[1] Glücksmann studied secondary school in Wadowitz, where he joined a socialist students organization.
He was a leading figure of the Austrian Social Democratic Party in Bielsko, and worked with its press organ Volksstimme.
[3] The DSDP later evolved, after a series of mergers, into the German Socialist Labour Party in Poland (DSAP).
The first joint protests by DSAP and the Polish Socialist Party (PPS) were organized on Glücksmann's initiative.
As a result, Glücksmann resigned from his position as the chairman of the DSAP organization in the Bielsko subdistrict.
After the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement between the Polish government in exile and the Soviets, Glücksmann was free to leave Yoshkar-Ola and in the fall of 1941 he moved to Bukhara.