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Granting 5, Euros to the recipient, it is now one of several awards named for her offered by various Austrian ministries. Others have started to recognize Leichter as well. Here, I try to answer these questions by undertaking a narrative of the all-too-brief life of Leichter , a woman, a Jew, a socialist. Leichter was a critical participant in, witness to, and victim of the era of world war, socialist revolution, fascist counterrevolution, and genocide that so fundamentally shaped contemporary history.
Her life is both a Central European story and one with universal significance and meaning. Her politically liberal parents, Josef and Lotte Pick, headed a household with limited ties to Judaism. The prosperity and comfort of her early life soon led her to sympathize with rebels and the oppressed. After the onset of World War I, she contributed to the Austro-Hungarian war effort by working in a nursery for children from working-class families.
Leichter grew to despise war and the ruling classes she believed responsible for it. Even that victory was partial. Women were not yet permitted to sit for the requisite examination necessary to graduate in that field. In , as World War I entered a decisive phase for the Dual Monarchy, she had to depart Austria for Germany in order to obtain her doctorate.
Leichter finished her PhD her dissertation dealt with commerce between Italy and Austria-Hungary with distinction at the venerable Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg under the supervision of the great German sociologist Max Weber. By that point, class conflict, war, and revolution had already transformed Leichter. Food insecurity dramatically increased in Austria in the final stages of the war, with the urban, working class hit especially hard. Against this background of hardship, the Great January Strike of inspired her.