Background
Horst Salomon was born in Pillkallen, then a small market town in East Prussia still recovering from the destruction of the First World War. His father was an agricultural worker
Horst Salomon was born in Pillkallen, then a small market town in East Prussia still recovering from the destruction of the First World War. His father was an agricultural worker
He nevertheless attended the Gymnasium (school) in Allenstein.
His successful career in the German Democratic Republic was cut short by his early death. Salomon was regarded as a regime loyalist. When the war ended in May 1945, Salomon, by now aged 16, was one of the millions required to relocate, and he ended up in Thüringia, by now in the Soviet occupation zone, and which in October 1949 would become part of the Soviet sponsored German Democratic Republic.
He became active in the no longer illegal local Anti-Fascist committee, later becoming active in the newly recreated Free German Youth.
In 1951 he started working at the important Wismut Uranium mines. He worked underground for 4½ years as a hewer.
He was able to attend evening classes at the Mining School which enabled him to gain promotion, becoming a foreman and supervisor. His poem "Genosse Walter Ulbricht" ("Comrade Walter Ulbricht"), which eulogised the country"s leader and provided justification for what others saw as the gratuitously savage repression of the 1953 uprising, appeared in its original form in 1955.
lieutenant received wide coverage within East Germany.
Praising the leader in print became an important part of Salomon"s contribution. He also worked as an Informal collaborator (informer) for the Ministry for State Security from 1955, under the cover names "Ursel" and "Petrus". In 1958 he was sent to the „Johannes R. Becher“ Literature Institute (as it was then known) in Leipzig, where he was one of several of the country"s more promising youthful writers to be mentored by Doctor.Erna Barnick.
He returned to Wismut in 1961, although his role within the mining enterprise was now cultural and political.
From 1965 he lived in Gera and supported himself as a journalist and freelance author Horst Salomon came to prominence as a poet.
From 1962 he was working closely with the de:Großes Haus (Gera) Theatre in Gera, and it was here that his plays "Katzengold" (1964) and "Ein Lorbaß" (1967) had their original productions. "Ein Lorbaß", notably, was thereafter frequently revived in the East German theatres.
At the same time, being a trusted party member, he worked as a "political inspector", which involved ensuring compliance with the party line.
He was a member of the Mine rescue service, and in July 1955 a member of the rescue team at the worst mining accident in the history of uranium mining at "Shaft 250" in Niederschlema.