Margrit_Schiller

Margrit Schiller

Margrit Schiller

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Margrit Schiller (born March 1948) is a German far-left activist formerly associated with the Socialist Patients' Collective (SPK) and then the Red Army Faction (RAF). She was released from prison in 1979 and has written two autobiographical books.

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Early life

Schiller was born in 1948.[1] She joined the Socialist Patients' Collective (SPK) and after it dissolved, she became a member of the Red Army Faction (RAF).[2]:229,230

Militant leftist career

On 25 September 1971, two policemen approached a wrongly parked vehicle near to the Freiburg-Basel autobahn. Schiller and Holger Meins emerged and started firing guns at them.[2]:232 A month later Schiller left a train station in Hamburg around 10pm and realised she was being trailed by police. She met her RAF comrades Irmgard Moeller and Gerhard Müller, then a shootout occurred, with one of the policemen being shot dead. Schiller was arrested and later claimed that it was Müller that was responsible for the murder.[2]:234,235 She was re-arrested alongside other RAF members Kay Werner-Allnach and Wolfgang Beer on 4 February 1974 after police carried out raids in Hamburg and Frankfurt. She received a five year sentence and was released from prison in 1979.[1] Whilst in prison Schiller took part in the RAF hunger strikes.[1]

Later life

Schiller moved to Cuba in 1985 and then Uruguay in 1993. She described her experiences abroad in the 2011 memoir So siehst du gar nicht aus!.[3][1]

Selected works

  • Schiller, Margrit; Munro, Lindsay (2008). Remembering the armed struggle: Life in Baader-Meinhof. London: Zidane. ISBN 978-0955485046.
  • Schiller, Margrit (2011). So siehst du gar nicht aus! Eine autobiografische Erzählung über Exil in Kuba und Uruguay. Berlin: Assoziation A. ISBN 978-3-86241-408-6.

References

  1. Smith, J.; Moncourt, André (2009). The Red Army Faction, a Documentary History: Volume 1: Projectiles for the People (eBook ed.). PM Press. ISBN 978-1-60486-029-0.
  2. Becker, Jillian (1977). Hitler's children: the story of the Baader-Meinhof terrorist gang (1st ed.). Philadelphia: Lippincott. ISBN 9780397011537.
  3. "Assoziation A – Margrit Schiller". Assoziation-a.de. Retrieved 7 November 2012.

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