Henriette Bie Lorentzen

Henriette Bie Lorentzen (18 July 1911 – 23 August 2001), born Anna Henriette Wegner Haagaas, was a Norwegian humanist, peace activist, feminist, co-founder of the Nansen Academy, resistance member and concentration camp survivor during World War II, and publisher and editor-in-chief of the women's magazine Kvinnen og Tiden (1945–1955).[1][2][3]

Background

Born in Vestre Aker (now Oslo), Anna Henriette Wegner Haagaas was the eldest daughter of the private school owner Theodor Haagaas and Henriette Wegner Paus, a granddaughter of the theologian and school owner Bernhard Cathrinus Pauss and a great-granddaughter of the industrialist Benjamin Wegner. She was a first cousin of the publisher Henrik Groth and of the noted surgeon and humanitarian Bernhard Paus, and a niece of the humanitarian Nikolai Nissen Paus. She was named for her great-great-grandmother, Anna Henriette Gossler of Hamburg, eldest daughter of the bankers Johann Hinrich Gossler and Elisabeth Berenberg. She was married to Øyvind Bie Lorentzen, a member of the noted Lorentzen family and a distant relative of Erling Lorentzen.[4]

She earned the degree Magister in history of literature at the Royal Frederick University in 1937, with a dissertation on Henrik Ibsen and Christian Friedrich Hebbel.

Humanism and the Nansen Academy

She was introduced to the liberal theologian and humanist (and later Bishop of Hamar) Kristian Schjelderup by her fellow student Nic. Stang in the mid 1930s, and they became lifelong friends.[5] She became involved in the establishment of the humanist Nansen Academy in 1937 and was one of its three original teachers, together with Schjelderup and Anders Platou Wyller, until it closed in 1940. She also succeeded Stang as assistant editor of Schjelderup's journal Fritt Ord in 1938, as the journal became the official publication of the Nansen Academy. According to Bjørn Egge, she was "the main practical force" in the establishment of the Nansen Academy.[6]

The Nansen Academy was founded to promote the humanist philosophy in an era of totalitarianism on the right and left.[7] Schjelderup and Wyller were both Christian humanists, while Bie Lorentzen was an agnostic, but they emphasized that humanism unites across religious lines. Bie Lorentzen lectured particularly on literature and women's issues. She also lectured extensively on humanism and the Nansen Academy around the country, and also lectured in local housewife associations and women's associations, believing it to be especially important for women and mothers who spent most of the time in the home to experience and learn something new. In May 1939, she initiated the Nansen Academy's first course—"What is humanism?"—aimed at women.

Second World War

During the Second World War, she became involved, along with her husband and first cousin Henrik Groth, in the Norwegian resistance movement. In 1943 she was arrested and tortured by the Gestapo at Arkivet,[8] even though she was pregnant, while her husband escaped to Sweden. The torture scene is reconstructed in the museum at Arkivet. She soon after gave birth to a daughter, who was taken from her. As a result of the intervention of an Austrian military doctor, the baby was given to her father and sister, instead of facing the prospect of being sent to Germany. As a Nacht und Nebel political prisoner, she was sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp where she remained until the end of the war.[9] On 8 May 1945, she and around 100 other female Scandinavian concentration camp prisoners were rescued by the White Buses, and she was reunited with her husband in Sweden.

Publisher of Kvinnen og Tiden

After returning from the concentration camp, she believed women should have a central role in rebuilding the country, and founded the women's magazine Kvinnen og Tiden (Woman and Time) together with Kirsten Hansteen, the first Norwegian female member of cabinet. Bie Lorentzen and Hansteen served as joint editors-in-chief and publishers of Kvinnen og Tiden for ten years between 1945 and 1955.

Originally, the magazine was published by J.W. Cappelens Forlag, which was led by Bie Lorentzen's first cousin Henrik Groth, but Cappelen terminated the cooperation over Hansteen's communist background, and from 1947 it was published by a limited company owned by Bie Lorentzen and Hansteen, Kvinnen og Tiden AS, with significant financial support from the liberal Swedish politician and heiress Elisabeth Tamm, a member of one of Sweden's wealthiest families. She bequeathed her large fortune as well as Fogelstad Castle to the magazine and established a trust for this purpose with Bie Lorentzen, Hansteen, Gerda Evang, Eva Kolstad, Honorine Hermelin and a Swedish lawyer as trustees. Despite the support from Tamm, the circulation fell from a peak of 12,000 subscribers in 1947 to just 900 in 1955. Bie Lorentzen and Hansteen therefore decided to close the magazine, and asked Tamm to change her will.

Many of the most prominent female public figures of the postwar years served on the editorial board of Kvinnen og Tiden, among them Liberal Party leader and cabinet minister Eva Kolstad, women's rights activist Margarete Bonnevie, poets Inger Hagerup and Halldis Moren Vesaas, child psychiatrist Nic Waal, Labour cabinet minister Aaslaug Aasland, physician and women's rights activist Gerda Evang, and social psychologist Harriet Holter.[10]

Later life and legacy

From 1951 until her retirement in 1978, she worked as a lecturer in Norwegian language and literature as well as drama at the National Teachers College for Arts and Crafts, Oslo (now Oslo and Akershus University College). She was also active in Amnesty Norway, the Norwegian Association for Women's Rights and the anti-nuclear organisation Bestemødre mot atomvåpen in the 1980s and 1990s. She chaired the Norwegian Ravensbrück committee for several years and was involved with the International Ravensbrück Committee.

She was interviewed in the film Mørketid – kvinners møte med nazismen (1994) by Karoline Frogner.

She received the Medal of St. Hallvard in 1995, for her educational work on women and peace. The Henriette Bie Lorentzen House at Oslo and Akershus University College is named in her honour.[11] In 2013, she was selected as one of the "100 most important women" in Norwegian history by the newspaper Verdens Gang.[12]

Publications

Translations

References

  1. Henriksen, Petter, ed. (2005–2007). "Henriette Bie Lorentzen". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget.
  2. Rogstad, Sofie (1999–2005). "Henriette Bie Lorentzen". In Arntzen, Jon Gunnar. Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget.
  3. Hjeltnes, Guri (1995). "Henriette Bie Lorentzen". In Dahl, Hans Fredrik. Norsk krigsleksikon 1940-45 (in Norwegian). Oslo: Cappelen.
  4. Lorentzen, I. F. (1913). Holmestrandsfamilien Lorentzen. En borgerslekt gjennem 300 aar. Christiania.
  5. Pål Repstad, Mannen som ville åpne kirken: Kristian Schjelderups liv, p. 290, Universitetsforlaget, 1989, ISBN 8200027872
  6. "Henriette Bie Lorentzen." Obituary by Bjørn Egge, Aftenposten, 30 August 2001, p. 19
  7. Anders Platou Wyller, "Nansenskolen," in Kjempende humanisme, Aschehoug, 1947
  8. "The Torture, Arkivet (Kristiansand)". stiftelsen-arkivet.no.
  9. Mirjam Kristensen, Etter freden: Barn av konsentrasjonsleirfanger forteller (2009)
  10. Henriette Bie Lorentzen: "Kvinnen og tiden 1945–1955," in Kari Skjønsberg (ed.), Hvor var kvinnene? Elleve kvinner om årene 1945–1960, Oslo: Gyldendal Norsk Forlag, 1979, pp. 126ff.
  11. Historiske kvinner bak høgskolens ulike bygg, khrono.no
  12. Norges 100 viktigste kvinner, Verdens Gang

Literature