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Photo Sr. Alfonsa (Josefa) Brettauer memorial portrait. Held in provincial archive of the Tertiary Sisters of St. Francis Hall in Tyrol. Introduction In 1980, more than three decades after the end of the Nazi regime, Sr. Alfonsa Brettauer (1893-1994) , the Provincial Superior of the Franciscan Tertiary or School Sisters of Hall in Tirol, wrote a significant letter. Her writing to Father Johann Reiter in Innsbruck documented an often overlooked chapter of Nazi injustice: the systematic removal of religious sisters from the teaching profession. In this listing of names and numbers, she not only preserved the memory of her fellow sisters but became an important eyewitness and chronicler of a religious community under persecution and resistance. Biographical Context and Leadership Role As Provincial Superior in the 1970s and 80s, Sr. Alfonsa Brettauer led the community of the Franciscan Tertiary Sisters in Hall. Her office obliged her not only to provide spiritual and organizational leadership but also to preserve the community's history. The convent in Hall had a long tradition in girls' education and childcare, meaning the sisters played a central role in the social fabric of Tyrol. The Nazi period meant a deep rupture for this work, the extent of which Sr. Alfonsa Brettauer meticulously recorded decades later. The 1980 Document: An Accounting of Injustice The central testimony of her work as a chronicler is her letter of July 7, 1980. In it, she precisely listed for Father Johann Reiter the personal and institutional losses suffered by the community during Nazi rule:
The Case of Sister Alfonsa Brettauer: An Exemplary Fate The fate of Sister Alfonsa Brettauer (1893–1994), documented in the community's records, illustrates the severity of the persecution behind Sr. Alfonso Brettauer's statistical account.
Historical Context: The Nazi Campaign Against Religious Schools The measures recorded by Sr. Alfonso Brettauer were part of a nationwide policy. The Nazi regime aimed to break all denominational influence on youth to educate them entirely according to the National Socialist ideology.
Significance and Legacy Sr. Alfonso Brettauer secured the collective memory of her community through her precise documentation. At a time when many eyewitnesses were beginning to fall silent, she preserved the names and scale of the injustice suffered from being forgotten. Her letter is thus more than an internal record; it is a historical document of ecclesiastical resistance and will to survive.
Her work reminds us that Nazi terror occurred not only in the large concentration camps but also in the systematic destruction of established social and charitable structures in everyday life. The Franciscan Tertiary Sisters of Hall, represented by sisters like Alfonsa Brettauer and documented by Sr. Alfonso Brettauer, stood for an attitude that refused to be diverted from their charitable and pedagogical mission, neither by professional bans nor by Gestapo interrogations.
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