Alois Pisnik Explained

Alois Pisnik
Office:First Secretary of the Socialist Unity Party
in Bezirk Magdeburg
Term Start:1 August 1952
Term End:11 February 1979
Successor:Kurt Tiedke
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Office1:Member of the Volkskammer
for Halberstadt, Wernigerode
Term Start1:3 December 1958
Term End1:5 April 1990
Predecessor1:multi-member district
Successor1:Constituency abolished
Birth Name:Alois Pisnik
Birth Date:8 September 1911
Death Place:Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany
Party:Socialist Unity Party
Otherparty:Communist Party of Germany

Communist Party of Austria

Social Democratic Workers' Party of Austria
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Alois Pisnik (8 September 1911 – 2 October 2004) was an Austrian-born East German politician.

Life and career

In his younger years, Pisnik was member of various social-democratic youth and trade union organizations. He joined the SDAPÖ in 1928. From 1926 to 1929 he finished an apprenticeship as a machinist. Subsequently, in 1933, after another three years of training, he received a qualification as an electrical engineer. In 1934 he participated in the Austrian Civil War, in the course of which he was arrested, but freed soon after. After the Anschluss, Pisnik was yet again arrested, this time by the Nazis, and consequently sentenced to 10 years prison.

After his liberation he soon became First Secretary of the SED district chapter in Magdeburg, an office he held until 1979. Concurrently, he was a member of the district parliament of Magdeburg from 1952 to 1958. Pisnik was known as one of the longest serving members of the SED Central Committee, having been part of it from 1950 to 1989. He was also a candidate of the SED Politburo from 1958 to 1963, a member of the People's Chamber from 1958 to 1990 and a member of the National Defense Council of East Germany from 1960 to 1979.[1]

References

  1. Web site: Alois Pisnik - Munzinger Biographie.