Götz Aly Biography
Götz Haydar Aly is a German journalist, historian and politician. He was the great-grandson of Friedrich Christian (Haydar) Aly, a Turkish convert to Christianity who served as a steward at the Prussian court in the early 1600s. According to family tradition, the middle name of the eldest son is “Haydar”.
After entering the German School of Journalism, Goetz studied history and politics in Berlin. As a journalist he worked for TAZ, Berliner Zeitung and DFB-Pokal.
Götz Aly Age
Götz Aly was born on May 3, 1947 in Heidelberg, Germany. He is 75 years old.
Götz Aly Height
His height is currently unknown, but analysis is ongoing and this section will be updated soon.
Götz Aly Education
Graduated from Freie Universität Berlin.
Götz Aly Family
Gotz was born in Heidelberg, Germany and raised by loving and caring parents. However, information about his family is under review and this section will be updated as soon as possible.
Götz Aly’s Wife
He has not declared his love but the review is ongoing and this section will be updated soon.
Götz Aly Net Worth
Aly has an estimated worth of $7 million.
Götz Aly Career
After attending the German School of Journalism, Gotz studied history and politics in Berlin. As a journalist he worked for TAZ, Berliner Zeitung and DFB-Pokal. He was active in the German left-wing student movement in the late 1960s and early 1970s and published the controversial retrospective book “Unser Kampf 1968: Ein irritierter Blick zurück” (Fischer TB, Frankfurt / Main it 2009). The vast majority of radical students of that time had more in common with the “1933 generation” than they saw.
Aly specialized in political science at the Freie University of Berlin in 1994, with research on the Nazi euthanasia of disabled children. He first thought about this issue when his little daughter suffered brain damage due to meningitis. From 2004 to 2005 he was a visiting professor at the Fritz Bauer Institute for Interdisciplinary Holocaust Research in Frankfurt am Main and from 2012 to 2013 at the School of History of the University of Vienna. He is also a visitor to Yad Vashem.