Paulina Kuczalska-Reinschmit


Paulina Kuczalska-Reinschmit was a Polish social reformer and feminist activist, publisher and writer. She actively campaigned for women's right to vote in Poland, which was then partitioned between Russia, Germany and Austria-Hungary.

Life

Born to Ewelina Porczyńska and Leon Kuczalski in January 1859 in Warsaw, then part of the Russian Empire. She began her publishing career in 1881, when her first text appeared in 'Echo'. She published in Tygodnik Ilustrowany, Kurier Warszawski, Kurier Codzienny, Ogniwa and Nowa Gazeta.
She was one of the first to agitate for women's rights separately and over the issue of national independence. In 1894 she founded 'Delegacja Pracy Kobiet przy Towarzystwie Popierania Przemysłu i Handlu', aiming to gain women full rights of access to the crafts and to provide courses for women. In this she co-operated with Józefa Bojanowska. In 1889 she participated in the Parisian international congress of women's associations.
In 1895, she founded the periodical Ster dedicated to women's rights, published first in Lviv and then in Warsaw. She organised salon meetings of like-minded women at ul. Marszałkowska, attended by Janina Baudouin de Courtenay, Justyna Budzińska-Tylicka, Kazimiera Bujwidowa, Maria Dulębianka, Maria Komornicka, Maria Konopnicka, Izabela Moszczeńska, Eliza Orzeszkowa, Józefa Sawicka and Cecylia Walewska. Piotr Chmielowski and Stefan Żeromski also contributed to this periodical.
In 1907, she founded the 'Związek Równouprawnienia Kobiet Polskich', fighting for a general enfrinchisement regardless of sex, national background, or religion, by means of a direct and secret ballot. To her death she remained its leader.
She married Stanisław Reinschmit and had with him a son, Leon.
Cecylia Walewska, chronicler of the Polish women's rights movement, deemed Kuczalska-Reinschmit to have been the first unrelenting agitator for full and uncompromising rights for women.

Selected bibliography