{{Short description|French-German footballer (1913–2006)}} {{about|the footballer|the Slovenian politician|Anton Raab}} {{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}} {{Infobox football biography | name = Antoine Raab | image = 0-ANTON RAAB.jpg | image_size = | caption = 1939 portrait of Raab | fullname = Anton Raab | birth_date = {{Birth date|1913|7|16|df=y}} | birth_place = Frankfurt, German Empire | death_date = {{death date and age|2006|12|12|1913|7|16|df=y}} | death_place = Nantes, France | height = | position = Defender or midfielder | years1 = 1929–1934 | clubs1 = FC Union Niederrad | caps1 = | goals1 = | years2 = 1937–1938 | clubs2 = CA Paris | caps2 = | goals2 = | years3 = 1939 | clubs3 = UMP Saint-Nazaire | caps3 = | goals3 = | years4 = 1938–1939 | clubs4 = Saint-Pierre de Nantes | caps4 = | goals4 = | years5 = 1939–1940 | clubs5 = Rennes | caps5 = | goals5 = | years6 = 1944–1949 | clubs6 = Nantes | caps6 = | goals6 = | years7 = 1949–1950 | clubs7 = Laval | caps7 = | goals7 = | totalcaps = | totalgoals = | manageryears1 = 1946–1949 | managerclubs1 = FC Nantes | manageryears2 = 1949–1950 | managerclubs2 = Stade Lavallois | manageryears3 = 1955–1956 | managerclubs3 = FC Nantes | manageryears4 = 1956–1961 | managerclubs4 = FC Nantes (director of sports) }} '''Anton "Antoine" Raab''' (16 July 1913 – 12 December 2006)<ref name="wf">{{WorldFootball.net|anton-raab|access-date=13 May 2020}}</ref> was a German football player and manager. Raab spent most of his career in France after having escaped Nazi Germany, being prosecuted and incarcerated for refusing to give the Nazi salute at a football game, according to his words.<ref name="Antoine" >{{cite web |url=http://www.tafdt.org/antoine-raab/ |title= Antoine RAAB (1913–2006) |date= |website=tafdt.org |publisher=Historical Society of Treillières |accessdate= 14 February 2016|language=French|trans-title= }}</ref><ref name="Équipe" >{{cite web |url=https://www.lequipe.fr/Football/Actualites/-/400000000000000000000000000683 |title= Décès d'Antoine Raab |date=13 December 2006 |work=L'Équipe |accessdate= 14 February 2016|language=French|trans-title= Death of Antoine Raab}}</ref><ref name="Rep" >{{cite web |url=http://www.republicain-lorrain.fr/sports/2012/05/17/raab-l-insoumis |title= Raab l'insoumis |date=17 May 2012 |work=Le Républicain Lorrain |accessdate= 14 February 2016|language=French|trans-title= Rebellious Raab}}</ref>

A biography about his life has been published in 2022 by a former French journalist.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.ouest-france.fr/sport/football/fc-nantes/livre-la-vie-de-legende-d-anton-raab-militant-anti-nazi-et-pilier-du-fc-nantes-449388b4-2f6d-11ed-bd84-c332a9af669a | title=Livre. La Â"vie de légendeÂ" d’Anton Raab, militant anti-nazi et pilier du FC Nantes | date=11 September 2022 }}</ref>

==Biography== Raab, born in Frankfurt, Hesse, was one of four children of a German First World War veteran. His father, through his own experience during the war, raised Raab a pacifist and Christian and the latter held a strong conviction against any form of killing. Raab turned from his Christian faith however when, as a 19-year-old, he saw a priest bless a submarine in Hamburg.<ref name="Antoine" />

A promising young player for Eintracht Frankfurt, Raab was selected to captain a German youth side in a game in Stuttgart where he refused to give the Nazi salute. He was not immediately prosecuted because of his status as a youth international, but was monitored by the police, and arrested 18 months later. Raab was detained and tortured for the next 11 months and eventually sentenced to 15 years of hard labour. Imprisoned in the fortress of Kassel, Raab contemplated suicide but was talked out of it by one of the guards. Raab fabricated a key, escaped and found shelter with a woman whose husband had been shot and killed by the Nazis. With the help of his brother, Raab escaped Germany for France on 1 May 1937, dressed in a SS uniform.<ref name="Antoine" /><ref name="Rep" />

Unable to speak French and without any money Raab received help from local people and eventually made his way to Paris where he was recognised as former German youth international and, despite opposition from Germany, signed for CA Paris. Raab moved to Nantes for work reasons in 1938 but had to give up his post as a draftsman after the outbreak of the Second World War because of the company being involved in national defence contracts. He was eventually arrested because of his German nationality and sent to work in an ammunition factory until shortly before the armistice in 1940 when he escaped from the advancing German Army. During the German occupation of France Raab avoided arrest by the Germans and wrote pacifist leaflets which he distributed to German soldiers, hiding for a time in the village of Treillières.<ref name="Antoine" /><ref name="Rep" />

After the liberation of Nantes in 1944 Raab joined FC Nantes and played for the club until 1949. He also had two stints as manager of FC Nantes as well as becoming the club's director of sports for a time. He became a critic of the money involved in professional football when, at the same time, there was so much suffering and poverty in the world. Raab died on 12 December 2006 in Nantes.<ref name="Antoine" /><ref name="Rep" />

==References== {{Reflist}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Raab, Antoine}} Category:1913 births Category:2006 deaths Category:German anti-fascists Category:German men's footballers Category:German torture victims Category:German escapees Category:Men's association football defenders Category:Escapees from German detention Category:German people imprisoned in France Category:World War II civilian prisoners Category:German expatriate men's footballers Category:Expatriate men's footballers in France Category:German expatriate football managers Category:Expatriate football managers in France Category:German expatriate sportspeople in France Category:Footballers from Frankfurt Category:Eintracht Frankfurt players Category:CA Paris-Charenton players Category:Stade Rennais FC players Category:FC Nantes players Category:Stade Lavallois players Category:FC Nantes managers Category:20th-century German sportsmen