- Source: Hans-Joachim Hoffmann
- Hans-Joachim Marseille
- Orde Baru (Nazisme)
- Hans Oster
- Hans Morgenthau
- Hans Fischer
- Operasi Walküre
- Hajo Herrmann
- Roald Hoffmann
- Joachim Frank
- Heinz Linge
- Hans-Joachim Hoffmann
- Joachim Hoffmann
- Marx-Engels Forum
- Hans-Joachim Lang
- Gewandhaus
- Hans-Joachim Marseille
- Hoffmann
- Heinrich Hoffmann (photographer)
- Alliance 90/The Greens
- Hans Morgenthau
Hans-Joachim "Jochen" Hoffmann (10 October 1929 – 19 July 1994) was a German politician and party functionary of the Socialist Unity Party (SED).
Hoffmann rose to become an influential culture policymaker during Erich Honecker's rule over East Germany, briefly serving as head of the SED Central Committee Culture Department and later minister of culture before having to step down during the Peaceful Revolution.
Described as "Artists' advocate", Hoffmann was considered a liberal figure.
Life and career
= Early career
=Hoffmann trained as an electrical technician and worked in the field from 1945 to 1948.
In 1945, he joined the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) and, following the forced merger of the SPD and KPD in 1946, became a member of the Socialist Unity Party (SED). From 1948 onward, he held various positions in the Free German Youth (FDJ) and the SED at district and Bezirk levels, including first secretary of the Leipzig FDJ, secretary for agitation and propaganda of the Bezirk Leipzig FDJ and of the Leipzig SED.
From 1953 to 1955, he attended the SED's "Karl Marx" Party Academy in Berlin, graduating with a diploma in social sciences (Dipl.-Ges.-Wiss.). Afterward, in 1960, he was made first secretary of the SED in the mostly rural Bezirk Leipzig district of Eilenburg, joining the SED's nomenklatura.
Hoffmann rose to the Bezirk Leipzig SED Secretariat in 1966, first serving as secretary for agitation and propaganda, before being made secretary for science, education and culture in 1969. He was finally promoted to second in command in November 1970, when Second Secretary Horst Schumann acceded to lead the Bezirk Leipzig SED following Paul Fröhlich's death.
= SED Central Committee and Minister of Culture
=On 2 November 1971, the SED Central Committee appointed Hoffmann head of the Central Committee Culture Department.
When the 6th session of the Central Committee of the SED in May 1972 abandoned the dogmatic cultural postulates of the notorious 11th Plenum of 1965, Hoffmann argued for a broad concept of culture and a realistic interpretation of conflict in art.
Not even two years later, he succeeded Klaus Gysi, who was made the GDR's first ambassador to Italy, as minister of culture.
He additionally become a full member of the SED Central Committee in May 1976 (IX. Party Congress) and of the Volkskammer in October the same year, nominally representing northeast Dresden. The following year, Hoffmann joined the Presidium of the Cultural Association of the GDR.
As Minister, Hoffmann was considered one of the "liberals" in government. His tenure was marked by the exodus of numerous artists from the GDR, including the expatriation of Wolf Biermann, which he was besmirched by. His strategy of mediating between artists and a one-dimensional political system led to ongoing conflicts over the virtually nonexistent freedom of expression. Hoffmann enjoyed a good reputation among artists, later being described as "Artists' advocate".
Hoffmann maintained friendly relations with figures such as Austrian politician Fred Sinowatz and Johannes Rau, then Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia. He was one of Europe's longest-serving Ministers of Culture.
In 1974, he was awarded the Patriotic Order of Merit.
= Peaceful Revolution
=During the Gorbachev era, Hoffmann publicly supported Perestroika in an September 1988 interview with the West German theater journal Theater heute, using the title quote, "The safest course is change." In the interview, Hoffmann not only expressed sympathy for Gorbachev's political approach, but also refused to call the theatre people who had left the GDR traitors.
This interview led to him being summoned by Kurt Hager, the Central Committee Secretary responsible for culture and member of the Politburo, who tried to pressure him to resign. After the meeting, Hoffmann suffered his first heart attack.
Hoffmann however refused to be intimidated, despite being in poor health. From that point on, his phone calls were deliberately monitored, yet he demonstratively continued to defend GDR artists.
Hoffmann also opposed the ban on the Soviet magazine Sputnik and a number of Soviet films.
During the Peaceful Revolution, on 7 November 1989, he resigned alongside rest of the government led by Willi Stoph.
= Death
=With his self-taught computer skills, he trained former officials in the IT skills they needed for new tasks in the social sector.
When the job was eliminated, a feeling of emptiness ate into his psyche. In 1994, Hoffmann died of his second heart attack and was buried in the Grünau Forest Cemetery.
In 2023, the German Literature Archive in Marbach acquired a collection of letters from Hoffmann's estate.
These letters, dating back to 1983, include responses from notable or prominent GDR residents to Hoffmann's inquiry about their reading habits and preferences. The correspondents also mentioned books they would like to read if they were available in the GDR. Contributors included Waldemar Cierpinski, Peter Hacks, Sigmund Jähn, Gret Palucca, Werner Tübke, and Christa Wolf.
References
Media related to Hans-Joachim Hoffmann at Wikimedia Commons