Ursula Ragwitz (born Ursula Rose; 15 February 1928) is a former senior official of the ruling East GermanSocialist Unity Party. She started her career as a primary school teacher, and rose to become a member of the powerful Party Central Committee between 1981 and 1989, undertaking various leadership roles in respect of the country's highly politicised culture sector.[1]
It is not clear at what date Ursula Rose married the composer and musicologist Erhard Ragwitz, but available sources concerned with her political career use her married name, identifying her as Ursula Ragwitz. In 1953 she founded the music school in Cottbus, becoming its first director, at the same time becoming head of culture with the district council. From May/June 1954 she became a department head with the regional arts commission. After this she served successively as assistant, senior assistant and then lecturer at the Dresden Music Conservatory. After that, until 1963 she served as Director of the Hoyerswerda Music Academy.[1] Between 1963 and 1969 she was the deputy chair of the Cottbus regional council for Culture, Well-bring and Sport. During this period, in 1967, she undertook a further training course for senior culture officers at the party central committee'sAcademy for Social Sciences in Berlin. Directly after that, in 1968 she became a member of the national executive of the Association of Presentation Arts ("Verband der darstellenden Künstler" / VdK).[1]
She switched to the national level in 1969 when she became a political assistant in the Culture Department of the Party Central Committee. Promotion followed in 1973 when she became deputy department head, and again in November 1975 when she took over as acting director. Finally, in March 1976, she took over as head of the Culture Department from Peter Heidt who moved on to an academic function as a Professor for Economic History at the party's Karl Marx Academy.[3] There had been five Culture Department heads since 1957, but Ursula Ragwitz would remain in the post until 1989.[4] She also headed up the Politburo's Culture Commission between 1976 and 1989,[1] and occupied various other positions of influence in the arts and media sector.[4]
Her position in charge of the Cultural Department gave Ragwitz considerable influence over cultural life and work in the German Democratic Republic[5] and also, some contended, over authors in West Germany.[6][7] The party's monopoly of various forms of patronage and sponsorship gave her the power to affect the material well-being of East German authors, such as, for instance, Stephan Hermlin.[8] On top of that she was also given charge, by Central Committee Secretary Kurt Hager, of determining approval processes for foreign travel and performances by artists[9] and she was given co-responsibility for the conditions under which the hugely popular books of Karl May (1842-1912) might be both published and produced as films.[10]
Between 1981 and 3 December 1989 Ursula Ragwitz was herself a member of the Party Central Committee, which became of the leading role afforded the party under the Leninist structure built into the East German constitution placed her at the heart of the country's power apparatus.[11]
^"Party memorandum from Ursula Ragwitz to Kurt Hager". Kultur und Kunst in der DDR - Auftrag, Auseinandersetzung und Veränderung. Dr. Tobias Herrmann i.A. Bundesarchiv, Koblenz. 29 June 1982. Retrieved 29 May 2016.