Peter Wust

He developed close friendships with the editors of the Munich-based Catholic monthly Hochland, Carl Muth and Otto Gruendler,[2] maintaining an "intense" correspondence with them and publishing six essays in the magazine between 1922 and 1926.

When Adolf Hitler came to power, Wust, one of the few early readers of Mein Kampf, became active in the church's resistance.

Before his death he wrote a farewell letter to his students,[4] which reportedly was widely read at the Eastern Front.

Werner Schüßler, philosophy professor at the University of Trier, re-edited Wust's magnum opus, Ungewissheit und Wagnis, in 2002. in einer neuen Bearbeitung herausgegeben (LIT Verlag, Münster).

[6] The influence of Wust's philosophy on Paul Klee's student Hubert Berke (1908–1979) was the subject of a 2004-2005 exposition in Merzig, "Von Peter Wust zu Paul Klee - Der Kölner Maler Hubert Berke.

Stamp commemorating the tenth anniversary of Wust's death.