Dietrich Bonhoeffer Display
augsburg college
Augsburg College > Dietrich Bonhoeffer Display

Contact us
Travelling Exhibit
Display Panels - Panel A
- Panel B
- Panel C
- Panel D
- Panel E
- Panel F
- Panel G

A - Z Directory

Academic Offerings

Admissions
- Undergraduate Day
- Weekend College
- Rochester Program
- M.B.A.
- M.A. Education
- M.A. Leadership
- M.A. Nursing
- M. of Social Work
- M.S. Physician Assistant

Campus Life
- Athletics
- Fine Arts
- International Programs
- Service, Work, Learning
- Residence Life
- Student Services
- Student Organizations
- Spiritual Expression

Quick Links
- Administration
- Alumni and Friends
- Apply Now
- AugNet Services
- Campus Map
- Employment
- Enrollment/Financial Aid
- Library
- News/Calendar
- Registrar's Office
- Search
- Student Computing


Augsburg College


Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Panel B2
   
 

Bottom left photo
Dietrich’s class at the Grunewald Gynmasium when he was 14 or 15 years old. He is the blond boy in the center of the group on the right. According to his sister, Sabine, Dietrich at age 15 had already decided on the study of theology. It is difficult to say why—other than “in the providence of God”—Dietrich made that choice. His father and older brothers had interests in science and were skeptics in matters of religion. At any rate, when this picture was taken Dietrich Bonhoeffer had already decided on the study of theology.

Top left photo
The Bonhoeffer family provided an unusually positive environment for Dietrich’s childhood and youth. The father, Dr. Karl Bonhoeffer, was one of the leading academicians at the University of Berlin. This meant that the family enjoyed upper class economic status and social ties with others of Berlin’s intellectual and cultural elite. The mother, Paula, was similarly able, and in the conventions of the time focused her energy and intellect on the life of the home. With the aid of five household servants, she used her ability and the family resources to create an enviable home life for the Bonhoeffer children. The Bonhoeffer home even became an influence in the public life of the time.

The picture shows Paula with the children when they were probably 4 to 14 years old. Dietrich is second from the right. Paula and Karl did not want to entrust their children to the public schools when they were at an early and impressionable age. There was a saying in the family that German children had their backs broken twice, first at school and later in the army. So Paula had a spacious school room in the home where she and a governess provided “home schooling” for the first year(s) of the children’s education.

Bottom right photo
Picture from 1922-23, about the time Dietrich finished secondary school and entered the university. He was then a year ahead of his age group.
Dietrich was the best musician in a family that enjoyed a good deal of music in their family gatherings. He played the piano well. He composed a cantata while in secondary school on a favorite verse from Psalm 42—“My soul is cast down within me, therefore I remember thee.” Says his biographer, “in his boyhood and youth it was music that gave him a special position at home and among his fellow students.”

 

Copyright 2008. Augsburg College. All rights reserved.