Rudolf A. Haunschmied Explained

Rudolf Anton Haunschmied (born 1966) is an Austrian author and local historian.

Life and achievements

Rudolf A. Haunschmied grew up and lived in Sankt Georgen an der Gusen, Austria. Even as a youngster, before his education as a mechanical engineer, he researched the "lost" history of the St. Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen area with its four Nazi concentration camps and focused as a pioneer on the history of the KZ Gusen I & II & III Concentration Camps.[1]

In 1986 he became a founding member of Arbeitskreis für Heimat-, Denkmal- und Geschichtspflege St. Georgen (AHDG) which gave the Gusen Memorial Committee (GMC) a home until January 2008, when he was again among the founding members of the then independent Gusen Memorial Committee. In 1989 he published the first history of the St. Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen complex upon request of the municipality of his hometown St. Georgen/Gusen.[2] He led excursions to the remnants of the camps[3] as well as study circles for years and advises students and researchers.

With Pierre Serge Choumoff of Amicale Francaise de Mauthausen (Paris) and others he organized the first local-international commemoration at Gusen in 1995 and founded the Mauthausen-Gusen Info-Pages in 1997.[4]

In 1996 and 1997 he founded two city-partnerships and was member of Reforminitiative Mauthausen (Federal Initiative to Modernize the Mauthausen Memorial) at the Austrian Federal Ministry of the Interior in 2000 that led to the opening of a new visitors´ center at KZ Gusen in 2004.[5]

In 2007 he contributed to Audiowalk Gusen[6] and to many publications and documentations on radio and TV in the last 25 years. In 2009 he requested successfully the opening of the "Bergkristall" tunnels of KZ Gusen II for the public and an adequate monumental protection of KZ Gusen I & II remnants. From 2019 to 2021, Rudolf Haunschmied contributed as scientific advisor to the creation of virtual guides for the Mauthausen Memorial on the former Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp complex and the associated inter-spaces.[7]

He resides in Traun.

Key Publications

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://diepresse.com/home/diverse/zeichen/57155/Neue-Heimat-im-KZ Neue Heimat im KZ
  2. Zum Gedenken 1938 bis 1945 , in: 300 Jahre erweitertes Marktrecht St. Georgen/Gusen, St. Georgen an der Gusen, 1989
  3. Geschichtespaziergang in St. Georgen und Gusen, Volkshochschule der Arbeiterkammer, St. Georgen/Gusen, 1993-2005
  4. http://www.gusen.org www.gusen.org
  5. http://www.gusen-memorial.at Gusen Memorial
  6. http://www.audiowalk.gusen.org Audiowalk Gusen
  7. https://mm-tours.org/en/20 Virtual Guides Mauthausen, Gusen