Hilde Radusch (1903-1994)

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Hilde Radusch had a very eventful and sometimes hard life. She lost her job because of her communist membership, was arrested and resisted the Nazi regime. After the war, she was expelled from the communist party as a lesbian and fought not only for her personal economic survival, but also for the rights of lesbians in the post-war period. … more in the audio or in the text below

Location A: Memorial site Hilde Radusch, Eisenacher Straße 11-14, Berlin-Schöneberg  map / route

Location B: Berliner Grave of Honour Hilde Radusch V4 -008-010, Cementery „Alter St. Matthäus Kirchhof“, Kolonnenstr. 24-25, Berlin-Schöneberg  map / route

Image gallery Hilde Radusch

Further audio clips:

Related links & sources:

  • [in German] online article „Hilde Radusch“, by Ilona Scheidle
    https://mh-stiftung.de/projekte/biografien/hilde-radusch/ 
  • [in German] online article „Hilde Radusch (1903-1994)“, by Claudia Schoppmann, Berlin, 2005
    https://www.lesbengeschichte.org/bio_radusch_d.html
  • [in German] Book „Zeit der Maskierung. Lebensgeschichten lesbischer Frauen im Dritten Reich“ by Claudia Schoppmann, Orlanda Frauenverlag, 1993, Berlin
    de/Zeit-Maskierung-Lebensgeschichten-lesbischer-Dritten/dp/3922166946
  • [in German] TV movie „Muss es denn gleich beides sein? Aus dem Leben einer Aufsässigen“, by Petra Haffter & Pieke Biermann, West-Germany, 1985, available at the Berlin achives of „FFBIZ“ or „Spinnboden Lesbenarchiv
  • [in German] Article „Lesbische Subkultur im Regenbogenkiez“ by Katja Koblitz from the book „Spurensuche im Regenbogenkiez – Historische Orte und schillernde Persönlichkeiten, Maneo-Kiezgeschichte Volume 2, Berlin, 2018

She was born in 1903 in Altdamm near Stettin and came to Berlin Schöneberg at the age of 18 to escape the socially prescribed marriage career and to be able to live an independent and self-determined life by training as a nursery teacher. However, her membership of the Communist Youth League meant that she was unable to find employment in her trained profession. So she became a telephone operator at the post office, where she quickly found a politically effective role in a works council position, standing for colleagues in the labor court. It was at the post office that she met her first girlfriend Maria, with whom she remained together until 1933. With her, she frequented Berlin’s lesbian bars, such as the Toppkeller.

Hilde Radusch talked about her evenings in the Topkeller at Schwerinstrasse 13 in an interview [with Claudia Schoppmann (1986)] and remembers the “underwear dance”: “The skirts back then were quite long, and underneath were petticoats with lace. So they danced, you were allowed to lift your skirt a bit, and that was terribly sexy. Then came the polonaise, where you had to climb over the chairs standing against the cellar wall to finally get that longed-for kiss. It was so exciting that women from all classes came, including actresses. It was always full, and on Fridays you could hardly get in”.

Because Hilde was not allowed to join the paramilitary Red Front Fighters’ League as a woman, she quickly founded the “Red Women’s and Girls’ League”. At the height of her political career, she was a communist party deputy in the Berlin City Assembly from 1929-1932, but the party did not allow her to run again, one reason being her openly lesbian orientation. She was now invited to travel to the Soviet Union as a German delegate for the postal service. She then returned to a Germany that was now under National Socialist rule. After her return in 1933, she was arrested by the Nazis and imprisoned for six months as a “political prisoner”. After the communist party KPD was banned by the Nazis, she continued to work illegally for the party.

In 1939, she met her partner Else Klopsch, known as “Eddy”. Together they opened the “Lothringer Kücher” lunch counter in Berlin Mitte, which later also served as a shelter for illegal immigrants such as communists and Jews.

In August 1944, she and Eddy went into hiding in an arbor near Königs Wusterhausen to escape the imminent arrest of former political prisoners. Without food stamps, this was a time characterized by hunger.

After the end of the war until February 1946, she worked as an office manager for the Schöneberg district office in the “Victims of Fascism” department. In a questionnaire from the department, she stated that the Nazis had offered 1000 marks for someone who could prove that Eddy and she had committed a criminal offense.

In 1946, she was dealt another hard blow when her party and political home, the KPD, which she had supported at risk in the underground during the Nazi era, turned against her.  Because she was a lesbian, she was expelled from the party and lost her job and source of income.

Years of discrimination and economic hardship followed, with unemployment or unsteady employment. Eddy’s junk store provided her with a small income.  After Eddy’s death in 1960, things became quiet for her until she became active in the incipient lesbian movement. This was triggered by the 1974 television film ” And we take our rights! Lesbians in Germany“ about a group of Berlin women from the “Homosexual Action West Berlin”. Hilde then wrote them a letter: “I saw you on television and would like to offer you my help. I have lived with a woman for 8 years, 2 years and 21 years and consider myself competent in this area. However, I don’t know what I can do for you, because I’m 70 years old. But I care about our people.”

She then became a member of L’74, a West Berlin group of older lesbian women, and was a member of the editorial team of UKZ – Unsere kleine Zeitung / our small newspaper , the first lesbian magazine after 1945. Documentation and access to history and knowledge were important to her, so she also co-founded the Feminist Women’s Education and Information Center FFBIZ.

She lived a life away from convention and was always committed to helping other people, not just in theory but in practice. To this end, she accepted setbacks, discrimination, and renunciation in her life.

She died in Berlin-Schöneberg in 1994 at the age of 91 and was buried in the Alter St. Matthäus Kirchhof cemetery. The grave is classified as an honorary grave of the city of Berlin. The Hilde Radusch memorial was inaugurated at her last place of residence at Eisenacher Straße 11-14 in 2012.

© 2024, Rafael Nasemann, all rights reserved