Fasia Jansen | |
Birth Date: | 6 June 1929 |
Birth Place: | Hamburg, Weimar Republic |
Death Place: | Oberhausen, Germany |
Fasia Jansen (June 6, 1929 - December 29, 1997) was a German political singer-songwriter (Liedermacher) and peace activist.
Fasia Jansen was born in Hamburg; she was the illegitimate daughter of the German chambermaid Elli Jansen and the Liberian Consul General Momolu Massaquoi (1869-1938), grandfather of the journalist and writer Hans-Jürgen Massaquoi (1926-2013).[1] Although both grew up in close proximity to each other, they did not know each other personally.
She experienced bullying and discrimination at an early age, both because of her skin color and her illegitimate birth. Growing up in the working-class neighborhood of Rothenburgsort in Hamburg, Jansen went through the problems of being an obviously "non-Aryan" during the Nazi era. Her Josephine Baker-oriented hopes of making a living through music and dance were dashed for the time being when she was expelled from dance school at age 11. Three years later she was "conscripted into service" and had to work in a soup kitchen that also supplied satellite camps of the Neuengamme concentration camp near Hamburg.[2] [3] The fifteen-year-old Jansen experienced both the brutality of the SS and the desperation of the prisoners - experiences that had a decisive impact on her life. During this time, she contracted a heart condition from which she suffered for the rest of her life.
In the fledgling German Federal Republic, Jansen tried to come to terms with her experiences in the camp and to keep alive the memory of the dead and their ideals. She took up music again, first in a Hamburg choir, later also with her own songs. She moved to the Ruhr area and became involved in the political struggles of the time. She performed at numerous Easter marches for peace,[4] among others in 1966 together with Joan Baez, played at the major strikes in front of the factory gates of Krupp, Hoesch or Thyssen and at the UN World Women's Conference in Nairobi and performed at the . She received numerous penal orders for incitement of the people and resistance to state authority, but time and again she also received offers to sing pop songs and thus become commercially successful.
Fasia Jansen's estate was transferred to the Fritz Hüser Institute by the Fasia Jansen Foundation in May 2022.