A sort ofOn May 18, 1923, the 75th anniversary of the meeting of the German National Assembly, a commemorative ceremony was held in Frankfurt at the invitation of the city of Frankfurt. In St. Paul’s Church, German President Friedrich Ebert delivered a speech, which was the first full-German parliament to be elected according to the basic universal suffrage. He praised the achievements of parliamentarians, the establishment of fundamental rights and the empire’s constitution, and declared that the empire targeted by these legal foundations has not yet been established.It was from the unfinished work of the National Assembly that Albert discovered some unforgettable and even encouraging things, and was once again taken care of by evangelicals church He interprets the temporary parliament buildings moved away with eye-catching images as signs of entrustment to those born after 1848: “Therefore, the work of Paul’s Church has not become a reality; but it has become a memorial stone in the nation-state. The further development of life, the establishment of the empire and the difficult period of our modern history all have obvious and prominent significance.”
It is foreseeable that on May 18, 2023, St. Paul’s Church will hold another memorial service. Frank Waltersteinmeier, who is Ebert’s successor of the head of state and friend of the Social Democratic Party, should not be re-elected as a federal senator. miss. The President of 2022, speaking at the celebration meeting.As early as 2019, Steinmeier put it all together project In the “Times” call for recognition of the “task” in the “Future of St. Paul’s Church”, the entire country should not let the city of Frankfurt handle it. At the time, Steinmeier even had a vision that the renovation could be completed before the anniversary. “Why didn’t Germany have the ambition to make St. Paul’s Church a monument of modern democracy? A real place that not only reminds people of revolution, parliamentary system and basic rights, but also a place of experience that integrates knowledge, education and debate?”



