Georg Thurmair


Georg Thurmair was a German poet who wrote around 300 hymns, a writer, journalist and author of documentary films.

Career

Born in Munich, he took commercial training and worked from 1926 as a secretary at the. He became an assistant to who had worked in Munich from 1923, but moved to Düsseldorf when he was elected president of the Katholischer Jungmännerverband Deutschlands. Thurmair studied at the Düsseldorf Abendgymnasium.
In 1932 Thurmair edited at a national meeting of the several editions of the weekly Junge Front, which was directed against the emerging National Socialism. The Nazis claimed the title, and it had to be renamed Michael in 1935, and was banned in 1936. Thurmair worked on two songbooks of the Jungmännerverband, and Das gelbe Singeschiff. From 1934, Thurmair was an editor of the youth journal Die Wacht, which first published in 1935 his hymns "Nun, Brüder, sind wir frohgemut" and "Wir sind nur Gast auf Erden", which was first called a Reiselied.
He was interrogated by the Gestapo and included in a Liste der verdächtigen Personen. He therefore wrote under various pseudonyms, such as Thomas Klausner, Stefan Stahl, Richard Waldmann, Simpel Krone, and Schikki. In 1936, Thurmair and Adolf Lohmann published a school songbook for the Rhineland. As it juxtaposed Catholic songs and Nazi songs, it was banned.
, second edition, 1938
Together with and Lohmann, in 1938 Thurmair published the hymnal
Kirchenlied, intended to be a common hymnal for German-speaking Catholics. Called a Standard Songbook, this collection of 140 old and new songs, beginning with the 16th century and including several Protestant songs, as well as ten of Thurmair's songs, was significant for ecumenical church singing in German and became the germ cell for the Gotteslob of 1975, which incorporated 75 of the Kirchenlied songs. This hymnal was not immediately banned, because of its many Protestant songs.
When the Jugendhaus Düsseldorf was closed on 6 February 1939, Thurmair became a freelance writer in Recklinghausen and, a year later, in Munich. He was drafted from 1940 to 1945.
He married Maria Luise Thurmair in 1941, and they worked together. He worked mainly for the
Christophorus-Verlag'' in Freiburg, which belongs to the Catholic Verlag Herder, and as chief editor of several Catholic papers. He died in Munich and was buried in the Munich Waldfriedhof.

Awards

Several of Thurmair's hymn were part of the Catholic hymnal Gotteslob of 1975, and are part of the 2013 Gotteslob, including :
Some hymns appeared only in the first edition of 1975, or were included in regional sections of the later edition, including:
General
Appendix in dioceses