Sigrid Grabner


Sigrid Grabner is a German writer.

Biography

Sigrid Grabner was born in the town of Tetschen-Bodenbach. After the expulsion of the Sudeten Germans, her family moved to Merseburg in 1947 where Grabner attended school until 1957. In 1961 she graduated from high school in Halle and worked in agriculture for one year. From 1962 to 1967 she studied cultural studies and Indonesian studies at the Humboldt University in East Berlin. In 1972, she received her doctorate there with a thesis on the Indonesian cultural policy during the Sukarno dictatorship. Since 1974 Grabner has worked as a freelance writer. The Stasi spied on Grabner, as she became suspicious of being a CIA agent.
In the 1990s, she co-founded and led the Brandenburgische Literaturbüro. She was married to writer and concentration camp survivor Hasso Grabner and has two children. Today Grabner lives in Potsdam.

Writing

Grabner has published a large number of non-fiction books, Essays, biographies and historical novels. Her biographical works on historical persons include biographies of Mahatma Gandhi, Cola di Rienzo, Christina of Sweden and Gregory the Great. Several times she traveled the original locations for her research.
Together with Hendrik Röder she published books about Emmi Bonhoeffer, Henning von Tresckow and the Nazi opponent Hermann Maaß. She is a regular contributor to Vatican Magazin.
In 2003, Sigrid Grabner published her autobiography Jahrgang '42 – mein Leben zwischen den Zeiten . The second volume Im Zwielicht der Freiheit – Potsdam ist mehr als Sanssouci followed in 2019.

Accolades