L’Église luthérienne d’Alsace entre 1940 et 1944 sous la présidence de Carl Maurer, un havre d’accueil de pasteurs persécutés en Allemagne ?
Summary
In view of a symposium announced for November 16-17, 2023, under the dual auspices of the University of Strasbourg (Université de Strasbourg) and the Union of Protestant Churches of Alsace and Lorraine (Union des Églises Protestantes d’Alsace et de Lorraine – UÉPAL) on “Protestantism and Protestant pastors in the years 1940 to 1945”, this paper attempts to shed light on one aspect of the work of Carl Maurer, the church president at the time.
The biographical sketches of the nineteen pastors recruited during those dramatic years, who came from Germany or worked there, show how Carl Maurer, who had been appointed by the German authorities but sought to gain the trust of the pastoral crops, specifically took in people who almost without exception had conflicts with the National Socialist authorities, and often clearly belonged to the Confessing Church.
In the appendix, the memorandum (“Mémoire”) is published for the first time, which Maurer in 1945 passed on to his successor Robert Hoepffner, whose presidency (1938-1954) had been interrupted by the German occupation.