Käthe (Marianne Katharina) Leichter

Is your surname Leichter?

Research the Leichter family

Käthe (Marianne Katharina) Leichter's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Käthe (Marianne Katharina) Leichter (Pick)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Vienna, Wien, Austria
Death: March 17, 1942 (46)
Bernburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany (Poison gas)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Dr. Jur. Josef Pick and Charlotte Lotte Pick
Wife of Dr. Otto Leichter
Mother of Henry (Heinz) Otto Leichter and Private User
Sister of Valerie "Vally" Weigl

Managed by: Pam Karp
Last Updated:
view all

Immediate Family

About Käthe (Marianne Katharina) Leichter

Dr Kathe Leichter was arrested on 30 May 1938 and sent to Rabensbruck [please read carfully: the place is Ravensbrueck!] concentration camp. He [She!] was murdered with poison gas in March 1942 [in Bernburg!].

Source

Euthanasia Institute, Bernberg



Author and politician

From "Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia" by Harriet Freidenreich
[http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/leichter-kaethe]

Käthe Leichter was undoubtedly the foremost socialist feminist in “Red Vienna” during the interwar years. A Social Democratic politician, labor organizer and author, with a doctorate in political economy, she directed women’s affairs for the Viennese Chamber of Workers (Arbeiterkammer). In May 1938, before she had a chance to escape from Austria, Käthe Leichter was arrested by the Gestapo for illegal socialist activities; she was never released from imprisonment.

Marianne Katharina Pick was the younger daughter of Josef Pick, a lawyer from a wealthy family of Jewish textile manufacturers from Bohemia, and his beautiful and cultured wife, the former Lotte Rubinstein, who came from an affluent Jewish banking family in Romania. Käthe, as she was always known, was born in Vienna on August 20, 1895, less than a year after her sister Vally. As children, the two girls were treated like twins; they were the same size and were always dressed alike. Käthe resented her pretty and talented sister, who took after their mother and became a musician, and chose to emulate their intellectual father instead. Josef Pick was a liberal freethinker, unlike his father, who was an observant Jew, kept kosher, led a traditional family seder, and encouraged his granddaughters to fast on Yom Kippur. Although Käthe was attracted to religious observance briefly while in her mid-teens, she rebelled against Judaism and liberal middle-class values when, at the age of seventeen, she joined the Viennese youth movement led by Siegfried Bernfeld and subsequently became a socialist. She opted out of the Jewish community by becoming konfessionslos, or without religious affiliation.

Käthe Pick decided at a young age that she wanted to devote her life to helping the less fortunate, especially members of the working class. After the outbreak of World War I, she did volunteer work on behalf of the war effort and worked in a day nursery for workers’ children; she soon became an ardent socialist and pacifist. In 1914, she began studying political economy at the University of Vienna. She would have preferred enrolling in law school, but women were excluded from studying law in Austria at that time. In 1917, she transferred to the University of Heidelberg, but in December, she was expelled from Germany for the duration of the war; she needed special permission to complete her doctorate in 1918 in Heidelberg. Her dissertation on foreign trade relations between Austria-Hungary and Italy won her highest honors, however. In 1921, Käthe Pick married another left-wing activist, Otto Leichter, whom she had met in the student socialist movement during the war. They had two sons, Heinz, born in 1924, and Franz, born in 1930. While Otto Leichter became editor of the major Austrian socialist newspaper, Die Arbeiter-Zeitung, Käthe Leichter served as a party functionary on the Viennese workers’ council and the Commission on Socialization.

As an official of the Social Democratic-controlled municipal government, Leichter systematically gathered material on women’s work in Austria, compiled statistical data, and published articles and reports. She worked on behalf of legislation to protect workingwomen, including household servants, home workers and agricultural workers, who were often excluded from health and unemployment insurance and other benefits. She was also concerned about the exclusion of university-educated women from professional opportunities and tried to get more women hired at all levels of social administration, demanding equal pay for equal work. Leichter spread her ideas not only through her publications, but also through lectures, courses in schools and trade unions, and radio broadcasts. She participated actively in Social Democratic Party conferences and interacted with other Austrian socialist women. The overall significance of her contribution is difficult to evaluate, however, since her work was interrupted by the Austrian Civil War of February 1934 before it could reach fruition.

Käthe and Otto Leichter both played active roles in the socialist underground in Austria after 1934. After the Anschluss in 1938, her husband and sons succeeded in escaping to Switzerland and subsequently found refuge in the United States, but Käthe Leichter was arrested while paying a final visit to her mother before attempting to flee to Czechoslovakia. While in prison, she wrote memoirs of her early years and kept in touch with her family. Even in the women’s concentration camp of Ravensbruck, she continued to exercise her leadership skills. In January of 1942, together with other Jewish prisoners, she was sent on a transport to an unknown destination, where she was murdered soon thereafter. An urn with her ashes was sent back to Vienna, along with her last letter to her children.

In memory of Käthe Leichter, the Austrian government established an annual state prize awarded to an outstanding Austrian woman historian. The recipient of this award in 1988, the distinguished Viennese-born American women’s historian Gerda Lerner, paid the following tribute to Leichter, which aptly sums up her life and her accomplishments:

Käthe Leichter personifies the highest ideals of feminism—lifelong activity on behalf of all women, but especially working-class women; conviction that social reforms are only just if they serve the interests of women as well as men; uncompromising struggle against fascism and National Socialism, which cost her life. In Käthe Leichter’s life there was no divide between theory and praxis; she combined her work as a journalist and organizer with her duties as mother and wife, her political leadership role with her research work as a social scientist. Käthe Leichter was heroic in her achievements, for she dared in a time of terror and oppression to organize resistance and to oppose the horrors of Nazi state power with the brave words of humanism on thin leaflets. It was for this she was jailed and finally gassed. (Lerner, Why History Matters, 50–51.)

SELECTED OF WORKS BY KÄTHE LEICHTER

PAPERS

Dokumentationsarchiv des Österreichischen Widerstands, Vienna; Verein für Geschichte der Österreichischen Arbeiterbewegung, Vienna.

“Erfahrungen des österreichischen Sozialisierungsversuchs.” In Der lebendige Marxismus. Festgabe zum 70. Geburtstag Karl Kautskys. Jena: 1924; “Die Entwicklung der Frauenarbeit nach dem Krieg.” In Handbuch der Frauenarbeit in Österreich. Vienna: 1930; “Vom revolutionären Syndikalismus zur Verstaatlichung der Gewerkschaften.” In Festschrift für Carl Grünberg zur 70. Geburtstag. Leipzig: 1932; “Lebenserinnerungen” in Herbert Steiner, ed. Käthe Leichter: Leben und Werk. Vienna: 1973, 235–386. (This volume also includes a complete bibliography of Leichter’s writings, 229–231).

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Steiner, Herbert, ed. Käthe Leichter: Leben und Werk. Vienna: 1973; Steiner, Herbert. “Käthe Leichter.” Österreich in Geschichte und Literatur, 18 (1974), 273–279; Leichter, Otto. “Käthe Leichter.” In Norbert Leser, ed. Werk und Widerhall: Grosse Gestalten des österreichischen Sozialismus. Vienna: 1964, 234–244; “An Austrian Social Democrat Women’s Leader Died in a German Concentration Camp.” Austrian Labor News. New York, May 5, 1942; Pollak, Marianne. “Käthe Leichter. Zum 20. Gedenktag ihrer Ermordung.” Zukunft, March 1962; Lerner, Gerda. Why History Matters: Life and Thought. New York: 1997, 50–55; Lafleur, Ingrun. “Five Socialist Women: Traditionalist Conflicts and Socialist Visions in Austria, 1893–1934.” In Marilyn J. Boxer & Jean H. Quataert, eds. Socialist Women: European Socialist Feminism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. New York: 1978, 215–48; Freidenreich, Harriet Pass. Female, Jewish, and Educated: The Lives of Central European University Women. Bloomington: 2002; Beller, Steven. Vienna and the Jews 1867–1938. Cambridge: 1989; Lexikon, 241–243. ___________

Board of Women’s and Gender Studies, University of Vienna [http://genderkult.univie.ac.at/en/kaethe-leicher-visiting-professor...]

Käthe Leichter (née Pick, born 1895 in Vienna) is one of the pioneers of Austrian women’s politics and social policy. She studied law and political science in Heidelberg and Vienna between 1914 and 1918. In 1919 Käthe Leichter became a research assistant of Otto Bauer’s in the committee of nationalisation and a consultant for the Ministry of Finance. Between 1925 and February of 1934 she was head of the newly-founded department for women’s labour in the Vienna Arbeiterkammer (Chamber of Labour), where she was in charge of sociological investigations of women’s labour. She published a large number of newspaper articles, essays and books, e.g. Frauenarbeit und Arbeiterinnenschutz in Österreich (Women’s labour and women workers’ protection in Austria) in 1927; Wie leben die Wiener Heimarbeiter (Vienna’s homeworkers and their way of living) in 1928; Handbuch der Frauenarbeit in Österreich (Manual of women’s labour in Austria) in 1930; So leben wir... 1320 Industriearbeiterinnen berichten über ihr Leben (This is how we live... 1320 female industrial workers talk about their lives) in 1932. Käthe Leichter was also a member of the women’s committee of the Socialist party and the first woman to be elected a member of the works council of the Arbeiterkammer. From February 1934 on, Käthe Leichter joined the banned revolutionary socialists, gave lectures and participated in information and intelligence services. In 1938 she was arrested and sent to the concentration camp of Ravensbrück in 1939, where she was killed in 1942.

- - - - - - - - -
https://www.uni-heidelberg.de/de/universitaet/heidelberger-profile/...

https://www.uni-heidelberg.de/de/newsroom/kaethe-leichter-forum-wir...

view all

Käthe (Marianne Katharina) Leichter's Timeline

1895
August 20, 1895
Vienna, Wien, Austria
1924
March 3, 1924
Vienna, Austria
1942
March 17, 1942
Age 46
Bernburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany