Rosette Susanna "Rosa" Manus (; 20 August 1881 – 1942) was a
Jewish Dutch pacifist and
female suffragist involved in women's movements and anti-war movements,
who was a victim of
the Holocaust
The Holocaust (), known in Hebrew language, Hebrew as the (), was the genocide of History of the Jews in Europe, European Jews during World War II. From 1941 to 1945, Nazi Germany and Collaboration with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy ...
. She served as the President of the Society for Female Suffrage, the Vice President of the Dutch Association for Women's Interests and Equal Citizenship, and was one of the founding members of the
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) as well as its secretary. She firmly believed that women could work together across the world to bring peace. Although Manus was fairly well known in feminist circles in the 1920s and 1930s, she remains relatively unknown today. She was involved in feminist work for about thirty years during her lifetime and was known as a "feminist liberal internationalist."
Early years
Rosette Susanna Manus was born in 1881 in
Amsterdam, Netherlands, the second of seven children to affluent
Jew
Jews (, , ), or the Jewish people, are an ethnoreligious group and nation, originating from the Israelites of ancient Israel and Judah. They also traditionally adhere to Judaism. Jewish ethnicity, religion, and community are highly inte ...
ish parents. Her father was Henry Philip Manus, a tobacco merchant, and her mother was Soete Vita Israël, a homemaker.
While the Manus family was Jewish, they were fairly assimilated. At-home education was the norm for Jewish women during the time, and Manus's upbringing was no different. Her father prevented her from attending university and becoming a nurse. Activism, therefore, became her outlet. As an incredibly wealthy woman, a modern-day millionaire through inheritance, Manus joined the elite ranks of female activist leadership.
Women's Suffrage and Pacifism Work
Suffrage
Manus became involved with the international
women's suffrage
Women's suffrage is the women's rights, right of women to Suffrage, vote in elections. Several instances occurred in recent centuries where women were selectively given, then stripped of, the right to vote. In Sweden, conditional women's suffra ...
movement in 1908 at the Congress of the
International Woman Suffrage Alliance (IWSA), later renamed the
International Alliance of Women (IAW). At the 1908 Congress, she met Dutch suffragist
Aletta Jacobs and American suffragist
Carrie Chapman Catt, who would become lifelong colleagues and friends. Manus was devoutly loyal to the IWSA, and as its vice president, she actively resisted talk of its replacement with the World Women's Party.
[Rupp, Leila J., and Verta Taylor. “Forging Feminist Identity in an International Movement: A Collective Identity Approach to Twentieth-Century Feminism.” ''Signs'' 24, no. 2 (1999): 363–86. .] This opposition was based mainly on the personal issues she had with the leadership of
Alice Paul
Alice Stokes Paul (January 11, 1885 – July 9, 1977) was an American Quaker, suffragette, suffragist, feminist, and women's rights activist, and one of the foremost leaders and strategists of the campaign for the Nineteenth Amendment to the Unit ...
.
Following the 1908
Fourth Conference of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance in Amsterdam, Manus became a board member of the Dutch Association for Women's Suffrage (''
Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht'', VVK).
In the VVK, Manus worked closely alongside
Mia Boissevain on the Propaganda Committee. Together they organized a 1913 exhibition, "''
De Vrouw 1813–1913''," (The Woman) on the lives of Dutch women
and successfully argued for women's full citizenship in the Netherlands.
In 1915, Manus played an integral role in organizing the
International Congress of Women at
The Hague
The Hague ( ) is the capital city of the South Holland province of the Netherlands. With a population of over half a million, it is the third-largest city in the Netherlands. Situated on the west coast facing the North Sea, The Hague is the c ...
, where she was appointed secretary of a new International Committee of Women for Permanent Peace, later known as the
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF). Manus and Aletta Jacobs are often credited with the survival of WILPF through the First World War.
Manus accompanied Carrie Chapman Catt, then-President of the IWSA, on a world tour in 1922-1923.
They toured Latin America (visiting Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile and Peru) where they met with many fellow female activists, including
Bertha Lutz, and discussed issues of Latin American women's suffrage.
Along with other IAW members, Manus attended the Week of Women Suffrage Campaign in Egypt to aide Egyptian women in their efforts to gain the vote in 1935. She also attended the
13th Conference of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance in 1939.
Peace Movements
Manus participated in a number of peace movements throughout the 1930s.
She served as secretary of the Peace and Disarmament Committee, a women's international organization. Her job consisted of collecting signatures to protest war in advance of the
Geneva Disarmament Conference in 1932.
Later, in 1936, Manus served as secretary for the ''Rassemblement Universel pour la Paix'' (RUP) and the
World Peace Congress.
For her efforts, the Dutch Police put her under surveillance. Due to her work, Catholics and national socialists in the Netherlands launched a "hate-campaign" against her because she was a Jewish woman with significant political and social standing.
Other Women's Organizations
In 1935, together with
Johanna Naber and
Willemijn Posthumus-van der Goot, Manus established the
International Archives for the Women's Movement (IAV), later known as the International Information Centre and Archives for the Women's Movement and currently known as
Atria Institute on Gender Equality and Women's History which is located in Amsterdam.
Manus's papers are currently located in these archives, however, they were only recovered in 1992 when they were found in Moscow.
When the Nazis invaded the Netherlands in 1940, they took the papers from the IAV and moved them to an unknown location in Berlin. How and when her papers were taken from Berlin to Moscow remains unknown but it appears that only a fraction of her documents survived.
Manus also founded the Dutch Electrical Association for Women.
Manus was made an
Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau by royal decree on August 22, 1936.
International Feminist Connections
Rosa Manus felt part of the international women's movement as evidenced from pieces of writing to
Mary Sheepshanks about the publication of the feminist journal ''
Jus Suffragii''.
Such connections were also evident in her writings to Carrie Chapman Catt, whom she described repeatedly as a mother-like figure.
Catt and Manus toured Europe together and developed a close relationship. Manus felt comfortable in her relationship with Catt, enough so that she exposed her friend to newly emerging sexual culture of European society. She took Catt to a Parisian show fraught with nudity in order to educate Catt on national differences of women's ideals on sexuality and exposing Catt's limited sexual awareness due to her Puritan upbringing.
Judaism and Antisemitism
Women's organizations of the twentieth century often had both Antisemitic and anti-Muslim tendencies since they were predominantly run by Protestant women.
Manus was part of the first wave of Jewish women who started to refer to themselves as feminists. Within these organizations, Manus often faced pressure to conform and not give other Jewish women positions because the organizations did not want to seem too Jewish.
Manus spoke of her support for Carrie Chapman Catt's aide to Jewish refugees through her letters, but she found she needed to distance herself from that activism because of her own Jewish identity.
Manus's Jewishness brought her into conflict with other feminists, particularly those from Muslim countries. The issue of immigration of Jewish people to Palestine in the 1920s and 1930s kept Muslim and Jewish women in the region from uniting over feminist causes. This was true for Manus and Egyptian feminist
Huda Sha'rawi who clashed over the issue even though the IAW and WILPF held Britain responsible for clashing interests in Palestine.
Sha'rawi strongly advocated for the Palestinians stating they were experiencing violence under British colonial rule while Manus and other feminists focused on the persecution of Jews during World War II. This caused further conflict between the two women. At an IWSA meeting in 1939, Manus came into conflict with Sha'rawi who was a representative from Egypt.
They had conflicting views about Palestine.
As
Nazi Germany
Nazi Germany, officially known as the German Reich and later the Greater German Reich, was the German Reich, German state between 1933 and 1945, when Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party controlled the country, transforming it into a Totalit ...
rose to power in the 1930s, Manus grew aware of the threat to herself and her movement. While attending a play in London, England, Manus first encountered the plot of the Nazi regime to kill the Jewish people.
It was at this point that Manus donated her papers to the IAV.
In 1933, after attending the Geneva Disarmament Conference, Manus helped found and became the president of the Dutch ''Neutraal Vrouwencomite' voor de Vluchtelingen'' (Neutral Women's Committee for Refugees).
She was accused at various points of both communism and pacifism and was particularly targeted on top of these issues because she was Jewish and a woman.
Death
The
Gestapo
The (, ), Syllabic abbreviation, abbreviated Gestapo (), was the official secret police of Nazi Germany and in German-occupied Europe.
The force was created by Hermann Göring in 1933 by combining the various political police agencies of F ...
arrested Manus between August 10 and August 14, 1941
and deported her to Germany. They arrested Manus due to her actions as a pacifist activist, however, they deported her because she was Jewish rather than because of her political actions. First she was taken to
Auschwitz and then was transferred to
Ravensbrück concentration camp
Ravensbrück () was a Nazi concentration camp exclusively for women from 1939 to 1945, located in northern Germany, north of Berlin at a site near the village of Ravensbrück (part of Fürstenberg/Havel). The camp memorial's estimated figure of 1 ...
(a camp for political prisoners and Jews) by train in October 1941. Multiple sources suggest that she was
gassed in the
Nazi euthanasia mental hospital of Bernburg in 1942, but there is conflicting information around her place and date of death.
Manus is a less well-known figure because she left few personal texts behind and she did not write a memoir like other feminists of her era. She did not feel as though she was a particularly important person. She often refrained from taking positions of immediate leadership because of her Jewishness, but she accepted on occasion because she was the lone Jewish female representative who had the chance and felt it was important in certain circumstances to step up - she always claimed her actions were for her feminism rather than her Jewishness.
See also
*
List of peace activists
*Manus friend and biographer,
Clara Meijers
References
External links
Archief Rosa Manus Fonds Atria, kennisinstituut voor emancipatie en vrouwengeschiedenis, Amsterdam, Netherlands
{{DEFAULTSORT:Manus, Rosa
1881 births
1942 deaths
Anti–World War I activists
Dutch feminists
Dutch Jews who died in the Holocaust
Dutch suffragists
Pacifist feminists
Jewish feminists
Jewish pacifists
Jewish suffragists
People from Amsterdam
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom people
Ravensbrück concentration camp prisoners
International Congress of Women people
20th-century Dutch women
People murdered at the Bernburg Euthanasia Centre