Germany bids tearless farewell as Margot Honecker dies in exile

Widow of East German leader Erich Honecker was a prominent – and despised – figure

Hardline Stalinist: Margot Honecker pictured in January 1993 with her husband, former East German president Erich Honecker upon his arrival in Santiago de Chile.  Photograph: Cris Bouroncle/AFP via Getty.
Hardline Stalinist: Margot Honecker pictured in January 1993 with her husband, former East German president Erich Honecker upon his arrival in Santiago de Chile. Photograph: Cris Bouroncle/AFP via Getty.

Germany has bid a tearless farewell to Margot Honecker, widow of former East German leader Erich Honecker, who has died in Chile after 24 years in unrepentant exile.

The 89-year-old died from cancer on Friday and was cremated on Saturday in a small ceremony in the capital, Santiago, where she had lived since 1992.

Though best known as the woman at the side of Erich Honecker, Margot Honecker was an accomplished – and feared – public figure in her own right. A hardline Stalinist, her 26 years as East German education minister from 1963, combined with her love of tinted hairdos, earned her the name the “purple witch”.

Born Margot Feist in 1927 in Halle, she joined the Communist Party after the second World War and became its youngest MP in the new East German parliament in 1949.

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That year she met Erich Honecker, then head of the party’s youth wing, who got her pregnant despite being married and 15 years her senior.

Marriage

After the birth of their daughter, Sonja, Erich Honecker divorced his wife, under pressure from East German chief Walter Ulbricht, and married Margot.

Though their romance soon cooled, the couple maintained a powerful political alliance, particularly after Mr Honecker ousted Ulbricht in 1971 to head the Politburo.

Mrs Honecker was never elevated to this most inner of circles, but she was an influential figure in East German public life. Most controversial were her introduction of compulsory military education in all schools and forced adoptions of the children of couples who tried to flee the country.

Charges

On her watch, East Germany also established prison-like institutions for “difficult” children. That legacy saw charges filed against her after the Berlin Wall fell, but they were eventually dropped as the statute of limitations had expired.

In 1991 she fled to Chile, where her daughter lived with her husband and son. Erich Honecker joined them a year later but died of liver cancer in 1994.

She was loathed by many Germans to the end, particularly after in 2012 she dismissed as “stupid” East Germans who were shot while trying to flee west.

Despite the political controversy, Mrs Honecker’s legacy lives on. Few of the teachers who visit Finland each year to study its world-class school system realise that it was itself inspired by the education system of East Germany – and Margot Honecker.

Derek Scally

Derek Scally

Derek Scally is an Irish Times journalist based in Berlin