Heinrich Lübke
Heinrich Lübke (14 October 1894 – 6 April 1972) was a German civil engineer and Christian Democratic Union (CDU) politician who served as the second President of the Federal Republic of Germany from 13 September 1959 to 1 July 1969.[1][2] Born in Enkhausen in the Sauerland region, Lübke studied engineering after serving in World War I and later entered politics with the Centre Party before joining the CDU postwar.[1] He held the position of Federal Minister of Food, Agriculture, and Forestry from 1953 to 1957 under Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, focusing on agricultural reconstruction and policy amid postwar economic recovery.[1] As president, Lübke emphasized ceremonial duties, international relations, and development aid initiatives, including visits to African nations to promote economic cooperation as a means to combat poverty and hunger.[3] Lübke's tenure was overshadowed by controversies arising from his activities during the Nazi era, where as a manager in his family's construction firm, Lübke & Co., he contributed technically to building military facilities such as barracks and the Peenemünde rocket complex, projects that employed forced laborers.[4][5] In the mid-1960s, East German authorities publicized documents alleging his direct oversight of forced labor camps, though subsequent analysis of archival evidence indicated that some incriminating sketches bearing his signature had been altered by Communist propagandists to heighten implication, while confirming his firm's utilization of coerced workers under regime directives.[6] Lübke, who was not a Nazi Party member until briefly in 1945 under duress, denied personal culpability for exploitation, attributing decisions to higher authorities like Fritz Todt, and maintained his role was limited to engineering oversight without knowledge of labor conditions.[7] These revelations fueled public protests, particularly from student movements in 1966–1968, challenging the adequacy of denazification processes in West German leadership, yet Lübke completed his second term despite calls for resignation.[8]