Women Who Defied Traditional Gender Roles
NOTE: The White Rose- also my profile name.
One lesser-known historical woman who defied traditional gender roles and changed history was Sophie Scholl, a German resistance fighter during World War II. Born in 1921, Scholl grew up in Nazi Germany, a society where women were largely expected to adhere to domestic roles and support the state.
However, Scholl, deeply influenced by her Christian faith and sense of justice, rejected the Nazi ideology and joined the White Rose, a non-violent resistance group led by students at the University of Munich. Alongside her brother Hans, she distributed anti-Nazi leaflets, calling for the German people to resist Hitler's regime and end the war.
In 1943, Sophie Scholl, at just 21 years old, was arrested for distributing these leaflets at her university. She and her brother were tried for treason and executed by guillotine just days later. During her trial, Scholl displayed extraordinary courage, defying both the Nazis' political oppression and societal expectations of women as passive supporters of the regime.
@WhiteRose Reading some of the leaflets the White Rose distributed is both rattling and revealing. Similarities from where Germany was and where we are is too close.
English translation of the leaflets:
@Lucky188 Thank you for sharing. ❤️