Katharina "Käthe" Kern was born into a working-class family in Darmstadt as the twentieth century dawned. Darmstadt, which was also the city where she grew up and lived as a young adult, had become a prosperous industrial, commercial and cultural centre during the second half of the nineteenth century. It was here that she completed her apprenticeship for a career as a clerical-commercial worker. In 1919 Käthe Kern joined the Young Socialists. Just one year later, still not 21, she joined the SPD which, following electoral reform, had recently found itself in the novel position of being the largest party in a new German parliament and leading participant in the coalition government of a post-imperialGerman republic. Kern was an activist party member and trades unionist from the outset. Between 1921 and 1933 she was a member of the "Zentralverband der Angestellten" (ZdA), a trades union of private sector clerical workers. Meanwhile she supported herself between October 1921 and October 1924 by working as a secretary for the president of LandesversicherungsanstaltHessen, the Darmstadt-based statutory pension insurance provider branch for Hessen.[1][3]
Between October 1928 and the middle of 1933 Kern was a member of the SPD regional leadership committee for Greater Berlin and head of the "Women's Secretariat" of the local party. Meanwhile, in January 1933, the National Socialists grabbed the opportunity presented by parliamentary deadlock and a resulting political crisis to take power. They rapidly converted Germany into a one-partydictatorship and set about dealing with known activist members of (after March 1933 outlawed) rival political parties. Käthe Kern was briefly taken into protective custody during June/July 1933.[1][3] Following her release she worked, between December 1933 and January 1935, as a typist for the Saar Association ("Saar-Verein") in Berlin. Between January 1935 and 1945 she was employed initially as a typist and later as a secretary by the mining conglomerate "Preußische Bergwerks- und Hütten-Aktiengesellschaft" at the company's Berlin administrative centre.[3] She was involved in anti-fascist resistance and had contacts with the group around Wilhelm Leuschner. Details of her involvement are sparse, but it appears that she was not caught.[1][3]
Building a political career in the Soviet occupation zone / East German
In terms of national parliamentary representation, Käthe Kern was a member of the "Erste Deutsche Volksrat" ("People's Assembly") which emerged out of the Second People's Congress held in Berlin on 17/18 March 1948, auspiciously the centenary of the 1848 March revolution in the Prussian capital. Although 100 of the 400 "People's Assembly" seats were set aside for members from the western occupation zones, these were never allocated. Precisely 300 assembly members were allocated to members from the Soviet occupation zone, and the event was effectively choreographed by the "eastern" Socialist Unity Party. No doubt there were those who would have welcomed any opportunity to extend the government structure emerging in the Soviet zone across all four occupation zones, but in March 1948 it made sense to concentrate on what was more immediately possible. (The twelve month long Berlin Blockade by the Soviet military would commence only in June 1948.) Within the "People's Assembly" created in March 1948, precisely ten members were identified as representatives from each of four "mass organisations", one of which was the DFD. Käthe Kern was the leader of the DFD group in the assembly. Membership of the "Erste Deutsche Volksrat" ("People's Assembly") and leadership of the groupings within it seems to have been determined on the basis of some sort of election/selection process enacted at the People's Congress. In May 1949 a Third People's Congress was held in Soviet administered East Berlin at which members of a "Zweiter Deutscher Volksrat" (new "People's Assembly") were (s)elected. This time there was no provision made for members from the western occupation zones, and the overall number of seats allocated was precisely 320. As before, the DFD received precisely ten seats, one of which went to Käthe Kern. This time, however, the ten member group had two leaders in the chamber. Käthe Kern was one of them: Emmy Damerius-Koenen was the other. The presidium of the "Zweite Deutsche Volksrat" (second "People's Assembly") comprised 35 members, increased from 25 in the "Erste Deutsche Volksrat" (first "People's Assembly"). Käthe Kern was now a member of the assembly presidium. She is included in the presidium membership listing not as the representative of the DFD: that position went to her comrade Elli Schmidt. Käthe Kern was one of eight presidium members representing the ruling Socialist Unity Party itself.[1][3]
On 27 April 1950 Kern resigned her seat in the Landtag of Saxony-Anhalt.[1] Her successor in the regional parliament was her elderly party comrade Frieda Voß, who held the seat from 27 April 1950 till the election of 15 October 1950. Käthe Kern's parliamentary future lay with the national "Volkskammer" ("People's Parliament"), of which she remained a member till 1985, and in which she led the women of the DFD parliamentary group between 1957 and 1984.[1][3][a] Although western commentators frequently dismissed the "Volkskammer" as a pseudo-democratic fig-leaf pseudo-parliament, it was nevertheless an integrated element within the overall government apparatus. The fact that its more influential members tended to combine Volkskammer membership with appointments as government ministers, senior party and ministry officials, or even - as in the case of Käthe Kern - of the powerful Party Central Committee sometimes made it hard for casual observers to determine the extent to which effective political power was concentrated in the hands of the party leadership.
Between 1954 and 1958 Käthe Kern chaired the recently inaugurated parliamentary committee for Citizens' Petitions.[6] In 1958 she was appointed to the parliamentary Constitutional Committee ("Verfassungsausschuss"), on which she continued to serve till 1963. She was a member of the parliamentary Healthcare Committee between 1963 and 1967, and of the Work and Social Policy Committee between 1967 and 1971.[1][3]
Mother and child department
Käthe Kern pursued a parallel career as a senior official in the Labour and Health Ministry, in which she headed up the national "Mother and Child department" ("Hauptabteilung Mutter und Kind") between 1949 and her retirement from the ministry in 1970. She had various additional responsibilities in respect of health provision and social welfare.[1][3][7]
^Number of DFD members in the Volkskammer: 1950 - 1954: 20 DFD members out of a total of 466 in the Volkskammer 1954 - 1958: 29 DFD members out of a total of 466 in the Volkskammer 1958 - 1963: 29 DFD members out of a total of 466 in the Volkskammer 1963 - 1967: 35 DFD members out of a total of 500 in the Volkskammer 1967 - 1971: 35 DFD members out of a total of 500 in the Volkskammer 1971 - 1976: 35 DFD members out of a total of 500 in the Volkskammer 1976 - 1981: 35 DFD members out of a total of 500 in the Volkskammer 1981 - 1986: 35 DFD members out of a total of 500 in the Volkskammer 1986 - 1990: 32 DFD members out of a total of 500 in the Volkskammer ......... 1990: 1 DFD member out of a total of 400 in the Volkskammer
^ abcdefghijklm"Nachlass Käthe (Katharina) Kern". Einleitung .... biographische Angaben. Stiftung Archiv der Parteien und Massenorganisationen der DDR im Bundesarchiv (SAPMO), Berlin-Lichterfelde. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
^"... Bericht des Ausschusses für Eingaben der Bürger". Auf der 33. Plenarsitzung wird schließlich die Vorsitzende des Ausschusses für Eingaben der Bürger, Frau Abgeordnete Käthe Kern, über die Tätigkeit des Ausschusses im Jahre 1957 berichten.... Neues Deutschland, Berlin. 11 March 1958. Retrieved 8 July 2021.