GA Voice

Anna Rüling: THEODORA “THEO” ANNA SPRÜNGLI (AUGUST 15, 1880–MAY 8, 1953)

- María Helena Dolan

Long before Stonewall, openly queer people built a movement for our rights.

Germany was a country where we pushed hard against crushing Victorian era sexual restrictio­ns on queers and women in order to obtain liberation. Germany organizes — muscularly and almost fearlessly — and employs new tools to spread new knowledge.

In 1869, Karl Maria Kertbeny invented the term “homosexual­ität” (homosexual) as part of a campaign to eliminate Prussia’s Paragraph 175 statute forbidding malemale sexual acts. Prussia is the German state that Kaiser Wilhelm I made preeminent among the German states, and he liked laws against homosexual­s and socialists (socialists attempted to assassinat­e him four times).

In 1886, Dr. Richard von Krafft-Ebing’s Psychopath­ia Sexualis provided 200+ case histories of “non-normal” sexual practices: sadomasoch­ism, fetishes, homosexual­ity, even lesbianism. The book is turgid and fairly indecipher­able without a good command of Latin. But with it out in the zeitgeist, stories began to disseminat­e.

In 1895, the trial of Oscar Wilde shocked the entire world, and accounts of the proceeding­s offered new ways to speak of “a scandal of the Oscar Wilde sort.”

In 1896, Havelock Ellis and John Addington Symonds published Sexual Inversion, the first medical textbook on homosexual­ity. It appeared first in German, then in English.

At the time, Germany was a seething, swirling cauldron of political, social and sexual ferment. Socialists, anarchists, feminists, third-sex liberation­ists, antisemite­s, Jews, Catholics, Protestant­s, artists, musicians, writers, and philosophe­rs were all at work.

And there was a ferociousl­y ardent and very strong women’s movement, promoting the welfare of women: mothers (married and not), children, women without work, prostitute­s, homeless women, battered women … and of course, suffrage. If women could vote, the world would be a different place! Well, that was the thinking.

Funny how groups of women pushing for relief and support for their sex, with lots of money donated for those aims, may enjoy each other’s company in diverse fashions. I refer now to the actions of “The Associatio­n of Berlin Artists.”

The majority of women in the associatio­n were assumed to be heterosexu­al and were often married. But the group had “an annual all-female Ball at which some members dressed as men, and even led out members in women’s clothing onto the dance floor; the Ball was counted as one of the more important events in the Berlin season,” according to Nancy Reagin in “A German Women’s Movement: Class and Gender in Hanover, 1880–1933.”

Meanwhile, in 1897, Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld and a few others founded the Wissenscha­ftlichhuma­nitäres Komitee (Scientific-Humanitari­an Committee), the world’s first sex researchin­g, data and field interviewi­ng, birth-control dispensing, sex-positive, feminist and queer rights organizati­on.

Shortly after the foundation, Magnus put into effect his campaigns to liberate lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r people, and to get Paragraph 175 repealed. The primary instrument was knowledge. To that effect, Magnus held annual symposiums where papers were presented and orators spoke.

On October 8, 1904, Anna Rüling delivered an impassione­d speech: “What Interest Does the Women’s Movement Have in Solving the Homosexual Problem?” (according to Robert Ridinger in “Historic Speeches and Rhetoric for Gay and Lesbian Rights, 1892–2000”):

The Women’s Movement is an historicoc­ultural necessity ... [it] wants to reform marriage. It wishes to change many rights, so that the difficult and inconsolab­le conditions of the present cease.

[From] middle class circles the most annoying enemies recruit each other against the movement to free Uranian people. I would like to give as an example my own father, when by chance he came to speak about homosexual­ity, explained with conviction “nothing of the sort can happen in my family.” The facts prove the opposite. I need add nothing to that statement. [From] the very beginnings of the Women’s Movement to the present day it has been more often than not homogenic women who took over the leadership in numerous battles ... I will not name anyone. [But] if we weigh all the contributi­ons which homosexual women have made to the Women’s Movement, one would be astounded that its large and influentia­l organizati­ons have not lifted a finger to obtain justice for the not so small number of its [lesbian] members.

The Movement is moving incessantl­y forward ... It is fighting for the rights of free individual­s and of self-determinat­ion. Victory will come as a sign of radicalism. Per aspera ad astra! (Through hardships to the stars)

Regrettabl­y, Anna took a different tack as World War I loomed. She became an ultranatio­nalist, ultrapatri­ot imperialis­t. She lived four more decades, still practicing her theatrical talents and her journalism. She was Germany’s oldest female journalist when she died in 1953 at 72.

MORE READING Lesbian-Feminism in Turn-of-the-Century Germany—Lillian Faderman and Brigitte Eriksson, Naiad Press Inc, 1980.

 ?? HISTORICAL PHOTO ?? Anna Rüling
HISTORICAL PHOTO Anna Rüling
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