verein resembled student organizations such as the Deutsche Studentenschaft in being "all-German," having 84 chapters in Austria and 220 in Germany. In May 1921 the "Austria" chapter of the Alpenverein, the oldest, and with 7,000 members, the largest of the organization's chapters, introduced a bill to the Alpenverein's general assembly that would have excluded Jews from the entire organization. Although two-thirds of the chapters approved the motion, it fell short of the three-fourths majority needed for acceptance.
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Nevertheless, many individual chapters of the Alpenverein did expel their Jewish members. The "Austria" chapter itself did so in October 1921 by a vote of 2,420 to 46 after its leader, Otto Wagner, gave a speech advancing the extreme racist argument that a large number of Jews had criminal, not human instincts, and he blamed the Jews for dividing the German people into classes. Some of the Jews who had been expelled from various chapters of the Alpenverein subsequently formed their own "Donauland" chapter in Vienna in late 1921, which was admitted into the Alpenverein by a 14-to-12 vote of the executive committee. Even this apartheid solution was unacceptable to the Klagenfurt section of the Alpenverein, which in 1924 demanded the expulsion of Donauland. Ninety-nine chapters, nearly all of them Austrian, sponsored the bill, which was accompanied by a threat from the Klagenfurters that they and the other Austrians would withdraw from the organization altogether if their demand was not met. The motion was approved by the main assembly by a vote of 1,660 to 70. This expulsion did not entirely end the matter, however, because the "Austria" section of the Alpenverein continued its enmity toward Donauland. It blamed Jews for the Treaty of St. Germain and for the growing influx of tourists into Austria, many of whom, according to the chapter, were obtrusive Jews who wore offensive clothing and destroyed the landscape. 2
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Another organization having pronounced anti-Semitic proclivities was the Osterreichischer Touristenklub or Austrian Tourist Club. In theory the club was merely supposed to protect the Austrian Alps from "undesirable elements." The club began excluding Jews informally in 1920 and then made it official a year later. 3
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Gymnastic organizations in Austria were even more nationalistic and anti-Semitic, tracing their ideological heritage back to the early nineteenth-century teachings of "Turnvater" Friedrich Jahn. Like the Alpenverein, they were often more anti-Semitic than their counterparts in Germany. The Turnerbund ridiculed the parent Deutsche Turnerschaft in Germany for accepting Jews as members and considering them Germans if they had German citizenship and had converted to Christianity. Already in 1897 the Erster Wiener Turnverein (First Viennese Gymnasts' Club) introduced the so-called Aryan
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