Batschka Donauschwaben
Spokesperson
"Peter
Max
Wagner"
Founder of Hilfswerk der Donauschwaben
Contributed by
Richard Wagner
Published at DVHH.org 2004 by Jody McKim Pharr
The Pannonian area
between the Danube and the Theiß Rivers also stands for the many people
and the many folds, that means accepting human rights, conceding the
rights for minorities. But these minority rights were not accepted
at the time and they are also not accepted in this stretch of land
today, Mayor Jakob remembered of the Kosovo War. And so it goes not only
for the beauty of the Pannonian area, but also for the question of human
rights and the rights of minorities. In this context he saw Peter
Max Wagner as a model that is still current today. Please think of
the stream of refugees from Kosovo or from Bosnia a few years ago and
the wave of readiness to help which came in for it.
In the case of the Donauschwaben it appears that the end of the cold
war has served in a small way to also take advantage in a greater
European escape and expulsion in a common fateful dimension.
For this reason Peter Jakob said, one should understand the Pannonian Fountain as well as Peter Max Square serve as reminders of
responsible politics, which we have, and we have for the problems
when responsible politics fails.
The district chairman of the association of North Württemberg,
Lorenz Baron, who welcomed the guests first, showed there that Peter
Max Wagner, whose square together with the Pannonia memorial were
consecrated on the 29th of August, 1964, would be 100 years old this
past year.
Hans Supritz, the chairman of the Donauschwaben team in
Baden-Württemberg recognized the works of Peter Max Wagner 53 years
ago as the disappearance of his people in Yugoslavia was very near.
In this time of greatest need and despair for the Donauschwaben,
Wagner thought of his Pannonian origins (He came from Sekitsch in
the Batschka), and he established Hilfswerk der Donauschwaben (Aid
for the Donauschwaben) in Ridgewood, Brooklyn with countrymen and
friends in May 1946. Thousands of help packets found their way
to the hungry children, mothers, and grandparents in the
concentration camps, which the Tito partisans had erected for the
ethnic cleansing of the German minority in the Pannonian region.
Bringing families together was organized and made possible the
immigration of tens of thousands of Donauschwaben to the USA.
Peter Max Wagner and his friends found people in the highest
government circles in Washington at the time to listen to them about
their humanitarian matters, but also in the American financial world
that the chairman knew. So support from US politics for the
assistance work can be developed in peace and do its work.
Many of the Donauschwaben living throughout the world forgot about Peter
Max Wagner after the times of greatest need. But the ones who did
not forget him wanted to honor his work through a memorial and a square
named after him, among them were men such as Lorenz Baron, Julius Kiltz,
Franz Hoff, Michael Diener, and Franz Weber. They wanted to see to
it that the generous humanitarian achievement of Peter Max Wagner and
his friends lived on in memory, just as now, where people in our former
homeland are again being driven out because of their nationality and
their beliefs.