Kai Holst
Kai Christian Middelthon Holst (24 February 1913 – 27 June 1945) was a Norwegian seaman, fur farmer and resistance fighter during World War II. When the leadership of Milorg was torn up by the Gestapo in 1942, he acquired a leading role in the organisation and participated in re-establishing the central leadership (Sentralledelsen, SL) of Milorg together with Jens Christian Hauge. Holst had to flee Norway in the autumn of 1943 and stayed in Sweden until the liberation of Norway in 1945.
Kai Holst | |
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Photo of Holst taken on 22 June 1945, a few days before his death | |
Born | Kai Christian Middelthon Holst 24 February 1913 Lillehammer |
Died | 27 June 1945 32) Stockholm | (aged
Cause of death | Pistol bullet to head, officially suicide but many friends and colleagues suspected murder. |
Body discovered | Top of stairway, apartment house, Gärdet |
Resting place | Vestre Gravlund, Oslo |
Nationality | Norwegian |
Education | Secondary school, vocational school |
Occupation(s) | Seaman, fur farmer |
Known for | Resistance fighter and suspicious circumstances regarding his death |
Spouse | Margarete Corneliussen |
Parent(s) | Christian and Inga Holst (born Rasmussen) |
Holst is remembered both for his work with the Norwegian resistance and for the circumstances surrounding his death in Stockholm in 1945. Holst's demise was so much talked of at the time that the Milorg leadership issued a statement in the Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten in July 1945. Swedish and Norwegian authorities officially concluded that Holst committed suicide, but his family and many of his friends and colleagues were of the opinion that Holst was murdered.