- published: 17 May 2019
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Michael "Bommi" Baumann (born 1948) was one of the founders of the German organization Movement 2 June, author of a memoir, and a former militant.
Baumann was a construction worker. His nickname derives from his favorite drink, Bommi mit Pflaume (plum-flavoured spirit), although it is often wrongly attributed to his occasional preference for explosives during student unrests.
In the 1960s, he got in touch with the West Berlin student movement and with Kommune 1. His views became more radical after various experiences with police, media and bureaucracy. After the death of Benno Ohnesorg on 2 June 1967, he started to espouse violence as a means of political struggle. Unlike many students in the SDS (German Socialist Student Union), he also stressed the importance of "direct action" and "fighting in the metropolises" to support guerrilla warfare in the third world.
After arson attacks against a British airline, which had flown young German Army deserters from West Berlin into West Germany, where they would have faced trial, Baumann had to spend some months in prison from February 1970 to summer 1971. With his friend Georg von Rauch, he joined the Zentralrat der umherschweifenden Haschrebellen ("Central Council of Rambling Hashish Rebels"), one of organisations that founded the Movement 2 June. The police tried to arrest von Rauch for driving a stolen car, and shot him at the scene. After this incident, Baumann decided to end his participation in urban guerrilla warfare, but he was sought by police as an accomplice.
Rob Long talks with Frederick Keys pitcher Michael Baumann before the O's take on the Indians. More: http://www.masn.me/orioles
2018-04-18, vs. Hagerstown Suns.
Jr. RHP Michael Baumann, Jacksonville, 2017 Elig.
Prof. Michael Baumann sits down with The Group Room at EMCC 2011. Prof. Baumann is the President of ECCO and the Congress Chair for this 2011 Congress in Stockholm. In this segment he discusses the theme of personalized medicine for the 2011 congress as well as how they have incorporated more patients and advocates into their ongoing agenda.
Michael Baumann, Mitgründer von TWAICE und Hauptpreisträger aus Runde 1/2018, verrät euch seinen goldenen Tipp für Pitches.
On 13th and 14th October, the European Cancer Patient Coalition (ECPC) held the ECPC Cancer Summit Making the Cancer Partnership Work. ECPC brought together cancer patients and their organisations, healthcare specialists, representatives of the European institutions and Member States' governments to discuss the European Partnership for Action Against Cancer, which was launched by the European Commission in September 2009. See more at: http://cancerpartnership.eu.
Michael "Bommi" Baumann (born 1948) was one of the founders of the German organization Movement 2 June, author of a memoir, and a former militant.
Baumann was a construction worker. His nickname derives from his favorite drink, Bommi mit Pflaume (plum-flavoured spirit), although it is often wrongly attributed to his occasional preference for explosives during student unrests.
In the 1960s, he got in touch with the West Berlin student movement and with Kommune 1. His views became more radical after various experiences with police, media and bureaucracy. After the death of Benno Ohnesorg on 2 June 1967, he started to espouse violence as a means of political struggle. Unlike many students in the SDS (German Socialist Student Union), he also stressed the importance of "direct action" and "fighting in the metropolises" to support guerrilla warfare in the third world.
After arson attacks against a British airline, which had flown young German Army deserters from West Berlin into West Germany, where they would have faced trial, Baumann had to spend some months in prison from February 1970 to summer 1971. With his friend Georg von Rauch, he joined the Zentralrat der umherschweifenden Haschrebellen ("Central Council of Rambling Hashish Rebels"), one of organisations that founded the Movement 2 June. The police tried to arrest von Rauch for driving a stolen car, and shot him at the scene. After this incident, Baumann decided to end his participation in urban guerrilla warfare, but he was sought by police as an accomplice.