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Julius Mader (7 October 1928 – 17 May 2000), also known by his alias Thomas Bergner, was a German jurist, political scientist, journalist and writer.

Julius Mader
Born(1928-10-07)7 October 1928
Radejčín, Czechoslovakia
Died17 May 2000(2000-05-17) (aged 71)
Berlin, Germany
OccupationWriter, Journalist & Lawyer
Political partySED

Life


Mader came from a lower-middle-class family.[1] Along with millions of other ethnic Germans, his family was forcibly relocated in 1945,[1] ending up in the Soviet occupation zone of what remained of Germany, a region which was in the process of becoming the German Democratic Republic.

Mader attended business college, followed by an apprenticeship as a draper. Then he began to study in the fields of government and law, economics and journalism at the Universities of Berlin and Jena, the Institute of Internal Trade in Leipzig and the German Academy for Political and Legal Science in Potsdam-Babelsberg .

In 1955, he completed a Master of Business Travelers. A member of the SED, from 1958 to 59 he was deputy managing editor at a magazine. From 1960, he began working as a freelance writer. From 1962, he served as officer on special assignment with the code name "Faingold" for the Stasi. In 1965, he received his doctorate from the "Walter Ulbricht" Law Academy ("Deutsche Akademie für Staats- und Rechtswissenschaft "Walter Ulbricht"") at Potsdam-Babelsberg for a dissertation on "The secret services of the German Federal Republic and their subversive activities against the German Democratic Republic". In 1970, he received his habilitation (higher academic qualification) from the Humboldt University of Berlin, for a piece of work co-authored with Albert Charisius on the development, system and operation of the imperialist German secret service.

Mader's military and political writings covered the period of the Nazi era and the Cold War. His books have a circulation of several million, including translations of some books into other.

In his writings, was a special feature for the print media of the GDR. For the book Who's Who in the CIA, Mader had neither a publisher's statement nor a license number. He listed himself as an editor with the address of Dr. Julius Mader, 1066 Berlin W 66, Mauerstr. 66. Two detachable cards were included in the book, one was to send him corrections and additions, the other was to send him more names of CIA agents and other intelligence officials.


Works



References


  1. Helmut Müller-Enbergs; Bernd-Rainer Barth. "Mader, Julius * 7.10.1928, † 17.5.2000 Schriftsteller". Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur: Biographische Datenbanken. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  2. Boris Chertok, Rockets and People, Volume 3: Hot Days of the Cold War, NASA History Series, 2009, (p.278, footnote 62)



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