Gerhard Jahn | |
|---|---|
Gerhard Jahn in 1972 | |
| German Federal Minister of Justice | |
| In office 22 October 1969 – 7 May 1974 | |
| Preceded by | Horst Ehmke |
| Succeeded by | Hans-Jochen Vogel |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1927-09-10)10 September 1927 |
| Died | 20 October 1998(1998-10-20) (aged 71) |
| Nationality | |
| Political party | Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) |
| Alma mater | University of Marburg |
| Profession | Lawyer, politician |
Gerhard Jahn (10 September 1927 – 20 October 1998) was a German politician and a member of theSocial Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). He was Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Foreign Affairs from 1967 to 1969, andFederal Minister of Justice from 1969 to 1974.
Jahn was born on September 10, 1927, atKassel,Germany, to Ernst andLilli Jahn, a couple of medical practitioners. Together with four younger siblings, he stayed with his mother after his parents divorced in 1942. His mother, a German Jew, had been banned from her medical occupation since theNazi take-over, and lost her and the children's home during a bombing raid in 1943. The Nazis then subjected Lilli Jahn toforced labour, and sent her toAuschwitz in 1944, where she died in July after three months. After his mother was deported, Gerhard and his siblings lived with their father and his new wife.[1]
Gerhard Jahn studied at a grammar school (Humanistisches Gymnasium), before theSecond World War. During the war, he was drafted as an airforce auxiliary manning anti-aircraft guns in 1943–44, and later sent to theReichsarbeitsdienst. After the war, he worked in a job in the food office of the local town hall.[2]
After graduating from school withAbitur in 1947, he studied law at theUniversity of Marburg. In the same year, he joined theSocial Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), and became an active member while at the university.[1] He took multiple jobs to support himself.[2] In 1949, he was elected leader of the student movement of the SPD, theSozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund (SDS). Since 1950, he held the office of a secretary of the local SPD group Marburg-Frankenberg.[1] He graduated from Marburg University. In 1956 he qualified as a lawyer, and began practicing law.[2]

Jahn was elected to the Federal German parliament,Bundestag, in 1957, where he was a member until 1990.[1] He served on various parliamentary committees at the Bundestag. In 1960 he was elected to chair committee on restitution in the public service.Alfred Frenzel, who was Jahn's predecessor was exposed as aKGB spy. He represented the SPD in various legal cases.[2]
In addition to his federal offices, he was chairmen of the SPD-fraction of theMarburg town parliament since 1962.[1]
In 1963, while Jahn was a member of the parliamentary committee for defense, he involved himself in a scandal by handing over a confidential document to the press, which proved that the former minister for defense,Franz Josef Strauß, had knowingly made untrue statements.[1]
Jahn was Parliamentary State Secretary to Minister for Foreign AffairsWilly Brandt from 1967 to 1969. When Brandt becameChancellor of Germany in 1969, he selected Jahn asFederal Minister of Justice.[2] While in this position, he initiated reforms of the laws on marriage and divorce as well as onabortion. On the latter issue, Jahn favoured a modified legalising abortion in several exceptional cases - the so-calledIndikationsregelung, but his cabinet colleagues insisted on a general legalisation during the first trimester. ThisFristenregelung was passed by parliament but was later held up by the Constitutional Court, so that Jahn's position eventually prevailed.[1] Jahn decided to withdraw from the office when chancellor Brandt resigned in 1974.[2]
Jahn was founding chairman of the German-Israeli Society (Deutsch-Israelische Gesellschaft) in 1966,[3] and president of the German Lessee Union (Deutscher Mieterbund) from 1979 to 1995.[4]
After Jahn left his position of Minister of Justice, he continued to work in the parliamentary committees, and became the managing director of the SPD-fraction.[1] He served as West German representative to the United Nations Human Rights Commission twice (1975–77 and 1979–82).[2]
He was one of the signatories of the agreement to convene a convention for drafting aworld constitution.[5][6] As a result, for the first time in human history, aWorld Constituent Assembly convened to draft and adopt theConstitution for the Federation of Earth.[7]
Jahn died from cancer on 20 October 1998.[1]