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Jochen Klepper
Jochen Klepper
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Joachim Georg Wilhelm Klepper (22 March 1903 – 11 December 1942) was a German Christian writer, poet and journalist.

Life

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Klepper was born in Beuthen an der Oder, (now Bytom Odrzański in Poland) on 22 March 1903.[1][2] He was the third child born to his mother Hedwig Klepper née Weidlich and his father, a Protestant pastor by the name of Georg Klepper. Klepper was the first born son to the couple and had four siblings. His older sisters were named Margot and Hildegard. His two younger brothers were named Erhard and Wilhelm.[2]

Suffering from severe asthma, he was schooled at home by his father, a Lutheran minister, until the age of 14. He then studied at the Gymnasium in Glogau. In 1922, he started studying theology at the University of Erlangen, before transferring to the University of Breslau a year later. He completed his degree and began doctoral studies, but in 1926 he abandoned this, instead working as a church publisher and later a journalist to support his family.[3] He held a sermon as a substitute to his ill father in 1927.[4]

In 1931, Klepper married the widow Johanna (Hanni) Stein, née Gerstel.[3][5] They moved to Berlin where he worked for the radio but was dismissed in 1933.[3]

Starting in December 1935, he wrote for Karl Ludwig Freiherr von und zu Guttenbergs journal Weiße Blätter [de] (White Papers).[6]

In December 1940, Klepper was drafted by the German Army — perhaps a bureaucratic mistake since citizens married to Jews were not to be drafted. His wife however had been baptised just prior to their church wedding in 1938. While Klepper did not see combat, he served in a supply unit for forces through Bulgaria, Poland and Soviet Union before being discharged in 1942 to tend to his wife.

Klepper's wife, Johanna, had two daughters from her previous mariage. The girls were called Brigitte and Renate. Brigitte, the older daughter, was sent to England. Renate was too young to emigrate and stayed behind.[1]

On 11 December 1942, after Adolf Eichmann refused visa for the couple's second daughter, the three of them committed suicide[3] by turning on a gas valve. Jochen wrote in his journal just before they died: "Tonight we die together. Over us stands in the last moments the image of the blessed Christ who surrounds us. With this view we end our lives."[7] After their death, his sister Hildegard gave the diary to the Allied trial[clarification needed] against Adolf Eichmann where it was used as evidence against him (Session 51).

Diary

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The book In the Shadow of Your Wings, appeared in 1956, contains a selection from the diaries of Klepper.[8]

Klepper wrote many hymns that became part of modern Protestant and Catholic hymnals, such as "Gott wohnt in einem Lichte" and the Advent hymn "Die Nacht ist vorgedrungen".

References

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from Grokipedia
Jochen Klepper was a German novelist, poet, and journalist known for his historical novel Der Vater and his deeply religious writings that reflected his Christian faith amid personal and political turmoil. Born on 22 March 1903 in Beuthen an der Oder to a Lutheran pastor's family, he studied theology before embarking on a career in journalism in Breslau, where he met and later married Johanna Stein, a Jewish widow with two daughters, in 1931. The couple and their family relocated to Berlin in 1932, settling initially in the Südende district, where Klepper worked for radio broadcasters and publishing houses including Ullstein. He published his first novel, Der Kahn der fröhlichen Leute, around this time and began keeping a detailed diary that chronicled his life and thoughts. His most acclaimed work, the historical novel Der Vater (1937), centered on Frederick William I of Prussia and achieved unexpected commercial success, with 100,000 copies sold by the end of the war. As the Nazi regime intensified its persecution of Jews, Klepper's marriage to a Jewish woman placed him and his family under increasing threat, forcing them to move to Nikolassee in 1939 after one stepdaughter escaped to England. His diary entries increasingly reflected on themes of suffering, faith, and suicide as conditions worsened. On 11 December 1942, facing the imminent deportation of his wife and remaining stepdaughter, Klepper, Johanna Klepper, and Renate Stein took their own lives by gas in their home. Klepper's posthumously published diary, Unter dem Schatten deiner Flügel (1956), edited from his writings spanning 1932 to 1942, remains a significant document of his inner life, faith, and the impact of Nazi policies on a Christian family. His works continue to be remembered for their blend of historical insight, spiritual depth, and testimony to resistance through personal integrity.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Jochen Klepper was born Joachim Georg Wilhelm Klepper on March 22, 1903, in Beuthen an der Oder, Province of Silesia, Germany (now Bytom Odrzański, Poland). He was the third child and first son of Pastor Georg Klepper, a Lutheran minister serving as the second clergyman in the community, and grew up in a Protestant parsonage environment that profoundly shaped his early religious worldview. From his third year onward, Klepper suffered from severe asthma, experiencing life-threatening attacks that made him a frail and sickly child. Due to this chronic health condition, his parents did not send him to regular school initially; instead, he received private home instruction from his father until his fifteenth year. This home schooling by his Lutheran minister father reinforced the strong Protestant influences in his upbringing, laying the foundation for his later theological interests. His mother, Hedwig Klepper, provided devoted emotional care amid his health struggles and the tensions within the household, while the family maintained a comfortable lifestyle supported by inherited wealth. The religious atmosphere of the parsonage, marked by his father's pastoral role and Herrnhuter piety, remained a defining element of Klepper's formative years.

Theological Studies

Jochen Klepper attended the Gymnasium in Glogau starting around the age of 14, completing his secondary education before pursuing higher studies. Influenced by his Protestant family background as the son of a pastor, he chose to follow a path in theology. In the summer of 1922, he began studying Protestant theology at the University of Erlangen. The following year, in the summer of 1923, he transferred to the University of Breslau, where he continued his studies under professors including the New Testament scholar Ernst Lohmeyer. Klepper pursued theological studies and began doctoral studies in church history. In 1926, he abandoned his studies to pursue a career in journalism and publishing, primarily for financial reasons to help support his family. In 1927, he delivered his only sermon, substituting for his gravely ill father from the pulpit.

Career

Journalism and Radio Employment

Jochen Klepper discontinued his doctoral studies in 1926 and began working for the Evangelischer Presseverband für Schlesien around 1927, where he produced daily devotions for radio broadcasts to support his family. From around 1927 onward, he worked as a journalist and radio editor in Silesia while also pursuing independent authorship. In 1931 or 1932, following his marriage the previous year, Klepper relocated with his family to Berlin, where he secured employment in radio as an editor and journalist, contributing to Protestant-oriented programming. He continued in this role until his dismissal in 1933. He faced increasing professional restrictions due to Nazi policies but contributed writings to journals including Weiße Blätter starting in December 1935.

Literary Works

Jochen Klepper's most significant literary achievement is the historical novel Der Vater, published in 1937, which portrays the life of Frederick William I of Prussia, known as the Soldier King, and his strained relationship with his son Frederick the Great. Through this work Klepper processed personal conflicts surrounding father-son dynamics, and it achieved great success upon release while remaining regarded as a worthwhile read. Klepper also produced a body of religious poems and hymns deeply rooted in Protestant faith and personal spiritual reflection. His collection Kyrie: Geistliche Lieder (1938) contains several of these texts, including the Advent hymn “Die Nacht ist vorgedrungen” (composed in 1937) and “Gott wohnt in einem Lichte,” both of which explore themes of divine presence, hope, and redemption. Other hymns such as “Ich liege, Herr, in deiner Hut” and “Der du die Zeit in Händen hast” similarly express trust in God's care and sovereignty. These works form a relatively small yet influential contribution to 20th-century German religious literature, with several hymns retained in modern Protestant and Catholic hymnals and some receiving English translations for broader use. Klepper's creative productivity declined during the Nazi years due to increasing professional restrictions and persecution.

Personal Life

Marriage and Family

Jochen Klepper married Johanna Stein (née Gerstel) on March 28, 1931, in a civil ceremony. Johanna, a widow from a respected Jewish family and thirteen years his senior, brought her two daughters from her previous marriage, Brigitte and Renate, into the family as his stepdaughters. The family relocated to Berlin, with Klepper moving there at the end of 1931 to pursue his literary work and Johanna and the daughters joining him in the autumn of 1932. They established a household rooted in Klepper's Protestant faith while including Jewish members through his wife and stepdaughters. Klepper's marriage to Johanna contributed to his dismissal from his radio broadcasting position in June 1933. In December 1938, Johanna was baptized into the Christian faith on her own initiative, an event that brought Klepper great joy and enabled the long-desired ecclesiastical blessing of their marriage.

Nazi Era Experiences

Professional Dismissal and Restrictions

Jochen Klepper's professional life was profoundly disrupted by Nazi racial policies due to his marriage to Johanna Stein, a Jewish widow, in 1931. In June 1933, shortly after the National Socialists came to power, he was dismissed from his position as literary editor at the Berlin Rundfunk, with his marriage to a Jewish woman cited as a primary reason. Some sources also note his prior SPD membership and contributions to the newspaper Vorwärts as contributing factors. Klepper subsequently obtained employment as an editor at the Ullstein-Verlag, but this position was terminated in autumn 1935 amid mounting restrictions on those associated with Jewish family members. As the husband of a Jewish woman, Klepper was treated as part of a "non-Aryan" family under Nazi legislation, resulting in escalating professional limitations. His exclusion from the Reichsschrifttumskammer in March 1937 imposed a near-total publication ban, allowing future work only under special permits and strict censorship. Despite these constraints, Klepper continued limited literary contributions to conservative journals such as Weiße Blätter from 1935 onward.

Family Persecution and Emigration Attempts

Jochen Klepper married Johanna Stein, a Jewish widow, on March 28, 1931, and his two stepdaughters, Brigitte and Renate, from her previous marriage entered the family. Under the Nuremberg Laws, Johanna and her daughters were classified as Jewish, exposing them to escalating Nazi persecution and the constant threat of deportation. The older stepdaughter Brigitte succeeded in emigrating to England in 1939, but Renate remained in Germany and faced severe restrictions, including compulsory labor and the requirement to wear the Jewish star. Klepper undertook persistent efforts to secure emigration for Renate, focusing particularly on Sweden as a destination. In early December 1942, Sweden unexpectedly granted Renate an entry permit, raising hopes for her escape. Reich Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick intervened personally and referred Klepper to Adolf Eichmann at the Reich Security Main Office for further assistance. Klepper met Eichmann on multiple occasions, but on December 10, 1942, Eichmann definitively denied the exit visa for Renate, blocking her emigration despite the Swedish approval and overriding Frick's support. These failed emigration attempts intensified the family's peril under the Nazi regime's intensifying measures against Jews in mixed marriages.

Military Service

Draft and Wartime Service

Jochen Klepper was drafted into the Wehrmacht in December 1940. He served in a supply unit and saw no combat during his time in the military. His service took him through Poland, the Balkans, and areas of the Soviet Union as part of his logistical duties. Klepper was discharged in October 1941 after being classified as "wehrunwürdig" (unworthy of military service) because of his marriage to a Jewish woman under Nazi racial policies.

Death

Suicide and Immediate Circumstances

On December 10, 1942, after Adolf Eichmann at the Reich Security Main Office denied an exit visa for Klepper's stepdaughter Renate despite Swedish approval for her entry, Klepper wrote his final diary entry acknowledging the family's decision to die together. In it, he stated: "Nachmittags die Verhandlung auf dem Sicherheitsdienst. Wir sterben nun – ach, auch das steht bei Gott – Wir gehen heute Nacht gemeinsam in den Tod. Über uns steht in den letzten Stunden das Bild des Segnenden Christus, der um uns ringt. In dessen Anblick endet unser Leben." That night, in their apartment on Teutonenstraße 23 in Berlin-Nikolassee, Jochen Klepper, his wife Johanna, and stepdaughter Renate took their lives by means of sleeping pills and gas. Their bodies were discovered the following morning, December 11, 1942. Excerpts from Klepper's diary describing the visa denial and its consequences were presented by prosecutor Yaacov Bar-Or during Session 51 of the Eichmann trial to illustrate Eichmann's direct role in refusing exit permissions to mixed families. The diary itself was preserved by Klepper's sister Hildegard Klepper.

Legacy

Diary and Posthumous Publications

Jochen Klepper's diary, titled Unter dem Schatten deiner Flügel (In the Shadow of Your Wings), comprises selections from his entries spanning 1932 to 1942. It was published posthumously in 1956 by Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, edited by his sister Hildegard Klepper. The work records Klepper's experiences of declining creative freedom under Nazi restrictions, the intensifying persecution of his Jewish wife and stepdaughter, and the circumstances of his final days. A revised edition appeared in 1997 from Brunnen Verlag. The diary stands as a significant primary historical source on personal and familial suffering during the Nazi era, with excerpts submitted as evidence during Session 51 of the Eichmann trial in 1961 to demonstrate Eichmann's role in denying emigration permits.

Hymns and Religious Contributions

Jochen Klepper's hymns represent a significant aspect of his religious contributions, expressing a deep Protestant faith shaped by Lutheran theology and sustained through personal adversity under the Nazi regime. His sacred texts often emphasize themes of divine grace triumphing over human sin and suffering, God's transcendent light penetrating darkness, and hopeful trust in redemption amid despair. These works, composed primarily in the late 1930s, continue to resonate in both Protestant and Catholic worship contexts. Two prominent hymns illustrate Klepper's religious vision. “Gott wohnt in einem Lichte,” written in 1938, draws on 1 Timothy 6:16 to affirm God's unapproachable holiness while highlighting His nearness to believers, the paradox of divine majesty and incarnational care, and the overcoming of fear through Christ's entry into human darkness. This text reflects Klepper's conviction that God's sovereignty provides assurance even in oppressive circumstances. It appears in the modern Protestant Evangelisches Gesangbuch (EG 379) and the Catholic Gotteslob (GL 429, 2013 edition). Another key work is the Advent hymn “Die Nacht ist vorgedrungen,” also composed in 1938, which proclaims the approaching day of salvation, comforts those weeping in the night, and calls for faith in the Christ child as redeemer from guilt and judgment. The text celebrates God's light dispelling ongoing darkness and invites believers to journey toward divine mercy. It is included in the Evangelisches Gesangbuch (EG 16 in several regional editions) and its English translation, “The night will soon be ending,” appears in the Lutheran Service Book (LSB 337). Klepper's hymns remain valued in contemporary Protestant and Catholic hymnals for their orthodox theology and poignant expression of faith under trial.

Posthumous Film and Television Adaptations

Jochen Klepper's novels have been adapted into film and television after his death in 1942. His novel Der Kahn der fröhlichen Leute served as the basis for the 1950 East German DEFA film of the same name, directed by Hans Heinrich. Klepper is credited as the author of the literary source for the screenplay. This black-and-white comedy, depicting life among barge operators on the Elbe River, premiered in February 1950. In 1980, the West German television movie Der Thronfolger was adapted from Klepper's novel Der Vater. Klepper is credited for the source material (novel "Der Vater"), with the teleplay written by Helmut Pigge and direction by Oswald Döpke. These adaptations reflect the continued interest in Klepper's prose works in postwar German cinema and television.

References

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