General Federation of Free Employees explained
The General Federation of Free Employees (German: Allgemeiner freier Angestelltenbund, AfA-Bund) was an amalgamation of various socialist-oriented trade unions of technical and administrative employees in the Weimar Republic.
Member organizations encompassed groups as diverse as artists, theater workers, bank clerks, foremen, and technical employees and managers. It was founded in 1920 and was dissolved in on March 30, 1933, just before the newly empowered Nazi regime began crushing the Free Trade Unions. Throughout its existence, it was led by Siegfried Aufhäuser.[1]
Affiliates
The following unions were affiliated to the federation:[2]
- Central Union of Employees (ZdA)
- German Workers' Union (DWV)
- Union of Technical Staff and Officials (Butab)
- Polishing, Works and Shaft Masters' Unions
- General Association of German Bank Employees
- Co-operative of German Stage Members
- International Artists' Lodge (IAL)
- Union of German Ship Engineers
- Master Craftsmen's Association of the Shoe Industry
- German Choir and Dancers' Union
- German Union of Carriers
- Union of cutters, directors
- Union of German Captains and Helmsmen of Merchant Shipping and Deep Sea Fishing
- AfA Association of Polish Upper Silesia
References
- Christian Zentner, Friedemann Bedürftig (1991). The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich. Macmillan, New York.
- Web site: Angestelltengewerkschaften in Deutschland vor 1933 . Friedrich Ebert Stiftung . 12 June 2020.
External links