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Františka Plamínková (1875-1942), Czech Feminist and Patriot

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Barbara Reinfeld*
Affiliation:
New York Institute of Technology, USA

Extract

When the American suffragist Carrie Chapman Catt (1859-1947), one of the founders of the International Alliance for Women's Suffrage, came to Prague in 1908 to lecture before German-speaking groups of women in the city, a beautiful young teacher asked her to address Czech women as well. Catt readily obliged. She could not have known, then, that this determined Czech feminist and nationalist, Františka Plamínková (1875-1942) would become, in time, a familiar figure on the international circuit of women's organizations, known as “Madame Plam” and would be executed by the Nazis as a member of the Czech resistance.

For her fight against fascism and for the liberation of her nation Plamínková was awarded, posthumously in 1950, the Czechoslovak Order of the Gold Star by the Ministry of National Defense. But then her name disappeared, along with thousands of other names from the First Czechoslovak Republic, as Stalinist repression set in. A plaque affixed to the building once her residence on Staroměstské Square tells us little about this energetic, dedicated patriot and fighter for women's rights. In 1993, the Gender Institute in Prague opened its doors, and, today, as feminism begins to awaken in the Czech Republic, the work and accomplishments of Františka Plamínková should be instructive.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1997 Association for the Study of Nationalities of Eastern Europe 

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References

Notes

1. Honzáková, Albina, ed., Kniha života. Práce a osobnost F. F. Plamínkové 1875-1942 (Praha: Ženská národní rada, 1935), Vol. II, p. 721.Google Scholar

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12. Although she rejected his proposal of marriage, Plamínková continued a friendship with Vilém Freyer until his death in 1938. In a letter to Albína Honzáková in 1932, Plamínková specifically directed her to burn a box of her correspondence with Freyer after her death. Plamínková stated that the letters to Vilém reflected a stage of her life when she was searching for her identity, therefore, any commitment to him would have been a mistake. Plamínková to Honzáková, dated 3 October 1932 in Box I in Plamínková's archival deposits in Pamatník Národního Písemnictví, Staré Hrady, Libáň, Czech Republic.Google Scholar

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14. Masaryk, Alice, the oldest daughter of the Masaryks, was a graduate of Minerva, the first academic gymnasium for young Czech women and had just earned a doctorate in philosophy from Charles University in 1903. At the University she was a co-founder of the Klub akademický vzdělaných žen, a Czech equivalent of the American Association of University Women. A feminist and a patriot, she was imprisoned by the Habsburg regime during World War I. After the war, she became President of the Czechoslovak Red Cross, a position she held until the end of the First Republic. Other members of the executive council of the club included, Marie Tůmová, Marie Vítková, Fráňa Zemínovå, Albína Honzáková and Karla Máchová. See Honzáková, “Práce F. F. Plamínkové v Ženském klubu českém,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. I, p. 66.Google Scholar

15. Plamínková's archive in Pamatník Národního Písemnictví, Staré Hrady, Libáň, Czech Republic, Boxes I and II.Google Scholar

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17. A copy of this speech is in Box I, Plamínková's archive in Pamatník Národního Písemnictví, Staré Hrady, Libáň, Czech Republic. Other well-known essays penned by Plamínková at this time were: “Svůj svému” (“Each to His Own”), “Žena v demokracii” (“Woman in a Democracy”), “Občanská rovnost zen v republice” (“Civil Equality of Women in a Republic”), “Učitel, žena, a muž” (“Teacher, Woman and Man”) and “Právo vdané ženy k práci” (“The Right of Married Women to Work”). They were carried by these women's magazines: Zîenský obzor (“Women's View”), Zîenský svět (“Women's World”), Zîenská revue (“Women's Review”), and Zîenské listy (“Women's Journal”).Google Scholar

18. For the relationship between Czech feminists and nationalism, see Katherine David, “Czech Feminists and Nationalism in the Late Habsburg Monarchy: The First in Austria,” Journal of Women's History, Vol. 3, No. 2, 1991, pp. 2645.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

19. For the difficulties achieving parity with men, especially in any leadership positions within the national movement, see Claire Nolte, “Every Czech a Sokol!” in Austrian History Yearbook, Vol. XXIV, 1993, pp. 70100.Google Scholar

20. On one such occasion, the delegation cornered representative Masaryk to find Baron Gautsch. When he saw the Czech women, he exclaimed: “Mein Gott, so viele Damen!” (“My God, so many women!”) and promised to do something for women. See Laura Schmidtova, “Život v starém Volebním výboru,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. I, p. 324.Google Scholar

21. A Slavic federation for suffrage was too ambitious, however, Plamínková's feminism served as an inspiration to other Slav women, especially the Yugoslavs. See Ivan Lah, “Vzpomínka slovinského studenta,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. II, pp. 304308.Google Scholar

22. The International Alliance for Women's Suffrage Report for the Conference (1908), pp. 44-47. The same year, Plamínková wrote an article about emancipation for the Czech encyclopedia, “Ženská emancipace,” Ottův slovník náučny (Praha: J. Otto, 1908), Vol. 27, p. 809.Google Scholar

23. In the Czech lands, men and women who paid certain taxes or were members of the learned professions were allowed to vote in the elections for the Bohemian Diet and in municipal elections, except in Prague and Liberec. See, International Women Suffrage Alliance, Woman Suffrage in Practice (London and New York, 1913), p. 116.Google Scholar

24. This was the first election of a woman on a multi-party ticket; in Finland women had been elected as candidates of one party. See Evans, Richard J., The Feminists: Women's Emancipation Movements in Europe, America, and Australasia 1840-1920 (London: Croom Helm, 1978).Google Scholar

25. Referred to as temno (a period of darkness) it encompasses the period between the Battle of White Mountain, the defeat of the Hussite movement in 1620, and the beginning of the Czech National Renascence at the end of the eighteenth century. During this time the Czech language fell into disuse among the educated as many became Germanized; it remained the language of servants.Google Scholar

26. Harmach, Kamil, “Průkopnice,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit. , Vol. I, p. 211.Google Scholar

27. The question of whether or not she should be able to assume her seat in the Bohemian Diet was debated and supported by feminists at home and abroad. For instance, a delegation of German women in Vienna petitioned for her recognition as a delegate. See Ženská revue 7, 20 October 1912.Google Scholar

28. Lancová, Juliana, “Několik pohledů zpčt na Plamínkovou před válkou, čili co mi z nich nejsilněji utkvělo v mysli,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. I, p. 218.Google Scholar

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31. , Zatloukalová-Coufalová “F. P. ženy nezklamene,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. I, pp. 405409.Google Scholar

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33. Honzáková, Albína, “Práce F. F. Plamínkové v osvobozené vlasti,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. I, p. 171.Google Scholar

34. , Matýašová “Průkopnice,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. I, p. 323.Google Scholar

35. Honzáková, Albína, “Politická činnost F. F. Plamínkové v osvobozené vlasti,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. I, pp. 7477.Google Scholar

36. , ČernýVzpomínky na činnost F. F. Plamínkové z radnice a senátu,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. II, p. 505.Google Scholar

37. Petr Zenkl (1884-1975) became the chairman of the National Socialists after World War II and was the leader of the democratic coalition, which, in 1948, resigned in the abortive attempt to prevent Czech Communists from consolidating their power.Google Scholar

38. In an interview with a Swedish journalist in 1935, Alf Due, reprinted in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. II, p. 761.Google Scholar

39. , PlamínkováEkonomická a sociální posice žen v Ceskoslovenské republice,” Politika, 26 May 1920.Google Scholar

40. Milada Horáková (1901-1950) proved to be Plamínková's disciple; she looked up to Plamínková, as a member of the older generation of feminists, for guidance and inspiration. A leading figure in the National Socialist party after World War II, she was executed by the Communists in 1950. See Zora Dvořáková, Milada Horáková (Praha: Středočeské nakladatelství, 1991).Google Scholar

41. , ČernýVzpomínky na činnost F. F. Plamínkové z radnice a senátu,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. II, p. 505.Google Scholar

42. Bartáková, Vlasta, “Paní F. F. Plamínková v práci pro Z{NR,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. I, p. 241.Google Scholar

43. The Women's Little Entente came into being after the formation of the Little Entente in 1923 (Romania, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia). But it was broader than the Little Entente; it included Poland and Greece. The focus was on cultural exchanges amongst member countries. Plamínková's interest in the Little Entente stemmed partly from her first-hand experience of Serbia and Bulgaria during the Balkan wars in 1912 when she traveled there as a reporter for Český Dělník (“Czech Worker”), a paper edited by a National Socialist leader, Alois Simonides. She served as president of the organization in 1935.Google Scholar

44. Špísek, Ferdinand Dr., “Františka Plamínková a její zahranični dílo,” in Honzáková, op. cit., Vol. II, p. 675.Google Scholar

45. After the death of Charlotte Masaryk in 1923, Alice Masaryk became the Czechoslovak First Lady, but retained her active role as the head of the Czechoslovak Red Cross which she hoped to turn into a permanent instrument for the search for peaceful solutions to world problems. Masaryk continued his full support of the feminists, including a personal gift he made to the Women's National Council. See Bartáková, Ibid. As a gesture of her gratitude for his steadfast support, Plamínková compiled a festschrift for Masaryk's eightieth birthday in 1930, Masaryk a ženy: sborník (Praha: Ženská národní rada, 1930).Google Scholar

46. Women and Social Protest, eds, Guida West, Rhoda Lois Blumberg (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990), p. 215.Google Scholar

47. The specially close relationship Czech feminists had with Americans was tied to Masaryk's American wife Charlotte, whose early example and inspiration was never forgotten. The Women's National Council pays homage to Charlotte Masaryk by laying a wreath on her grave at Lany cemetery every year on the anniversary of her death.Google Scholar

48. Čapková, Anna, “F. Plamínková v America,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. II, pp. 634660.Google Scholar

49. The statue was sculpted by Josef Strachovsky and erected in Douglas Park in 1911 by the Czech-American community of Chicago. It was moved from that location in 1983 to the colonnade in front of the Adler Planetarium, Chicago Museum of Science.Google Scholar

50. Honzáková, Albina, “Malá vzpomínka ze zájezdu na kongres ve Washingtoně 1925,” in Honzáková, ed., op. cit., Vol. II, pp. 705707.Google Scholar

51. See Těsnopisné zprávy Národního Shromáždění (Congressional Record) for the years 1925-1937. On the budget committee of twenty-five, she was one of five National Socialists; on the Foreign Affairs committee of seventeen members, she was one of three. There were four other women in the Senate, but they did not form a coalition, rather staying loyal to their respective parties and the policies they followed.Google Scholar

52. Plamínková described a typical trip with Beneš to Geneva in a letter to Albina, Plamínková to Honzáková, 5 March 1932 in Plamínková's archive, Box II, Pamatník Národního Písemnictví, Staré Hrady, Libáň, Czech Republic.Google Scholar

53. An account of this exchange in Ženská rada, June 1934, a copy of this issue is in Plamínková's archive, Box I, Pamatník Národního Písemnictví, Staré Hrady, Libáň, Czech Republic.Google Scholar

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