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Maria Backenecker (born Maria Scharnetzki; 20 March 1893 – 24 December 1931) was a German politician (
KPD The Communist Party of Germany (german: Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands, , KPD ) was a major political party in the Weimar Republic between 1918 and 1933, an underground resistance movement in Nazi Germany, and a minor party in West German ...
) and feminist activist. She was elected to the Reichstag (national parliament) in 1924, but was expelled from the party early in 1927 during the course of one of its periodic outbursts of internal division. Her life and political career were cut short by Tuberculosis.


Life

Maria Scharnetzki was born in
Bochum Bochum ( , also , ; wep, Baukem) is a city in North Rhine-Westphalia. With a population of 364,920 (2016), is the sixth largest city (after Cologne, Düsseldorf, Dortmund, Essen and Duisburg) of the most populous Germany, German federal state o ...
in the Prussian
Province of Westphalia The Province of Westphalia () was a province of the Kingdom of Prussia and the Free State of Prussia from 1815 to 1946. In turn, Prussia was the largest component state of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918, of the Weimar Republic and from 1918 ...
, then a booming industrial town located between Düsseldorf and
Dortmund Dortmund (; Westphalian nds, Düörpm ; la, Tremonia) is the third-largest city in North Rhine-Westphalia after Cologne and Düsseldorf, and the eighth-largest city of Germany, with a population of 588,250 inhabitants as of 2021. It is the la ...
, and after marrying a man named Backenecker, spent her early adulthood as a working class housewife. During the turbulence that followed the First World War she joined the Independent Social Democratic Party (''Unabhängige Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands'' / USPD) which had split away from the mainstream Social Democratic Party a couple of years earlier, primarily on account of differences over whether or not to continue with support for the country's participation in the war. The USPD itself split in 1920. Maria Backenecker was an active participant in the process whereby the larger part of the USPD merged with the recently formed German Communist Party. In the years that followed she engaged in the
Communist Communism (from Latin la, communis, lit=common, universal, label=none) is a far-left sociopolitical, philosophical, and economic ideology and current within the socialist movement whose goal is the establishment of a communist society, a s ...
Feminist movement in the economically and politically important Ruhr region, which came under foreign military occupation a couple of years later. In 1924 she was elected to the Reichstag (national parliament) as a Communist Party member representing the eighteenth electoral district ( Westpahlia South). However, the continuing economic pressures meant that 1924 was another year of acute austerity, and a second general election was triggered at the end of the year, which saw the Communist share of the vote falling back, with a corresponding reduction in the number of people on the party list gaining seats in the new legislature: Maria Backenecker was too low down on the party's list of candidates for her to retain her place in the Reichstag after the election of December 1924. She remained politically active within the Communist Party, positioned firmly on the left wing of it. As a further internal split approached she found herself in opposition to the party leadership under Ernst Thälmann. She was excluded from the party in 1927. In 1928 she was one of around 6,000 founding members of the
Leninbund The Lenin League (german: Leninbund) was a German revolutionary socialist organisation that was active during the later period of the Weimar Republic. Founded in 1928 by former left communist members of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD), it ex ...
, an alternative Communist Party composed largely of former members of the mainstream party who had been excluded from positions of influence or, as in Backenecker's case, from the party itself because Thälmann found them too left wing.Hermann Weber: Die Wandlung des deutschen Kommunismus. Die Stalinisierung der KPD in der Weimarer Republik. vol 2. Frankfurt/Main 1969, p. 65 However, when the Leninbund itself broke apart in a pattern that mirrored the conflict between Stalin and Trotsky that had played out in Moscow a couple of years earlier, Backenecker was one of those who followed
Anton Grylewicz Anton Grylewicz (8 January 1885 – 2 August 1971) was a German communist politician. Early life Grylewicz was born into a working-class family in Berlin, where he finished school and was apprenticed as a locksmith. From 1907 to 1909 he did his m ...
away from the Leninbund, and she became the leader of the Trotskyite Left wing opposition to the Communist Party in Hamborn. While German politics became ever more extreme and polarised in the run up to the Nazi take-over in January 1933, Maria Backenecker herself died from Tuberculosis on 24 December 1931.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Backenecker, Maria 1893 births 1931 deaths Politicians from Bochum Politicians from the Province of Westphalia Independent Social Democratic Party politicians Communist Party of Germany politicians Members of the Reichstag 1920–1924 Members of the Reichstag 1924 German Trotskyists 20th-century German women politicians German socialist feminists