Paul Spiegel was leader of the Central Council of Jews in Germany and the main spokesman of the German Jews.
Background
Paul Spiegel was born into a Westphalian family of cattle dealers, originating from the small town Versmold. His father was arrested and held in Buchenwald, Auschwitz, and Dachau, but survived to reunite with Spiegel and his mother in Warendorf after the war.
Career
He was widely praised for his leadership of the German Jewish community, which had grown from the remnants left by the Nazis into the third largest Jewish community in western Europe. After the Nazi rise to power, the family fled at first to Brussels. Spiegel survived the Holocaust in Flanders where he was hidden by a family of farmers.
Spiegel described these events in his book At home again? (Wieder zu Hause?).
In 1958, he began practical training as a journalist with the Allgemeine Jüdische Wochenzeitung, now the Judische Allgemeine, in Düsseldorf. He was also active as an editor at this newspaper until 1965, when he became editor of the Jewish Press Service and assistant to the secretary-general of the During the 1960s he worked for various other newspapers as well.
On 11 February 2004, Paul Spiegel received an honorary doctorate from the Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf, and was made an honorary citizen of Warendorf, the city of his birth. Since 1986 he ran an agency for artists and media in Düsseldorf.
Equal status for Jewish community in Germany
On the 58th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz in 2003, Spiegel and Chancellor Gerhard Schröder signed an agreement that granted Germany"s Jewish community the same legal status as the country"s Christian religions, thereby tripling annual government funding of the to $3.8 million.
Outspoken as leader
Paul Spiegel died in the morning hours of 30 April 2006, in Düsseldorf, after suffering from cancer. Wieder zu Hause?, Ullstein Verlag München 2003,
Was ist koscher?, Ullstein Verlag München 2003,
Gespräch über Deutschland. Ein Interview mit Wilfried Köpke Herder, Freiburg, 2006,
Shavua Tov! Eine gute Woche! Jüdische Türme aus Schwäbisch Gmünd., Stadt Schwäbisch Gmünd, 2001.
Membership
In 1993 he became a member of the executive committee of the, first as vice president and later (as of 9 January 2000, following the death of Ignatz Bubis) as president Spiegel was an outspoken critic of lawyers who took what he felt were overly large fees to represent Jews who had been slave laborers during World World War II, saying "Earning money should not come before moralistic intentions." He also criticized the national Holocaust Memorial in Berlin, stating at its dedication in 2005 that it failed to address the basic question, "Why were members of a civilized people in the heart of Europe capable of planning and carrying out mass murder?".