Erik Seidenfaden (journalist)

Erik Seidenfaden (April 24, 1910 – April 13, 1990) was a Danish journalist and editor. He was a co-founder of Dagbladet Information.

Early life

Erik Seidenfaden was born in Hasle, Denmark where his father was a district attorney. In 1928, Seidenfaden took the classical languages exam at Sorø Akademi and went on to study comparative literature at Copenhagen University. In Paris, he attended a journalism school and, after considering a career in literature studies, he joined the conservative newspaper Dagens Nyheder.

Career

Early career

Erik Seidenfaden began working as an assistant to Dagens Nyheder’s foreign correspondent, Nicolaj Blædel (1882–1943), about whom it was said that he had vaccinated the Danes against Nazism. Later, in 1945, Seidenfaden would edit and publish Blædel's work Forbrydelse og Dumhed (Crime and Stupidity). His first significant reporting job came when he was sent to cover Adolf Hitler's 1933 election campaign, where he was almost arrested writing against Nazi Germany. He began his series on Germany with a satirical article, published on June 18, 1933, which was about the "nazification" of Heidelberg University titled "200 Dueller om Ugen I Heidelberg" (200 Duels a Week in Heidelberg). He then published "Jødehaderen" (The Jew-hater), an interview with the Nazi and vehement anti-Semitic editor of "Der Stürmer" Julius Streicher (1885–1946) at a coffee house in Nürenberg on 9 July.

While travelling through Prague, Vienna, and Amsterdam, he recorded the life of around 50,000 Germans who had to flee their country, and published in "Paa Flugt fra Nazi-Tyskland" (On the Run from Nazi-Germany) on 6 August. On 1 January 1935, he became the permanent foreign correspondent for Dagens Nyheder, working within the newsroom of The Times. On 1 October he followed Nicolaj Blædel, decamping to the more conservative Berlingske Tidende and Jydske Tidende until 1937. When the Spanish Civil War broke out in July 1936, he compiled reports from the front on the government's side, later publishing the book Borgerkrig i Spanien (1937). On his study of democracies, he said that "it's an open question whether democracies in the long run serve the cause of peace if they accept being attacked, whether it is directly as in Abyssinia or indirectly as in Spain, and still pay the price dictators demand from them to keep the peace".

He then returned to his culturally liberal predisposition and joined the left leaning newspaper Politiken as a foreign editor in 1937. His militant attitude towards the Nazi threat often clashed with that of the influential social liberal Det Radikale Venstre party and the views of the several times foreign minister Erik Scavenius (1877–1962), and chairman of the board of Politiken. In an article titled Indre Frihed i Pant for Ydre (Inner Freedom Mortgaged for Outer) published for the journal Kulturkampen in December 1937, written by him but signed by Peter Rohde (1902–1978), Erik Seidenfaden attacked the appeasing line of the government led by the social democratic prime minister Thorvald Stauning (1873-1942) and the foreign minister Peter Munch (1870-1948) and the ease with which "the country's leading organs" avoided offending the Nazi government in Germany.

Second World War

When Denmark was invaded on 9 April 1940, Erik Seidenfaden was in Oslo reporting on the Allied minefield laying operations in Norwegian waters. After the German invasion, he then reached the front by Trondheim via Sweden but after the retreat of the Anglo-French expeditionary force, he returned to Copenhagen. He told the editor in chief of Politiken that he had joined the News Chronicle, and agreed to stay only after being offered a post as a correspondent in Rome to cover "neutral Italy". He returned to Denmark after Italy entered the war in early June 1940 and began becoming active in "illegal circles", a group which met regularly and, apart from Nicolaj Blædel, included the journalists Merete Bonnesen (1901-1980), Jens Søltoft-Jensen (1906-1964), Sten Gudme (1901-1961), the Gyldendal publisher Ingeborg Andersen (1887-1960), the philologist Lis Jacobsen (1882-1961), the physicist Niels Bohr (1885-1962) and his mathematician brother Harald Bohr (1887-1951), the Politiken board member Herman Dedichen (1896-1958) and the jura professor Stephan Hurwitz (1901-1981).

He forged contacts with the journalist and resistance organizer Ebbe Munck (1905–1974) and Sten Gudme in Stockholm, who had gone to London in June 1941 as a representative of the Danish resistance. When the British military intelligence organization SOE in their first mission in Denmark dropped parachutists Carl Johan Bruhn (1904–1941) and Mogens Hammer (1911–1946) by Haslev on 27 December 1941 (Bruhn died in the drop), they were given two contacts who, it was believed, would be prepared to assist them. The first of the contacts declined all help, but Seidenfaden did everything he could to assist them and made arrangements to feed and assist them in order to enter the resistance circles. Sensing in September 1942 that he might get caught, in January 1943 Seidenfaden managed to be sent to Stockholm as a correspondent for Politiken. There, he was soon active in establishing a network of underground news informers in Denmark, with the help of his brother, who worked in the Foreign Ministry, and his father, who at the time was the chief constable of Copenhagen’s northern district.

He tried to explain to the Allies the situation in occupied Denmark, where the sitting government wasn't a puppet but behaved like one. A situation which he later described in the book Hitler Beskyddar Denmark (Hitler Protects Denmark), published in Autumn 1943 under the pseudonym of Erik Ring in Stockholm by Tor Bonnier (1883–1976) at Albert Bonnier Förlag, which in an abridged version was illegally distributed in occupied Denmark. In Stockholm, he forged close ties to the SOE-Special Operations Executive chief Ronald Turnbull (1914–2004) and became an SOE agent n.4388 with the rank of officer.

Among the many Danes who flocked to the neutral Swedish capital and consolidated friendships were the writer and architect Poul Henningsen (1894–1967) and the journalist and writer Erling Bjøl (1918-). Among the Swedes in their circles, belonged writers like Eyvind Johnson (1900–1976) and Harry Martinsson (1904–1978). On 29 August 1943 the Germans took total administrative control of Denmark and, with Ebbe Munck, Seidenfaden established the news agency Dansk Presse Tjeneste, with 30-35 paid staff servicing Swedish, British and American newspapers, radio stations and news agencies. The intelligence from Denmark, via DPT, involved several telegrams a day containing very valuable information, which also found its way to the BBC broadcasts directed at Denmark, where the censored local press did not carry stories which reflected negatively on the Nazi occupiers. Other beneficiaries were of course the SOE organisation, as well as the PWE, the Political Warfare Executive, which dealt with propaganda. The DPT service was particularly useful during the general strike in Copenhagen in July 1944, when all power was cut, nor the local press nor the Danish radio operated. As the Danish resistance movement gained strength and its activities became more incisive, he became involved in its decision-making, and repeatedly travelled to Denmark for negotiations with the Freedom Council (Frihedsrådet).

Post Second World War

After the liberation in May 1945, the board of Politiken sought to appoint him as its editor, to distance themselves from an arguably collaborationist stance during the occupation. However, the newspaper’s staff, loyal to Niels Hasager (1888–1969) who had led them since 1931, blocked it. In October 1945, with Sten Gudme, Seidenfaden started the foreign policy magazine Fremtiden to which he remained associated until 1968. He then joined forces with Børge Outze (1912–1980), who had taken over the German-friendly printing press of Fædrelandet to publish the daily Information. Both worked together for twenty years, in an association which influenced Danish press for its opinions, style, political independence and open debates. Many of their editorials were collected in the 1948 book Spidser. While Outze’s style was described as "language virtuoso", characterized for his directness, Erik Seidenfaden was "intellectual, analytical, ironic and sarcastic, at times with explosive effect." Information and Erik Seidenfaden probably exerted the strongest influence in the fields of defence and foreign policy, and his campaign for Denmark joining NATO in 1949 had crucial impact. At one point he suggested that the Danish defence should be a "brass band on the White House lawn". But the newspaper was not pro-American all the time. Indeed, when its reporter Elsa Gress followed very critically phenomenon of McCarthysm in the US in 1952 and 1954, Erik Seidenfaden gave a very unflattering presentation of McCarthy’s career and even concluded by expressing the pious hope that somebody would eliminate the senator.

Later career

As a writer, lecturer and correspondent on the radio, he consistently advocated Denmark's position in the Western world and the European Community. His list of foreign policy writings include a book about Israel, Den hellige krig om det hellige land (The Holy War for the Holy Land), 1956, Atomvåbnene og udenrigspolitiken (Nuclear weapons and foreign affairs), 1958, Luft mellem magtblokkene? (Air between the Power Blocks), 1959 and Vejene til Europa (The Roads to Europe) 1970. Between 1965-75 he served as a member of the London-based Council of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and in 1976 of the Trilateral Commission. He was also a member of Det Udenrigspolitiske Selskab, a Danish foreign policy club.

In 1965, he moved to Paris as the director of the Danish student house. There he initially worked as a correspondent for Information, but considering the paper to have become too left-wing for his liberal views, in 1967 he began to write for Berlingske Tidende. In 1980, again as a correspondent, he returned to Politiken and from 1975 worked for the Danish broadcasting company. His last book, from 1982, was Frederiksholm’s Kanal og Verdenshavet (Frederiksholm’s Canal and the World Sea) in 1982. At the end of WWII, he was awarded a British MBE. In 1974 he was awarded the Ridder af Dannebrog knighthood, and in 1982, the same of the first degree.

Personal life

He was the son of district attorney and Copenhagen’s chief constable Aage Valdemar Seidenfaden (1877–1966) and Anna Elise Reenberg Teilman Harck (1887–1928). He married journalist Jytte Kaastrup Olsen (1913–2007) in 1935 in London and had two children: Annelise Kaastrup Seidenfaden (1937-) and Ebba "Snu" Merete Seidenfaden (1940–1980). He married second time around with the priest Lone Knutzon (1923–1978), with whom he had one child, Tøger Seidenfaden (1957–2011), who would later become editor-in-chief of Politiken. He was the brother of the diplomat and botanist Gunnar Seidenfaden (1908–2001). He was the nephew of Major Erik Seidenfaden (1881–1958), Danish ethnologist and anthropologist who specialized in Thai culture.

References

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