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Konopka, Gisela

in: People

Gisela Konopka (1910 – 2003) — Social Group Worker, Researcher, Educator and Author

by Rhoda G. Lewin

Gisela Konopka
Gisela Konopka
Photo: AAUW

Gisela Konopka’s outstanding career in youth and adolescent services, social work, education and history is reflected in her litany: “All my life I have been fighting for justice, and for respect for all people. I abhor any arrogance related to race, religion, nationality, appearance, sex, age, intelligence, profession, money. That arrogance is wrong. What is important is what a person is, and does, for the community.”

Born February 11, 1910 in Berlin, Germany to Mendel Peiper and Bronia (née Butterman) who had left Poland to escape anti-Jewish pogroms, and who owned a little grocery store, Gisela Peiper had two sisters, Hanna (1907–c. 1995) and Ruth (1916–1940). They lived in two rooms attached to the store, and after her father died in 1935 her mother, who spoke German, Polish and Russian fluently and was a dedicated reader, although she had not been allowed to go to school as a child in Poland, ran the store. Ruth was killed during a wartime bombing. Hanna emigrated to Palestine in 1935 and her mother followed in 1937.

As a teenager in Germany, Gisela joined a socialist youth group, the members of which rejected all differentials based on social class or money. They wore sandals and loose clothing, and the women wore ribbons and flowers in their hair. They carried guitars and sang, read and wrote poetry, and did not drink alcohol, because it was “the drink of the bourgeoisie.” It was there that she first experienced the positive influences of group dynamics; she would experience the negative influences after the Nazis came to power. It was also where she met her non-Jewish soul-mate and future husband, Paul Konopka.

Gisela Konopka studied education, history, psychology and philosophy at the University of Hamburg, receiving her degree in 1933. The Nazis had just come to power in Germany, and as a Jew she was not permitted to teach, or live a professional life. She joined an underground resistance group and in 1936 she was arrested and placed in the Hamburg prison camp. When she was suddenly, and unexpectedly, released, she escaped to Czechoslovakia and in 1937 went to Vienna, where she worked with children. When Germany invaded Austria in 1938 she went to Paris. After the German invasion of France she fled to Montauban, where she was reunited with Paul. Later they went to a French village, where a Justice of Peace, a French Nazi, refused to marry them because “no Jew and non-Jew should be united.”

In 1941 Konopka received an immigration visa from the U.S. consul in Marseille and sailed to the United States. Within two months Paul also received a visa, and they were married three days after his arrival in New York. Konopka worked briefly as a house-maid until, with the help of refugee committees, the couple were resettled in Pittsburgh. She received a scholarship from the School of Social Work at the University of Pittsburgh, while Paul worked in a factory until the United States entered the war in December, 1941, when he joined the U.S. Army.

Konopka found a job as a psychiatric group worker at the Pittsburgh Child Guidance Clinic and earned a Master’s Degree in Social Service Administration. After Paul returned from service in the U.S. Army, she received a job offer from the University of Minnesota where, in addition to teaching at the university, she earned her Ph.D. degree in Social Welfare from Columbia University in 1957, was coordinator of community programs for the Minnesota Center for Urban and Regional Affairs from 1968 to 1970, and served as Director of the Center for Youth Development and Research from 1970 until she retired in 1978. She continued as adjunct professor in the University of Minnesota Medical School’s Adolescent Health Program.

Konopka built an international reputation as a group social worker and an expert on youth issues. After she and her husband settled in Minneapolis, they sent half their income to people in Germany who came out of the camps and needed help. They also sponsored refugees to the U.S., many of whom lived with them for some period of time, and they took in troubled adolescents whom Konopka calls her “family by choice,” because she and Paul had no children. She taught all over the world, beginning in the 1950s when the U.S. State Department asked her to go back to Germany to help rebuild social services and education. Since over twenty-five thousand professionals had left Central Europe during the Nazi period—an enormous loss to German education and child welfare—she taught classes and set up child guidance clinics. She reported that, “Every night one or more Germans would come to my room to “confess” the bad things they had done during the Nazi era.”

Called “the mother of social group work,” Konopka brought to a defeated Germany her philosophy of “justice with a heart,” a concept that values the human being and stresses human dignity, interdependence and mutuality.

Although she was offered many teaching jobs, she chose to stay in Minnesota, where her husband worked as an engineer at General Mills. However, her travels have included Fulbright and guest lectureships in Germany, Holland, Turkey, Greece, Israel, Iran, Hong Kong, Korea, India, the Phillipines, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Brazil and Australia, as well as taking her all over Canada and the United States. She also served as a consultant for many corrections programs, including setting up work training programs for female prisoners for a U.S. Department of Labor and Bureau of Prisons joint project. She served on or chaired more than one hundred committees all over the world, and her list of more than forty-two awards includes being the recipient in 1975 of the “Highest Meritorious Medal” from the Federal Republic of Germany “in recognition of her work on the rebuilding of German social services after World War II” and receiving the Urban League’s Cecil Newman Humanitarian Award for “outstanding service to the community in the area of human rights and poverty.” In 1990 Minnesota’s governor proclaimed May 24 “Gisela Konopka Day.” She is in the Hall of Fame at Columbia University School of Social Work, and is inscribed as a founding member in the Hall of Pioneers at the National Association of Social Work building in Washington, D.C. She was president of the American Association of Orthopsychiatry from 1963 to 1964. Her biography is included in every “Who’s Who” publication, as well as in the Dictionary of International Biography.

A prolific writer, Konopka published more than three hundred scholarly articles and eleven books, including her autobiography, Courage and Love. Her scholarly works include Therapeutic Group Work with Children, also published in German and Japanese, Group Work in the Institution, also in Italian, Danish, Turkish, Japanese and German, Social Group Work: A Helping Process, also in Dutch, German, Japanese , Portuguese, Spanish, Norwegian and Persian, and The Adolescent Girl in Conflict, also in Japanese.

Konopka’s research areas included psychiatry, group work, social work, social welfare, delinquency, adolescence, and institutional care—fields in which she developed and chaired many programs. The Konopka Institute for Best Practices in Adolescent Health is a collaborative effort of the Schools of Medicine, Nursing and Public Health at the University of Minnesota, and after her retirement in 1978 the annual event sponsored by the Gisela Konopka Lectureship honored her for being “the moving force behind numerous innovative methods in social work and youth service.”

Konopka is also remembered in the words of her students. Former student David Fogel wrote that “You taught us to praise the light, not to wallow cursing the darkness… You taught us passion for our profession and compassion for our clientele… You sparked an imagery of leadership for social justice… Anyone touched by you is today a bit more human.”

In her old age, Konopka lived in her spacious red wooden house overlooking Lake Calhoun in Minneapolis, which was a tumble-down, unheated summer cottage when she and her husband bought it in 1948. Paul completely rebuilt the house, adding an indoor swimming pool. His wood carvings, etchings and sculpture shared space with Gisela’s bright abstract needlework and pottery, as well as with their extensive library of books on history, poetry and sociology, while the walls were hung with artworks inspired by the Indian, Black and Jewish experiences.

Gisela Konopka died on December 9, 2003 at the Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis.

Source: Lewin, Rhoda G.. “Gisela Peiper Konopka.” Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. 1 March 2009. Jewish Women’s Archive. March 17, 2011 <http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/konopka-gisela-peiper>.

How to Cite this Article (APA Format): Lewin, R. G. (2011). Gisela Konopka (1910-2003) — Social group worker, researcher, educator and author. Social Welfare History Project. Retrieved [date accessed] from https://socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/people/konopka-gisela/

One Reply to “Konopka, Gisela”

  1. i met Dr. Konopka when i was a teenager, she came to the Home School for girls in Sauk Centre minnesota, she was kind and i believe she didn’t approve of how we were treated i remember Her sitting with us at the girls tables and eating from the dishes we had as opposed to staff tables with their china and Silver. she talked to us and was so kind and was genuinely interested in the girls she met and talked with. she left a lasting impression on me as i’m 71 now i hated Sauk Center Home school but i remember her fondly and have not forgotten her

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