hatmaker's assistant Rudolf Anzböck, carried out a bomb attack on a signal installation of the Donauuferbahn, which caused only minor damage.[citation needed]

Afterward, Gerl and Anzböck attempted to flee to Czechoslovakia but missed the last train by a few minutes. They spent the night of July 21, 1934, in a café near the East Station, and after it closed, they stayed outside. Around 4 a.m., police sergeant Ferdinand Forstner noticed the two in a park at Keplerplatz in Vienna-Favoriten and checked their identification papers. When Forstner attempted a body search, Gerl drew a pistol and fired twice at the officer, gravely injuring him (the 33-year-old Forstner succumbed to his injuries three weeks later).[1]

 
Death notice

Gerl and Anzböck were captured after a dramatic chase. During the subsequent police interrogation, they confessed to the bombing, which would have been difficult to prove otherwise.[citation needed]

Sentencing and Execution

Due to their confession of planning and carrying out a bomb attack, Gerl and Anzböck were brought before a court-martial. Summary court-martial procedures had been introduced on November 10, 1933, for certain offenses. On July 12, 1934, the government—responding to the numerous bomb attacks at the time, mostly carried out by illegal National Socialists – extended the jurisdiction of the courts-martial to include offenses related to explosives (bomb attacks and illegal possession of explosives).[2]

Death Sentence

The court-martial proceedings were conducted by a panel consisting of four judges and a prosecutor, with each case lasting no more than three days. If the verdict was unanimously guilty, the proceedings ended with a death sentence, which had to be carried out by hanging within three hours. No legal appeal was possible against the court-martial's decision; only a pardon from the Federal President Wilhelm Miklas could be granted.[citation needed]

During the court-martial proceedings, presided over by Senior Regional Court Counselor Dr. Alois Osio, Gerl stated that he "no longer firmly identified with Social Democracy" and sympathized with the National Socialists. However, this may have been a defensive claim, as Gerl had stated during the interrogation immediately after his arrest that the attack was intended to benefit Social Democracy by blaming it on the National Socialists.[citation needed]

As a result of the bomb attack, Gerl and Anzböck were sentenced to death by the court-martial on July 24, 1934. Anzböck was pardoned by the President, but Josef Gerl was hanged the same day.[citation needed]

 
Grave of Josef Gerl

Commemoration

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Josef Gerl is buried in the Urn Grove of the Simmering Fire Hall (Section 8, Ring 2, Group 2, Number 23).[citation needed]

In the Spanish Civil War, a company of the International Brigades composed of Austrians was named "Josef Gerl" in his honor.[citation needed]

In 1949, the municipal housing complex built in 1931 at Stromstraße 39–45 in the 20th district of Vienna (Brigittenau) was renamed "Josef Gerl-Hof" in his memory.[citation needed]

Further reading

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  • Brief biography of Josef Gerl in: Josef Fiala, Die Februarkämpfe 1934 in Wien Meidling und Liesing. Ein Bürgerkrieg, der keiner war. Dissertation, University of Vienna, 2012 (online), pp. 163–164.
  • The Idea is Higher than Life: A Book about Josef Gerl and His Friends. Published by the Socialist Youth Association for the German Territories of the Czechoslovak Republic. Karlsbad: Graphia, 1935.

References

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  1. ^ Bauer, Kurt (2014). Hitlers zweiter Putsch. Dollfuß, die Nazis und der 25. Juli 1934 [Hitler's Second Coup. Dollfuss, the Nazis, and July 25, 1934]. St. Pölten: Residenz. p. 27.
  2. ^ "Widerstand aus Begeisterung für Hitler und Stalin?" [Resistance from Enthusiasm for Hitler and Stalin?]. Der Standard. Retrieved 2024-08-16.