Trygve Bratteli
Template:Short description Template:Infobox officeholder Trygve Martin Bratteli (11 January 1910 – 20 November 1984) was a Norwegian newspaper editor, a politician with the Norwegian Labour Party, and Nazi concentration camp survivor. He served as the prime minister of Norway from 1971 to 1972 and again from 1973 to 1976. He was president of the Nordic Council in 1978. <ref name=snl>Template:Cite web</ref>
Background
Bratteli was born on the island of Nøtterøy at Færder in Vestfold, Norway. His parents were Terje Hansen Bratteli (1878–1966) and Martha Barmen (1880–1938). He attended school locally, having many jobs including: work in fishing, as a coal miner and on a building site. Over a 9- to 10-month period, Bratteli travelled with whalers to Antarctica, where he worked in a guano factory at South Georgia Island. He was a student at the socialist school at Malmøya in 1933. Oscar Torp, chairman of the Norwegian Labour Party, asked him to become editor of Folkets Frihet in Kirkenes and later editor of Arbeiderungdommen which was published by the Socialist Youth League of Norway. For a period during 1940, he also served as Secretary of the Norwegian Labour Party.
Following the Nazi invasion of Norway, the daily newspaper Arbeiderbladet was closed down during 1940 by Nazi officials. Bratteli subsequently participated in the Norwegian resistance movement. He was arrested by agents of Nazi Germany in 1942, and was a Nacht und Nebel prisoner of various German concentration camps; including Natzweiler-Struthof, from 1943 to 1945. He was also imprisoned in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, north of Berlin.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He was liberated from Vaihingen an der Enz concentration camp on 5 April 1945, by the Swedish Red Cross White Buses along with fifteen other Norwegians who had survived.<ref name=nbl>Template:Cite web</ref>
Political career
After the liberation of Norway in 1945, Bratteli was appointed as secretary of the Labour Party. He became chairman of the Workers' Youth League, vice chairman of the party, served on the newly formed defence commission, and in 1965; was made chairman of the Labour Party. Bratteli was elected to the Norwegian Parliament from Oslo in 1950, and was re-elected on seven occasions.
He was appointed as minister of finance in Oscar Torp's cabinet, and from 1956 to 1960 in the third cabinet of Einar Gerhardsen. From 1960 to 1963, during Gerhardsen's third period as prime minister, he was minister of transport and communications. He was also acting minister of finance from January–February 1962. In September 1963, when Gerhardsen's fourth cabinet was formed, Bratteli was again made minister of transport and communications, a post he held until 1964.
The centre-right cabinet of Borten held office from 1965 to 1971, but when it collapsed, Bratteli became prime minister. In social policy, Bratteli's premiership saw the passage of a law in June 1972 that lowered the pension age to 67.<ref>Growth to limits: the Western European welfare states since World War 2: Volume 4 by Peter Flora</ref> Central to his political career was the question of Norway's membership of the European Community. Following the close rejection of membership in the 1972 referendum, his cabinet resigned. However, the successor cabinet Korvald only lasted one year, and the second cabinet Bratteli was formed following the 1973 Norwegian parliamentary election. Bratteli resigned as prime minister in January 1976 on the grounds of ill health. He was succeeded by fellow Labour member Odvar Nordli.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Personal life
Trygve Bratteli was married to Randi Helene Larssen (1924–2002). They had three children: two daughters, Tone and Marianne, and one son, professor Ola Bratteli (1946–2015).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Bratteli's memoirs of his experiences in Nazi concentration camps was published in 1980. He died in 1984 and was buried at Vestre gravlund in Oslo. Trygve Bratteli was a member of Friends of Israel within the Norwegian Labour Movement (Venner av Israel i Norsk Arbeiderbevegelse) which planted a forest to his memory in Israel.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
References
See also
Other sources
- Anderson, Gidske (1984) Trygve Bratteli (Oslo: Gyldendal) Template:ISBN
Related reading
- Bratteli Trygve (1980) Fange I Natt Og Take (Oslo: Tiden Norsk Forlag) Template:ISBN
Notes
- Thirteen Norwegians died at Vaihingen and were buried in a mass grave, according to: Template:Cite news
External links
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Template:Norwegian Labour Party Template:NorwegianPrimeMinisters Template:NorwegianFinancialMinisters Template:Minister of Transport and Communications (Norway) Template:Presidents of the Nordic Council
- 1910 births
- 1984 deaths
- 20th-century Norwegian writers
- Leaders of the Labour Party (Norway)
- Ministers of finance of Norway
- Ministers of transport and communications of Norway
- Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp survivors
- Night and Fog program
- Norwegian autobiographers
- Norwegian newspaper editors
- Norwegian people of World War II
- Norwegian World War II memoirists
- Norwegian Zionists
- People from Vestfold
- Politicians from Oslo
- Prime ministers of Norway
- Vaihingen an der Enz concentration camp survivors
- Members of the Storting 1977–1981
- Members of the Storting 1973–1977
- Members of the Storting 1969–1973
- Members of the Storting 1965–1969
- Members of the Storting 1961–1965
- Members of the Storting 1958–1961
- Members of the Storting 1954–1957
- Members of the Storting 1950–1953