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Albert Merz
German who was executed for refusing to bear arms in the Second World War

Albert Merz

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German who was executed for refusing to bear arms in the Second World War
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Albert Merz
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Albert Merz (d. April 3, 1941) was a German Christadelphian who was executed for refusing to bear arms in the Second World War.

Albert Merz belonged to the Merz family of southern Germany who were leading members of what was then known as the Urchristen ("Primitive Christian"), which was the German name for the Christadelphian church in Germany. The Urchristen church had its German origins due in part to the efforts of a Stuttgart tradesman Albert Maier who had travelled to the United States before World War 1 and had been introduced to Christadelphian beliefs while residing in America. Albert Maier subsequently joined the Christadelphian church there and then returned to Germany to the Stuttgart area before start of hostilities. His efforts to introduce others to Christadelphian teaching was instrumental in establishing the Christadelphian church in southern Germany.

After the Nazi rise to power in 1933, the Christadelphian church, or as they were then known - the Urchristen, attracted particular attention for their pro-Jewish views and their belief that God would restore the Jews to a national homeland in Israel.

The first member of the Merz family to be incarcerated was August Merz who was condemned to a concentration camp for religious and political prisoners in 1938, where he survived six years until the camp was liberated in 1945. The next was Rudolf Merz who was committed to an insane asylum for his pacifist views. He too survived.

Albert Merz was called up for military service in early 1941, but immediately refused on the basis of conscientious objection as his brothers had done before him. He was sent to the Brandenburg-Görden Prison where he was executed on April 3, 1941.

He wrote a farewell letter to his parents and siblings containing the poem:

"What you are, be it all totally
not only the blossoms, the bright,
but also the leaf, the simple,
has significance for the crown."

His reference to a "crown" (German Kranz, laurel crown) is probably an allusion to Christadelphian belief in resurrection and 2 Timothy 4:8.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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