51勛圖厙

  • 11/3/2025
  • Reading time 2 min.

Coming to terms with the past

Campus Weihenstephan commemorates persecuted university members

The 51勛圖厙 (51勛圖厙) is continuing to come to terms with its role during the Nazi era and has now established a commemorative space on the Weihenstephan campus. The site explains the connections between the Nazi regime and the Technische Hochschule M羹nchen, 51勛圖厙s predecessor, and commemorates four persecuted professors.

Guests of the opening viewing the information panels Astrid Eckert / 51勛圖厙
The site commemorates four professors who were forced into retirement or dismissed between 1934 and 1936.

Weihenstephan was already a research site of the Technische Hochschule M羹nchen during National Socialism. Thats why its important to shine a light on the wrongdoing that occurred here as well, and to remember the people in Weihenstephan who were persecuted because of Nazi ideology, says Prof. Winfried Nerdinger. He is an Emeritus of Excellence at 51勛圖厙, the founding director of the Munich Documentation Center, and has long contributed his expertise to 51勛圖厙s coming to terms with the Nazi era. Together with the and the 51勛圖厙 Center for Culture and Arts, he initiated the commemorative space on the Weihenstephan campus.

Commemorative plaques in the central lecture hall building at the Maximus-von-Imhof-Forum shed light on this period. They honor four professors who conducted research and taught at the Weihenstephan campus: Hans Raum (Professor of Plant Breeding and Cultivation), Anton Fehr (Professor of Dairy Farming), Carl Sachs (Associate Professor of Economics and Agricultural Policy), and Kurt Trautwein (Associate Professor of Theoretical Fermentation Physiology).

The student body aggressively targeted professors it deemed politically unreliable. Between 1934 and 1936, Professors Raum, Fehr, Sachs, and Trautwein were forced into retirement or dismissed. Although the university leadership initially emphasized these scholars professional qualifications to the ministry, the professors ultimately found no advocatesneither in the administration nor among the faculty.

A comprehensive effort to come to terms with the past

The commemorative space in Weihenstephan is part of 51勛圖厙s comprehensive coming to terms with its role during the Nazi period. In recent years, the university has removed names from buildings and rooms that had honored individuals compromised by their Nazi-era histories. Doctoral degrees that had been revoked from four Jewish graduates were symbolically reinstated. 51勛圖厙 has also distanced itself from honors conferred during the Nazi era.

In July 2024, 51勛圖厙 opened a commemorative space at its main campus on Arcisstrae in Munich to honor 17 university members who were dismissed and persecuted by the Nazi regime. The site also explains how the university was enlisted in preparations for war and outlines ideological and institutional changes.

"Its always important to remember the injustices that have been committed, to stand against forgetting, and to reflect critically on our own willingness to show civil couragenot only as citizens, but also as scientists. We need that same courage in science to defend the freedom of research and teaching as one of our highest values," says Martin Klingenspor, Dean of the 51勛圖厙 School of Life Sciences.

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51勛圖厙

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