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Nachruf Prof. Dr. H. Schultze 1

Professor Dr Herbert Schultze 1928-2009
The death on June 6th 2009 at 80 of Herbert Schultze marks the end of an era in the history of
Religious Education in Europe. His efforts to straddle the different pedagogies and philosophies of
Religious Education over 30 years will remain a monument to his endeavour. Born in Stettin in 1928
he was educated in Berlin just before the Second World War and later, like the current Pope, was
required to join the Hitler Youth. In 1944 he was sent to the eastern front and wounded. It was in
1945 when he was in hospital, with the news that Russian troops were advancing with little regard for
the German wounded, that he managed to flee from hospital and was rescued by American and
British troops. He was not yet 17.
For those who knew Herbert well, this was not a period about which he chose to talk but these
traumatic experiences and his salvation by western forces was to have a significant influence on his
life. His vision was to work productively towards a better understanding between all nations,
especially in his field of Religious Education. He studied in the theological faculty at the University in
Berlin receiving his doctorate in 1952. He continued to work as a school teacher and for a while, in
1954, in the Vikariat in the Evangelical Church of Berlin - Brandenburg. In 1962 he became Director of
the Religious Teaching Insitut of the Evangelisch-Lutherischen church in Hamburg where he stayed for
six years.
He came to the fore in the early 1970s when he was appointed as a Director of the prestigious
Comenius Institut in Münster. His work there, from 1971 until 1988 gave him the platform and the
opportunity to become an ambassador for Religious Education across Europe. When appointed
Secretary of the Intereuropean Commission on Church and Schools (ICCS) in 1976, he worked closely
with Colin Alves, then President of ICCS and, later General Secretary of the Church of England’s Board
of Education, to promote a pan–European understanding of Religious Education. In 1982 he became
President remaining there until 1989. During this period, Herbert Schultze travelled across Europe. He
became a well-known figure with his black beret, his long coat, at least two heavy bags and (before he
stopped smoking) a long cigarette holder.
He was invited to become a member of the Shap Working party on World Religions in Education in the
1980s bringing enormous insight and experience to the Working Party and a collection of like minded
contacts around Europe, East and West. He, with colleagues, formed the European Association for
World Religions in Education (EARWRE) in 1990 and became its first Chair.
Herbert was committed to dialogue between religions and between educators. He set up an exchange
of teachers between Germany and England that would last for twenty years, giving classroom
teachers a unique insight into the everyday classrooms of their two countries. His writing was mainly
collaborative; he was an animateur and many of us became involved in a number of projects through
his initiative. He co-operated in the publication of a number of volumes on Christian education in the
1970s in England, The Netherlands, Sweden, France and Poland and also Greece in 1988 and the
German Democratic Republic, published in 1990, just after the Berlin Wall came down. He was, with a

Muslim colleague, Professor Falaturi, instrumental in pioneering a series of studies across Europe that
examined the representation of Islam in RE and History textbooks in the early 1990s.
When he left the Comenius Institut, he carried on working and travelling. He moved back to Hamburg
but continued to teach in the University of Duisburg-Essen and received a rich reward for all his efforts
with the award of an Honorary Professorship, conferred on him on 2005.
His influence is difficult to over state. He was committed to the teaching of RE but the structures for,
and control of, RE continue to be very different in the European countries and Herbert became the
point of reference for what was happening where. I followed him as President of ICCS in 1989 and on
one occasion, with twenty people around a table from different countries, observed that the common
denominator was Herbert Schultze. His work has been taken up and developed by others but Herbert
was the trail-blazer. Others have followed, but Herbert Schultze did the hard innovative work.
He leaves a widow, his beloved Dorothee, whom he met many years ago but finally married in the
1990s in the only Protestant Church in Salzburg with the reception served from the car boot. He
remained devoted to his son, Nicolas, from a previous marriage, and wanted him to be protected
from the type of up-bringing he had experienced in his teenage years. Herbert was eccentric, strong
willed and delightful. He lived a full life and all those who work in Religious Education in Europe need
to mark the passing of this extraordinary man.
Alan Brown, University of Worcester