Helene Bresslau Schweitzer

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Helene Bresslau Schweitzer
File:Gedenktafel am Albert- und Helene-Schweitzer-Bresslau-Baum in Basel.JPG
Memorial plaque of Schweitzer, left, and her husband Albert, right, in Basel
Born Helene Bresslau
(1879-01-25)January 25, 1879
Berlin, Germany
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Zurich, Switzerland[1]
Nationality German
Fields Medicine, Nursing, Missionary
Education Protestant Deaconess Society
Known for Co-founding the Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Lambaréné, Gabon

Helene Bresslau Schweitzer was co-founder of the Albert Schweitzer Hospital, medical missionary, nurse, social worker, linguist, public medicine enthusiast, editor, feminist, sociologist,[2] mother, and wife/confidant of Albert Schweitzer.[3] Albert, a medical missionary, did not mention her role in his efforts. According to writer Mary Kingsley, she is "one form of human being whose praise has never adequately been sung, namely, the missionary's wife."[3] While much of his work seems to overwrite her own, she played a pivotal role in the advancement of medicine, feminine independence, and societal justice.

Early life

Helene Bresslau Schweitzer was born to the Bresslau family on January 25, 1879 in Berlin. Her maternal family was of Jewish descent, but she was baptized into the Christian religion as a result of wide-spread anti-semitism. The Bresslaus moved to Alsace, France when she was eleven because of a new job opportunity for her father. Her father, Harry Bresslau, began working at the University of Strasbourg and eventually became chancellor. As a result of the move, Schweitzer adopted French, becoming fluent rather quickly.[3]

In 1898, Bresslau met her future husband, Albert Schweitzer at a wedding.[1] Shortly thereafter, they developed a relationship that included separation, independence, and non-exclusive behaviors. This allowed both to develop their lives while enjoying each other's companionship, conversation, and virtues. The one thing that united the pair was their shared ideology: to the take care of others.[3]

Bresslau became Albert's confidant but did not give up her own life for his. In fact, they spent a great deal of time away from each other and maintained a nontraditional relationship (together but not exclusive). They felt secure remaining undefined as a couple, relying on their friendship through documented letters. The turning point for their relationship occurred when they married on June 18, 1912 in Gunsbach.[3][4] At this point in their lives, they both decided to marry and go to Africa to fulfill their desire to care for others in need. She quit her job at the orphanage and studied higher level nursing to advance her knowledge before leaving.[5][3] On Good Friday of 1913, she travelled with Albert to Lambaréné, Gabon, beginning her medical missionary adventure.[1]

Education and professional development

File:EOST Université Strasbourg.jpg
University of Strasbourg, where Schweitzer took courses in medieval, modern, and art history

Aged 6, Bresslau attended Queen Charlotte's School. In 1890, she transferred to Lindner Girls' High School in Berlin. She began to pursue music studies at a music conservatory from 1897 to 1899. After receiving her teaching credentials in one year rather than the usual two, she worked as a teacher in England in 1902. Continuing to delve into her passion for learning, Bresslau took courses in medieval, modern, and art history at her father's university, the University of Strasbourg. In pursuit of music, she took voice and piano lessons.[3]

One area of study that interested Bresslau was nursing. She joined the Protestant Deaconess' Society on January 1, 1904 "to complete a course in nursing.[6] After, she was assigned to complete three months of nursing lessons in Stettin. On April 1, 1905, she took a break from nursing and went into social work. Even so, exploring another field other than nursing left her "eager to fill in the gaps" of her nursing knowledge.[6]

She changed her direction of study when she became a municipal inspector for orphans in 1905. She maintained the position from 1905 to 1909.[6] This endeavor attributes largely to part of her own goal to improve the social sphere. However, her home's "Jewish atmosphere" widely influenced her as she was taught to "pay it forward."[3] Including and prior to this job, all of her endeavors were based on her own emotions and goals without the Albert's influence. In one of his letters, he notes "it is you who have won, happy to have found a task that will fill your life, and you’ve done it ahead of me", addressing her social work in Strasbourg's City Orphan Administration.[3]

On October 1, 1909, Schweitzer "enrolled as a student in the nursing school of the Protestant Deaconess' Society in Frankfurt in the city hospital" to further her knowledge in the profession, thus beginning her nursing career.[6]

Missionary work

Journey with Albert Schweitzer

File:Lambaréné-grumes2.jpg
The Ogooué River flowing past Lambaréné

Schweitzer and Albert shared one main common goal: to help improve medicine and the greater good in Lambaréné, Gabon. At the very beginning of their journey, Schweitzer wrote in her diary that "we are truly in love with Africa."[3] In spring 1913, Schweitzer and Albert set off to establish a hospital (Albert Schweitzer Hospital) near an already existing mission post. The site was nearly 200 miles (14 days by raft)[7] upstream from the mouth of the Ogooué at Port Gentil (Cape Lopez) (and so accessible to external communications) but downstream of most tributaries, so that internal communications within Gabon converged towards Lambaréné.

The catchment area of the Ogooé occupies most of Gabon. Lambaréné is marked.

This journey to make medical improvements in Africa allowed Schweitzer to further develop herself. Patti Marxsen writes that Schweitzer's "capacity for hard work in a challenging environment can be read as proof that her independence earned in Strasbourg was now unshakeable. For the now thirty-four-year-old Helene Schweitzer...a life in Africa offered a chance to integrate multiple aspects of modern identity, perhaps even more so than would have been possible in Europe.”[3]

Schweitzer had prior interest in nursing and the medical field before Albert became involved in medicine. Therefore, Schweitzer played a vital role in his work, acting as a possible influence.[3] In the first nine months, Schweitzer and Albert had about 2,000 patients to examine, some travelling many days and hundreds of kilometers to reach him. In her time in Africa, she worked as nurse and helped with the hospital. She played an essential part in sanitation efforts, especially by preparing medical equipment for surgery. Schweitzer was an anaesthetist for surgical operations.[7]

Challenges

When World War I broke out in summer of 1914, the French military put Schweitzer and Albert, Germans in a French colony, under supervision at Lambaréné, where they continued their work. In 1917, exhausted by over four years' work and by tropical anaemia, they were taken to Bordeaux and interned first in Garaison and then from March 1918 in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence.[8]

The Schweitzer house and Museum at Königsfeld in the Black Forest

Medical issues forced Schweitzer to leave Africa many times, and sometimes Albert kept her from returning at times. When Albert decided to return to Africa in 1924, he took on Oxford undergraduate, Noel Gillespie, as assistant, leaving Schweitzer behind. After the birth of their daughter (Rhena Schweitzer Miller), Schweitzer was no longer able to live in Lambaréné owing to her health. In 1923 the family moved to Königsfeld im Schwarzwald, Baden-Württemberg, where Albert was building a house for the family. This house is now maintained as a Schweitzer museum.[9]

Schweitzer's house at Gunsbach, now a museum and archive
Albert Schweitzer Memorial and Museum in Weimar (1984)

Her not returning to Lambaréné was a sacrifice made "by her husband, not for him." She wrote about her not returning, describing it as a "practical matter", but she "never agreed to a separation of three and a half years" from her husband. Despite her poor health, she still took care of her daughter, "engage[d] herself with the Hospital Aid Association," and "enroll[ed] in a three week course in tropical medicine at the Medical Missionary Institute of Tubingen, Germany." As a motherhood advocate, she gladly took care of her daughter and continued to develop her own personal skills. Schweitzer still remained engaged in helping the mission hospital.[3]

In 1929, after receiving treatment for pneumonia, Schweitzer returned to Lambaréné to see her husband Albert’s progression with the new hospital. Shortly after arriving, however, she developed a bad fever and was forced to depart the hospital and her husband to return to Europe for treatment. After recovering, she used her writing skills and began to edit her husband's autobiography. Her English skills also opened the door for "public speaking and networking in the United States." On December 1, 1930, a German newspaper printed one of her speeches. In it, she described her husband’s concept, the Fellowship of the Marks of Pain. She turned her medical challenges into positives, explaining that through her suffering she developed a compassionate view of their work that only she could personally attest.[3]

Schweitzer was aware that her husband would receive much of the acclaim for their missionary endeavors, so she set out to make her work known. In October 1946, she began to review her documents and collect them so that she would be understood as a "full partner" in their missionary work. In addition, she began lecture tours in the United States in 1937 to promote the Schweitzer Hospital.[3]

Health complications

Schweitzer experienced tremendous health issues throughout her life, mostly in relation to the lungs. She first encountered tuberculosis before she turned ten. She was officially diagnosed in the spring of 1922 with laryngeal tuberculosis after exhibiting symptoms of "pain, fever, and the coughing up of blood." In addition the heat of Africa caused many respiratory issues. In 1915, she contracted phlebitis resulting in two weeks of therapeutic bed rest. She also had pneumonia in 1929, almost keeping her from returning to Lambaréné. Despite her already weak lungs, she completed the trip though she had to return early due to illness again.[3]

File:Lambarene-tombe-DrSchweitzer.jpg
Albert's tomb at a hospital in Lambaréné

Schweitzer died on June 1, 1957,[10] and her remains are located in Lambaréné.[1] Once Albert died, he was buried next to her. Schweitzer's grave with Albert is "on the banks of the Ogooue River is marked by a cross he made himself."[11]

Legacy

Schweitzer contributed greatly to the work done in Lambaréné. A role model as an independent, educated woman with a deep intellectual curiosity, she was "One of the first female students at the University of Strasbourg" and "One of the first female employees in the community administration" at the orphanage. Her aid in the poor relief system, "Armenpflegesystem," mirrored in modern social welfare, saw the illegitimate mortality rate fall. Setting precedence as a female medical missionary in the early 20th century, she established lasting effects of nursing and education in Lambaréné. She co-founded the Schweitzer Hospital, documented much of Albert's autobiography, and "supported the [mission] work with lectures and fund-raising" essential to its upkeep and vivacity.[3]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Schweitzer-Miller, Rhena. "Helene Schweitzer-Bresslau." Association Internationale Schweitzer Lambaréné, n.d.
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  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 Marxsen, Patti M. Helene Schweitzer: A Life of Her Own. First Edition. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press, 2015.
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  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Schweitzer-Miller, Rhena, and Gustav Woytt, eds. The Albert Schweitzer-Helene Bresslau Letters 1902–1912. First Edition. Syracuse University Press, 2003.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Schweitzer, Albert. The Primeval Forest. Johns Hopkins Paperbacks Edition. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.
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  11. Reuters. "Albert Schweitzer, 90, Dies at His Hospital" (6 Sept. 1965): n. pag. The New York Times Learning Network. New York Times. Web. 5 Dec. 2015.