Roman Karl Scholz
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16 January 1912
Augustinian canon regular
Teacher
Roman Scholz | |
|---|---|
| Born | Karl Scholz 16 January 1912 |
| Died | 10 May 1944 |
| Alma mater | Klosterneuburg Monastery |
| Occupation(s) | Author Augustinian canon regular Teacher |
| Known for | Resistance activism and execution |
| Parent | Josefa Scholz (mother) |
Roman Karl Scholz (16 January 1912 – 10 May 1944) was an Austrian author and Augustinian canon regular at Klosterneuburg. He became a resistance activist after attending a Nuremberg Rally in 1936. He was arrested in 1941 and executed in 1944.[1][2]
The illegitimate son of a textile worker, Josefa Scholz, Karl Scholz was born in Mährisch Schönberg (now Šumperk), a prosperous manufacturing town in the northern part of Moravia, in Austria-Hungary.[3] When he was six, Austria-Hungary was broken up and his home town was transferred to the new republic of Czechoslovakia. It remained overwhelmingly German in terms of language and ethnicity, but in a period of heightened nationalism, the growth of the Czech-speaking minority became a source of tension, and it was part of the regions which politicians were beginning to identify as the Sudetenland.
Scholz grew up with his grandparents, and attended the Gymnasium (secondary school) in his home town. As a schoolboy he joined a local Catholic youth group, becoming a group leader.[4] Sources relate that he wrote poems, loved nature and took an interest in politics.[3] He also "fell under the spell" of those advocating nationalist solutions to the Sudeten-German issue, which increasingly became identified with the idea that the Sudetenland should be transferred from Czechoslovakia to Germany in deference to the principle of self-determination, which had been proclaimed as a guiding principal for reconfiguring the political map by the victorious governments in 1918/19.
In 1930, he entered Klosterneuburg Monastery as a novice canon regular,[4] taking the "religious" additional name, "Roman".[3] He completed his probationary period and was ordained into the priesthood in 1936. Between 1936 and 1938, he was employed as a chaplain in the Heiligenstadt district of northern Vienna. In 1938, he started working as a teacher of religion at the Gymnasium in Klosterneuburg, and from 1939, he taught Christian Philosophy at the monastery's own school. He was also employed as a priest for the military centre in the town after war broke out at the end of the summer.[4]