Credit: (c) POST Luxembourg

On Wednesday 31 August 2022, POST Luxembourg commemorated the 80th anniversary of the postal strike against the Nazi occupation in 1942.

On this occasion, the Amicale de POST Luxembourg held a ceremony in front of the commemorative plaque "A nos Héros et Martyrs" (to our heroes and martyrs), installed in the entrance hall of POST Technologies at Cloche d'Or, and presenting "St Georges terrassant le dragon" (St George slaying the dragon), a bronze sculpture by Auguste Trémont.

The commemoration ceremony took place in the presence of members of the families of the victims, as well as members of the management of POST Luxembourg and the Amicale de POST Luxembourg.

The opening speech of Mike Orazi, President of the Amicale de POST Luxembourg, preceded speeches by Georges Schmit, former postman and member of the Amicale POST Luxembourg and Mario Treinen, director of POST Courrier. The ceremony closed with the national anthem "Ons Heemecht", performed by Mr Schmit.

Background

On Sunday 30 August 1942, Gauleiter Simon made public the decree imposing compulsory military service in the Wehrmacht on Luxembourgers born between 1920 and 1924. Organised by the unions and resistance movements, a strike against the forcible recruitment of around 15,000 Luxembourgers by the Nazi occupiers began in Wiltz before reaching the capital and the south of the country.

Postal workers Nicky Konz and Jean Schroeder, both aged 28, were the first to be arrested on the territory of the City of Luxembourg. Following this movement of revolt, death sentences were handed down by the special courts, followed by immediate executions.

Apart from Nicky Konz and Jean Schroeder, executed on 3 and 4 September 1942 at the Hinzert concentration camp, nine staff members of what was then known as PTT Luxembourg, who had gone on strike at the central post office in Luxembourg City, were brought before the drumhead court-martial and were sentenced, along with 37 other Luxembourgish protesters, to various penalties. A total of 22 postal workers were deported to concentration camps, six of whom were killed. A further ten postal workers were imprisoned, two of whom lost their lives.