as soon as he arrived, and his Berlin was one of factories, strikes, unemployment, demonstrations, and rallies rather than nightclubs. Sandor Rado recalled that Reich was “heavily involved in communist propaganda” when he arrived in Germany, an “admirer of Lenin and Stalin.” Reich, he said, was “both leftist and outspoken.”47
In the September 1930 elections in Germany the Communist Party garnered 4.6 million votes, making it the largest Communist Party outside the Soviet Union. In the capital itself the Communists overtook the Social Democrats and were now the leading party. Yet nationally, the Nazis surged past them with 6.5 million votes, dramatically increasing their number of seats in the Reichstag from 12 to 107. The Russian Communist leader Karl Radek wrote that the Nazi Party burst onto the political scene “just as an island suddenly emerges in the middle of the sea owing to volcanic forces.”48 The slight, clubfooted Joseph Goebbels had been the Gauleiter (Nazi district leader) of Berlin since 1926; his violent campaigning had seen the Nazi vote increase fourfold, even in this bastion of free-thinking and liberalism. The Nazis celebrated their electoral success by wreaking havoc in the capital. They smashed the windows of the Jewish-owned department stores in the Leipziger Strasse before assembling in Potsdamer Platz to chant “Germany awake!” “Death to Judah,” and “Heil Hitler.”49
In July 1931 there was a devastating financial crash in Germany, which saw unemployment double, to six million, by the following January. In the volatile months that followed, the Communist Red Front and the Nazi Brownshirts clashed frequently in Berlin, an escalation of violence that led to near anarchy. The expressionist painter George Grosz wrote to a friend that the Nazis were perpetrating a political murder “almost every third day.”50 That September the head of the Berlin storm troopers, the ominously named Wolf Heinrich von Helldorf, was driven up and down a busy boulevard in broad daylight as he stood in his convertible and pointed imperiously at anyone who looked Jewish. These people were immediately set upon by storm troopers dressed in civilian clothes and mixed in with the crowds. This “ mini-pogrom,” as one historian has called it, went on for two hours before the police intervened to stop it.51
The Communist demonstrations Reich attended in Berlin were much more impressive and better organized than those in Vienna. “One marched in military formation and sang revolutionary songs lustily,” Reich recalled.52 Reich volunteered as a marshal at the May Day parade, in which nearly one hundred thousand Communists participated. He gave an average of two lectures a week to youth groups on subjects such as “The Fiasco of Bourgeois Morality,” distributed leaflets in unemployment offices, daubed revolutionary and anti-Nazi slogans on walls in red paint, and on Sundays recruited door-to-door in the working-class sections of the city. “Social Democrats furiously slammed the door at the sight of a Communist brochure,” Reich recalled, “and the indifferent brusquely declined.”53
He even traveled to rural districts to speak to farmers about the Soviet collectivization of farms.
Among his comrades was the writer Arthur Koestler, who moved from Paris to Berlin in September 1931 to become the science editor of the liberal Berlin newspaper Vossische Zeitung and now found himself in the Communist cell of thirty writers and intellectuals associated with the “Red Housing Block” on Wilmersdorfer Strasse. “We sold the World Revolution like vacuum cleaners,” Koestler wrote in The God That Failed (1949) of their dogged, unglamorous brand of activism:
Among other members of our cell, I remember Dr. Wilhelm Reich. He . . . had just published a book called The Function of the Orgasm, in which he had expounded the theory that the sexual frustration of the proletariat caused a thwarting of its political consciousness; only through a full, uninhibited release of the sexual urge could the working-class realize its revolutionary potentialities and historic mission; the whole thing was less cockeyed than it sounds.54
Reich found an audience in Berlin that was much more receptive to his utopian project (Koestler was, by his own admission, “fanatically promiscuous”); the psychoanalysts he met there were “far more progressive in social matters than the Viennese,” he wrote. “The young psychoanalysts could breathe more freely and my orgasm theory was much better received.”55 In an oral history at Columbia University, recorded in 1971, Edith Jacobson, a young dissident analyst, convincingly explained why “renegades” such as Reich flourished in the less conservative environment of Berlin, far removed from Freud and Vienna: “Some of these people felt, ‘Now I am in a new country. Now I can be myself completely.’ And they wanted to resolve their ties to Freud. It had something to do with acting out unresolved transference problems and underlying ambivalences that may not have been so fully analyzed.”56
According to Reich’s future disciple Ola Raknes (who would be bowled over by his “vitality, his vivacity and his charm”), Reich was already much talked about in Berlin, with “a reputation of an outstanding clinician and teacher and of a remarkable, though somewhat wild theorist.”57 In 1924 Otto Fenichel, now teaching at the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute, had started the “children’s seminar,” which met to debate radical ideas, and on his arrival in the city Reich immediately fitted into this circle of younger dissident left-wing analysts (Erich Fromm, Karen Horney, Edith Jacobson). In fact, Reich hijacked Fenichel’s Marxist group. It was now Reich’s ideas that a splinter group met to discuss (“The opposition,” Reich said proudly, “had sprung up around my scientific research”). They often met in Reich’s house on Schwäbische Strasse to plot their coup against conventional analysis. Following the slogan “[For] Freud against Freud,” Reich wanted the group to reassert the early radical work of psychoanalysis, to show “where Freud the scientist came into conflict with Freud the bourgeois philosopher.”58 “We specifically dealt with therapeutic ‘character’ problems,” Edith Jacobson remembered of the group, “discussed Reich’s ideas, and also socio-psychological questions . . . This was a very lively, smart, special group.”59
In 1930 the German psychoanalyst Fritz Perls, whose genitalia Hitschmann had examined when he was his analyst, was thinking of going back into therapy. When he asked Karen Horney to refer him to a doctor, she said, “The only analyst who I think would get through to you would be Wilhelm Reich.”60 Perls had been in therapy for eighteen months with the conservative analyst Eugen Harnick, who had terminated the therapy in August 1929 when Perls got married against his advice (according to Freud, patients were to be discouraged from making any life-changing decisions while undergoing therapy). Harnick, who believed in classic “passive analysis,” refused to shake Perls’s hand when he arrived or left his office and, according to Perls, limited his own verbal contribution to a frustrating one sentence a week; he was so mute that he would signal the end of the allotted hour merely by scratching the floor with his foot.
“Well, the next year was a completely different story,” Perls wrote of character analysis with Reich, who was two years younger than him. “Reich was vital, alive, rebellious. He was eager to discuss any situation, especially political and sexual ones, yet of course he still analyzed and played the usual genetic tracing games. But with him the importance of facts begins to fade. The interest in attitudes moved more to the foreground.”61
Perls once said that Reich, whom he saw for three years, was the first man he had been able to trust. From Reich he also learned “brazenness,” he wrote. Perls’s experience goes some way toward showing how Reich became influential among a second