Obituary: Hans–Eberhard Dingels, former International Secretary of the SPD

08/04/2014

Hans–Eberhard Dingels, former International Secretary of the SPD, will be laid to rest in his home-town Bonn on the 8th of April 2014.

The following text by Dr. Ernst Stetter and Dr. Klaus Voll remembers an outstanding German and European Social Democrat of our time. 

For thirty-­‐one years, from 1964 until 1995, Hans-­‐Eberhard Dingels was the head of the Department of International Relations of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). The end of the Cold War, Willy Brandt’s Ost-­‐Politik and Germany’s integration into Western Europe as well as its opening up to the wider world required at the operative level of the party a man of his stature.

Dingels, who studied law and political science in Bonn, was a well‐read man with a keen interest in international affairs, which he practiced already in socialist youth organizations before he became International Secretary of the SPD. As a permanent member of the Bureau of the Socialist International (SI), Dingels occupied several positions, amongst them as a member of the Middle East SI­Delegation, led by former Austrian Chancellor Dr. Bruno Kreisky from 1972–1976. He advised the SI Presidents (former French Prime Minister) Pierre Mauroy and former Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Guterres between 1975 and 2000.

Towards the end of the Second World War, Hans-­Eberhard Dingels encountered members of the Indian National Army, led by the legendary Subhas Chandra Bose. His keen interest in India, Burma and Asian Affairs lasted throughout his life, with professional and personal relations to a whole galaxy of Indian socialists, amongst them the prominent trade unionist Ashoka Mehta and George Fernandes, who, in his last ministerial function, was India’s Defence Minister. Dingels and Fernandes communicated over a period of nearly fifty years. Dingels saw India, although not uncritically, as one of the big powers of the future International System.

Dingels, endowed with a sense of sublime, yet never hurtful humour and irony, regretted in his later years the “resistance to advice” on international affairs by parts of the German political class. Looking back to his life, he was proud of being able to free some political prisoners and to have professionally promoted young men and especially also women.

He kept a sophisticated personal library at his home and was always ready to interact with young students and academics, who specialized in areas of his competence. Dingels, who even studied economics after his retirement, contributed some articles on international affairs, also highlighting common interests of Europe and India in West Asia. He was very knowledgeable about Iran and Afghanistan.

His former colleagues and friends in Europe and world-­‐wide will miss this truly excellent and unassuming man of knowledge and deep professional expertise, who, as a German, European -­ particularly also vis­‐à-­vis France and its Socialist Party -­ and Internationalist, contributed in his own way to the international relations of our times.

When you called him from far away, he always started the conversation: “How is the state of play?” Today we have to answer: “Hans­‐Eberhard, sincerely, we miss you!”.

Find all related publications
Publications
19/04/2024

A New Global Deal

Reforming world governance
18/04/2024

The transformation of the mainstream right and its impact on (social) democracy

15/04/2024

Expected labour market effects of the Green Deal Industrial Plan

The potential of labour policy for Just Transition regions
15/04/2024

Labour migration in the Western Balkans

Balkan Focus series
Find all related news
News
29/04/2024

FEPS celebrates 20 years of the biggest EU enlargement

19/04/2024

FEPS welcomes the signing of the La Hulpe Declaration

05/04/2024

FEPS supports the declaration of Portimão calling for affordable housing in the EU

Affordable housing needs Europe, Europe needs affordable housing
05/04/2024

FEPS stands with Zita Gurmai against persecution from Orban regime

Find all related in the media
In the media

Veinte años del ‘big bang europeo’, el espejo en el que se mira la próxima gran ampliación hacia el Este

by El País 02/05/2024
'Twenty years of the 'European big bang', the mirror in which the next big eastward enlargement is viewed' El País' article on EU enlargement features input from FEPS Secretary General László Andor, offering insights on the lessons to be learned from the 2004 enlargement

Hidak közel és távol

by Népszava 02/05/2024
'Bridges close and far' Article written by László Andor in the newspaper Népszava about Hungary's accession to the EU

State of the Union: End of the mandate, enlargement and revolution

by Euronews 29/04/2024
Secretary General Lászlo Andor discusses the 20th anniversary of the "big bang" enlargement of the EU with Euronews

Karl Polanyi against the ‘free market’ dystopia

by Social Europe 23/04/2024
In this article published in Social Europe, FEPS Secretary General László Andor reassess the Hungarian social scientist’s legacy.