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Bruno Kreisky (1911 - 1990)
Bruno Kreisky stands undoubtedly as the most prominent
and influential politician to emerge in post-war
Austria. For some thirty years, he helped to shape
his country's politics and raise its status in
the world, first as Under
Secretary of State
(1953-1958), as Foreign Minister (1959-1966),
then as leader of the opposition Social Democratic
Party, and finally as Chancellor
from 1970 to 1983. During his long tenure of public
office, Austria achieved unprecedented levels
of prosperity, whilst he promoted
electoral, educational and legal reform
and weathered the occasional scandal. Kreisky
tried simultaneously to broaden and deepen democracy
in Austria and to intensify the dialogue with
the international community.
Bruno Kreisky was born in Vienna, Austria, on
January 22, 1911, into a middle class Jewish family.
Angered by the poverty and violence around him
in Austria between the Wars, Kreisky joined the
“Socialist Working Youth” (SAJ) when
he was 16. During the authoritarian Schuschnigg-Regime
he was arrested in 1935 and imprisoned for 1 ½
years. The Nazi regime put him back into a Gestapo
jail in March 1938 and forced him to immigrate
in September of that year to Sweden, where he
married Vera Fürth. Despite his efforts to
return to Austria in 1946 he was kept out of the
country as a diplomat in Sweden and returned home
only in 1951. Kreisky at that point started his
political career as advisor to the then President
Theodor Körner. Having been appointed Undersecretary
of State in the Foreign Affairs Department of
the Austrian Chancellery, he participated in the
decisive negotiations leading to the Austrian
State Treaty of 1955 and the Neutrality Law, ending
a ten year post-war period of four-power allied
administration of Austria.
His analytical mind and intelligence were much
appreciated by statesmen in East and West as well
as in the academic world, as were his deeply felt
humanism, integrity, untiring advocacy of tolerance
and social justice, and his earnest sense of responsibility.
These won him the trust and admiration of the
leading international figures of his era, including
Willy Brandt, Indira Ghandi, John F. Kennedy,
Charles de Gaulle, Anwar al-Sadat, Henry Kissinger
and François Mitterrand. His international
connections and his position as leader of a neutral
state allowed him to assume the role of honest
broker in international peace, human rights, and
development initiatives.
| While
heading the government from 1970 to 1983,
Bruno Kreisky strode the international stage
as an advocate
of Palestinian self-determination,
of European détente and of North-South
dialogue. He worked continuously towards realising
the Conference of Security and Cooperation
in Europe, and never gave up his interventions
in favour of suppressed opposition leaders
in Communist countries. As a result of such
activity, Kreisky was respected and praised
by every U.S. and Soviet administration from
Kennedy to Brezhnev, despite his support for
the containment of Soviet communism and sharp
critique of U.S. Cold War policies and arms
build-up under President Reagan. |
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In his late years he realized that the
world had completely changed and that Europe
would be recreated after the end
of the Cold War, and he was therefore emotionally
very sad not to be able to participate in
the shaping of a new era.
Bruno Kreisky died on 29 July 1990. In
the eulogy delivered at Bruno Kreisky’s
funeral, the German Statesman and Nobel
Prize recipient Willy Brandt remarked, “What
do we do with this, our debt of gratitude?
I believe that we discharge it by keeping
alive as much as possible of that
for which he strove.” This statement
is a powerful dictum for the future work
of the Bruno Kreisky Forum. (©
Oliver Rathkolb)
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