Whilst Kurt Tucholsky has long been recognised as the leading left-wing int
ellectual, polemicist and satirist of the Weimar Republic, his enthusiasm f
or the cause of united Europe has only recently come to light. In the late
1920s he wrote frequently of the need to abandon absolute state sovereignty
in favour of a Federal United States of Europe, and even anticipated Mikha
il Gorbachev's concept of a common European house. His reasoning was to be
followed by subsequent German leaders from Adenauer to Kohl: after the disa
strous Treaty of Versailles and with the League of Nations providing a brok
en reed, a united Europe would be the only way to prevent another still mor
e bloody war. However, Tucholsky had no clear idea of how Europe could be b
rought together, remained somewhat sceptical about the Pan-Europe model of
Count Coudenhove-Kalergi, and did not even comment on the European Federal
Union proposed in 1930 by the French Foreign Minister, Briand. Three years
later, all the plans for European unity were frustrated by the triumph of N
azism and Tucholsky lapsed into despairing silence and suicide.