Therese Elisabeth Alexandra Förster-Nietzsche (July 10, 1846–November 8, 1935), who went by her second name, was the sister of philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and the creator of the Nietzsche Archive in 1894.
Förster-Nietzsche was two years younger than her brother. Both were children of a Lutheran pastor in the German village of Röcken bei Lützen. The two children were close during their childhood and early adult years, but grew apart as Elisabeth increasingly disapproved of Friedrich's philosophy, and Friedrich disapproved of Elisabeth's anti-Semitism.
On May 22, 1885, Elisabeth married Bernhard Förster, a former teacher who had become an anti-Semitic agitator. Förster planned to create a "pure" Aryan settlement in the New World, and had found a site in Paraguay which he thought would be suitable. The couple persuaded 14 German families to join them in the colony, to be called Nueva Germania, and the group left Germany for South America on February 15, 1887.
The colony did not thrive. The land was not suitable for German methods of farming, illness ran rampant, and transportation to the colony was slow and difficult. Faced with mounting debts, Förster committed suicide on June 3, 1889. Four years later, his wife left the colony forever, and returned to Germany. (As of 1991, however, the colony still existed.)
Friedrich Nietzsche had gone mad in 1889 (he died in 1900), and, when his sister returned for good, was an invalid whose earlier writings were beginning to be read and discussed throughout Europe. Förster-Nietzsche took a leading role in promoting her brother, choosing to distort his philosophy (which she had never approved of) as she did so. In pre-1914 Germany, her distortion made his philosophy seem sympathetic to conservatives and the German aristocracy; in the 1920s and 1930s, her distortion made Nietzsche a spokesman for Mussolini and Hitler.
In 1930, Förster-Nietzsche, a German nationalist and still an anti-Semite, became a supporter of the Nazi Party. After Hitler and the Nazis came to power in 1933, the Nietzsche Archive received financial support and publicity from the government, in return for which Förster-Nietzsche bestowed her brother's considerable prestige on the régime. Förster-Nietzsche's funeral in 1935 was attended by Hitler and several high-ranking Nazi officials.
References
Macintyre, Ben. Forgotten Fatherland : The Search for Elisabeth Nietzsche. New York : Farrar Straus Giroux, 1992.
Last updated: 05-09-2005 17:20:09