{"id":41331,"date":"2022-11-11T09:12:27","date_gmt":"2022-11-11T08:12:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/?p=41331"},"modified":"2023-01-08T00:37:59","modified_gmt":"2023-01-07T23:37:59","slug":"rudolf-steiners-family-iii","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/","title":{"rendered":"Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s Family &#8211; Part III."},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><strong>Marginalia on Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s Life and Work No. 22 \u2013 The Sister had the works of her famous brother read to her after her blindness. The deaf brother copied them after his death.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<p>Rudolf Steiner had two younger siblings: Leopoldine and Gustav. Both were born in Pottschach and had godparents from the Solterer family, owners of a mill in the village. <span id='easy-footnote-1-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-1-41331' title='The miller&amp;#8217;s wife, Franziska Solterer, was Gustav&amp;#8217;s godmother, her daughter Theresie godmother to Leopoldine.'><sup>1<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As a child, he \u00aboften spent hours\u00bb looking at picture books with moving figures with his sister, Rudolf Steiner tells in \u2039Mein Lebensgang\u203a.<span id='easy-footnote-2-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-2-41331' title='Mein Lebensgang [1923\u20131925], GA 28, 9. Ed. Dornach 2000, p. 12.'><sup>2<\/sup><\/a><\/span> Leopoldine Steiner herself mentioned to Carlo Septimus Picht that she sometimes came to meet her brother on his way home from school in Wiener Neustadt to help him carry the heavy school folder but also \u00abto support him in the \u2039fear of the gypsies\u203a.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-3-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-3-41331' title='Carlo Septimus Picht, \u2039Aus der Schulzeit Rudolf Steiners\u203a (From Rudolf Steiner&amp;#8217;s school days). In: On Rudolf Steiner&amp;#8217;s education, IV. Jg. 1930\/31, p. 255.'><sup>3<\/sup><\/a><\/span>.<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"alignleft size-large is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-662x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-41185\" width=\"331\" height=\"512\" srcset=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-662x1024.jpg 662w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-194x300.jpg 194w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-770x1190.jpg 770w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-994x1536.jpg 994w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-1325x2048.jpg 1325w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie.jpg 1500w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 331px) 100vw, 331px\" \/><figcaption>Picture: Rudolf and Leopoldine Steiner, ca. 1865\/66, Photo: Rudolf-Steiner-Archiv<\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n<p>The three siblings worked together in their parents&#8217; garden: \u00abCherry picking, gardening, preparing the potatoes for sowing, tilling the field, digging up the ripe potatoes, all this was taken care of by my siblings and me.\u00bb (GA 28, p. 41)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-die-schwester-leopoldine-steiner\">The Sister \u2013 Leopoldine Steiner<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>Leopoldine Steiner (Pottschach, 11\/13\/1863\u201311\/01\/1927, Horn), called Poldi in the family, probably attended the village school in Neud\u00f6rfl for a few years and then worked \u2013 like her mother \u2013 as a seamstress until this was no longer possible for her due to her increasing blindness. She stayed with her parents until their death and cared for her brother Gustav for as long as possible. So both of Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s siblings never married.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With her cousin Mizzi, Leopoldine was once at a lecture by her brother when he spoke on February 20, 1893, about \u2039Uniform conception of nature and limits of knowledge\u203a at the Scientific Club in Vienna.<span id='easy-footnote-4-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-4-41331' title='This is evidenced by Rudolf Steiner&amp;#8217;s Letter to Parents and Siblings of 02\/18\/1893 (in: Letters Volume II: 1890\u20131925, GA 39, 2nd ed. Dornach 1987, p. 172).'><sup>4<\/sup><\/a><\/span> A visit to Berlin was also once planned. So she wrote to her brother on April 19, 1902: \u00abDear Rudolf, I would like to see you, that is if you are so good and really send me a card, visit you for the Pentecost holidays, but if you are planning a trip or anything at all at this time that I might want to come inconveniently, so write to us. Dear Rudolf, but you have to write me about which train and how I have to travel at all and at what time I should leave here, that I arrive in Berlin by day and not by night. So be so good and write me everything in detail, you know I never travel, and that&#8217;s why I am a little awkward.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-5-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-5-41331' title='All letters of the Steiner family can be found in the Rudolf Steiner Archive (RSA 089). The original spelling was left untouched. Only punctuation was inserted for better comprehensibility.'><sup>5<\/sup><\/a><\/span> Whether this trip really took place, we do not know.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After her father died in 1910, Leopoldine Steiner took on the task of writing to her brother for the family. Given her probably only rudimentary education, how well she could write is impressive. The topics that appear in her letters are similar to those in her father&#8217;s correspondence: weather, health conditions, congratulations on the name day, death of relatives, and the request that the brother writes more often or even come to visit. Again and again, she also thanks him for his help: \u00abDear Rudolf, you are so good to us. If we did not have you, what would it be with us? Only your mother asks you should sometimes write a card, only if you are healthy. We read about so many accidents, and now with this cholera everywhere, we are anxious.\u00bb (09\/05\/1910) \u2013 \u00abWe have received your mission, and Mother thanks you many times. Dear Rudolf, the mother is always in fear because you send so much that, in the end, it could hurt you in a way. Without your help, we wouldn&#8217;t be able to get out of this inflation, but we would be happy with much less.\u00bb (09\/19\/1912)<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-large is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_3_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-745x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-41183\" width=\"373\" height=\"512\" srcset=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_3_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-745x1024.jpg 745w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_3_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-218x300.jpg 218w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_3_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-770x1058.jpg 770w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_3_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-1118x1536.jpg 1118w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_3_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-1491x2048.jpg 1491w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_3_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie.jpg 1500w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 373px) 100vw, 373px\" \/><figcaption>Picture: Johann and Gustav Steiner, 1884, Photo: Rudolf-Steiner-Archiv<\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n<p>Once Rudolf Steiner apparently sent a postcard with a view of the emerging Goetheanum. Leopoldine Steiner wrote to him: \u00abThe card has also given us great pleasure, that house must be really very beautiful, and we can imagine what the dear Rudolf has for effort and work, but if you only have a little time, write us a few lines again.\u00bb (08\/15\/1914)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From 1916 \u2013 due to the war \u2013 there was a lot of military in Horn, which led to food shortages in the village: \u00abAs far as I am concerned,\u00bb writes Leopoldine Steiner in 1917, \u00abI have now become a whole alley girl because you have to walk all day now, that you bring together what you still get to eat and do that for a long time, it&#8217;s really terrible sometimes.\u00bb (09\/08\/1917)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In September 1919, the siblings worked together for their famous brother: they wrote a letter to the editor of the magazine \u2039Leuchtturm\u203a, Karl Rohm, to reject his out-of-the-air assumptions about Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s Jewish origin. \u00abIn one of your summer issues, you have printed several claims about Dr. Rudolf Steiner that are quite untrue. Dr. Rudolf Steiner is the son of a Roman Catholic family from the Waldviertel of Lower Austria [&#8230;].\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-6-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-6-41331' title='The process is described in detail in: Anthroposophy and its opponents, GA 255b, Dornach 2003, pp. 488\u2013492.'><sup>6<\/sup><\/a><\/span> The local pastor even confirmed the statements about the origin of their brother in Horn.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 1919 Leopoldine&#8217;s eyes worsened so that on December 15, 1920, she wrote: \u00abDear Rudolf, we are both healthy, only my eyes often make me so anxious, I can sew and knit almost nothing anymore. Gustav fell in the room last summer and knocked out a deep wound and a tooth on his chin. Dear Rudolf, it is often so painful to me that we are such a burden to you. You really do a lot for us two poor human children.\u00bb On March 31, 1922, she complained: \u00ab[&#8230;] I want to work so much; the handicrafts are now paid very well, but with my sick eyes, it is quite impossible for me, and I am very desperate about it.\u00bb Rudolf Steiner tried to help as far as he could, sending doctors over and her medication.<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-large is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_2_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-630x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-41181\" width=\"315\" height=\"512\" srcset=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_2_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-630x1024.jpg 630w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_2_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-184x300.jpg 184w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_2_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-770x1253.jpg 770w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_2_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-944x1536.jpg 944w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_2_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-1259x2048.jpg 1259w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_Martina_Maria_Sam_2_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie.jpg 1500w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 315px) 100vw, 315px\" \/><figcaption>Picture: Leopoldine Steiner, ca. Mid-1880s, Photo: Rudolf Steiner Archive<\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n<p>Since she herself could no longer write due to her blindness, Leopoldine Steiner dictated a letter to Marie Steiner after the death of her brother Rudolf on April 3, 1925. The letter is more upscale in language than her other letters but certainly comes essentially from her: \u00abRevered sister-in-law! I truly do not know with inner melancholy what to write to you in my greatest dismay and excitement! The bad news, which is so completely unexpected to me and so surprising to me like a lightning bolt out of the blue, has shaken me so deeply that I can hardly think properly today!!! [&#8230;] In mere, dry words, I cannot possibly express my great pain in any way and tell you from the innermost heart what this greatest loss means for Gusti and me and, in any case, in the same way (also) for you, dearest sister-in-law!!! This knows and can truly only be understood to some extent by those who have calmly pronounced this real and truly good and great full and noble man \u2013 even as his biological sister; I can pronounce this without committing praise here because it is completely true and right \u2013 as you, his beloved wife, will be the best to confirm. [&#8230;] I, his sister, whom he has also given insight here and there into his superhumanly large and noble world of ideas as far as possible, can remind me of the one that he has often made hints in such a way that man dies physically, but not spiritually, i.e., that he embodies himself everywhere after his physical death somehow and somewhere again. That is why I firmly believe that our beloved brother Rudolf [&#8230;] has now physically gone home, but in reality, is not dead, so he lives on spiritually among us and continues to lead and guide us all as before.\u00bb<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-style-plain has-large-font-size is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>\u00abThat is why I firmly believe that our beloved brother Rudolf [&#8230;] has now physically gone home, but in reality is not dead, so he lives on spiritually among us and continues to lead and guide us all as before.\u00bb<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Later, Leopoldine Steiner listened attentively to her brother&#8217;s cycles.<span id='easy-footnote-7-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-7-41331' title='Letter from Antonie K\u00f6rner to Mrs van Leer, 10\/12\/1926, RSA.'><sup>7<\/sup><\/a><\/span> But she was not to survive him for very long \u2013 she died of tuberculosis at 8 a.m. on November 1, 1927, shortly before her 64th birthday.<span id='easy-footnote-8-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-8-41331' title='So, according to the death register Horn, in which otherwise some things are incorrectly documented, so her year of birth (as 1864). \u00abWidow (?)\u00bb is also behind her name and \u00abEverything else unknown.\u00bb The heading \u00abSacraments of Death\u00bb says: \u00abNot provided.\u00bb'><sup>8<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Brother \u2013 Gustav Steiner<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>Franziska Steiner is said to have suffered a severe shock from a railway accident shortly before the birth of her son Gustav (Pottschach, 07\/28\/1866\u201305\/01\/1942, Scheibbs).<span id='easy-footnote-9-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-9-41331' title='According to an oral tradition by Wilhelmine Eunike. \u2013 On the effects of fear and shock in pregnancy, see the lecture of 12\/30\/1922, GA 348. It is also possible that this event involves the entrance of a burning railway car to the Pottschach station, which Rudolf Steiner describes in \u2039Mein Lebensgang\u203a (GA 28, p. 16).'><sup>9<\/sup><\/a><\/span> The fact that their youngest child was born deaf may be related to this.<span id='easy-footnote-10-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-10-41331' title='Wolfgang V\u00f6gele researched Gustav Steiner extensively and interviewed the family&amp;#8217;s daughter, where he spent his last years. See \u2039Soul Care\u203a, No. 3\/2012.'><sup>10<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Ludwig M\u00fcllner reports from conversations with Anton Gliederer \u2013 the son of the landlord of the \u00abGliederer-Haus\u00bb in Brunn am Gebirge, where the family lived from the summer of 1882 \u2013 that \u00abthe parents had given him[Gustav] in turn to various institutions, where he \u2039but did not stay with them\u203a and kept coming back home.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-11-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-11-41331' title='Ludwig M\u00fcllner, Rudolf Steiner and Brunn am Gebirge. Unknown from his youth. Brunn am Gebirge 1968, p. 25.'><sup>11<\/sup><\/a><\/span>. Gliederer described Gustav as \u00abmentally not unregistering, friendly, and with a natural wit.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-12-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-12-41331' title='Ibid. Kurt Berthold (\u2039Communications from anthroposophical work in Germany\u203a, No. 143, Stuttgart 1983, p. 31) mentions in his article \u2039In the footsteps of the Steiner family in Horn\u203a without citing the source that Rudolf Steiner \u00abhimself mastered the language of the deaf.\u00bb'><sup>12<\/sup><\/a><\/span>.<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-large is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_1_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-1500x953.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-41177\" width=\"750\" height=\"477\" srcset=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_1_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-1500x953.jpg 1500w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_1_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-300x191.jpg 300w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_1_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-770x489.jpg 770w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_1_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-1536x976.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/09\/FO_Geschwister_Steiner_1_Das_Goetheanum_Wochenschrift_fuer_Anthroposophie-2048x1302.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 750px) 100vw, 750px\" \/><figcaption>Picture: Gustav Steiner, Leopoldine Steiner, Margarethe Karner, ca. 1926, Photo: Rudolf-Steiner-Archiv<\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n<p>Rudolf Steiner probably tried to teach his brother while still living with the family. This can be inferred from a letter dated July 12, 1915, to Willy Schl\u00fcter, which says: \u00abMany years ago I also gave deaf lessons and saw what the lack of the musically effective in the imagination life has for an influence on the psyche.\u00bb Rudolf Steiner probably also had the following experience with his brother for the first time, mentioned in the letter: \u00abI had always noticed that I immediately had the trust of a somehow frail or crippled person when I focused on the fact that only the physical body has the infirmity, but that the spiritual form underlying the physical body is fully intact.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-13-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-13-41331' title='In: GA 39 (see Note 4), p. 646. In Rudolf Steiner&amp;#8217;s library, fragments of a booklet from this period have been preserved \u2013 \u2039The deaf-mute and his education\u203a by J. D. Heil, Hildburghausen, 2. Ed. 1870, RSB P\u00e4 28a.'><sup>13<\/sup><\/a><\/span> He probably tried to get Gustav a teacher, as seen from his father&#8217;s letter of March 13, 1892: \u00ab9 days ago Mr. Wachlin, a deaf-mute teacher, was here, just said that he had spoken to you in Vienna.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-14-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-14-41331' title='Rudolf Steiner had been in Vienna for about a week at the end of February 1892.'><sup>14<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As seen from the family&#8217;s letters, Gustav required constant care and supervision. At times he was very nervous and excited and \u00abcaused quite unpleasant behavior as a result\u00bb (12\/6\/1907)<span id='easy-footnote-15-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-15-41331' title='Similar in the letters of 12\/14\/1909 and 12\/08\/1910.'><sup>15<\/sup><\/a><\/span> After the death of his father, his seizures caused difficulties for his mother and sister: \u00ab[&#8230;] only the Gusti still gets his seizures, a few weeks ago he made us a few times such a riot that the mother and I could not tame him and had to call the housewife for help. You can think like we were embarrassed.\u00bb (09\/05\/1910) \u2013 \u00abI would have written to you, dear Rudolf, earlier, but Gustav must not see that I am writing. He thinks that I write something of him, and then he makes riot,\u00bb so it says in Leopoldine&#8217;s letter of December 1911. \u00abWith Gustav, there is always a cross with his nervousness. He must not see that we sew or wash something for him, and for me to be able to write this letter, the mother must go away with him so that he does not see any of it.\u00bb (09\/19\/1912)<span id='easy-footnote-16-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-16-41331' title='Similarly in the letters of 9\/27\/1913 and an undated letter of 1914.'><sup>16<\/sup><\/a><\/span> So mother and sister always had to think about how they could take care of him inconspicuously: \u00abIf only Gustav were a bit good, but he still doesn&#8217;t want to buy anything and have nothing sewn, and says that if he has torn his old clothes, he wants to die.\u00bb (03\/09\/1914)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Gustav Steiner loved to read the newspaper, so Leopoldine always had to provide him with newspapers. The fact that he liked to eat a lot made the sister sorrowful in the times when it was so difficult to get food. He had \u00abalways a too great appetite for these times\u00bb (04\/13\/1919). In the letter of November 28, 1919, Gustav personally added a sentence: \u00abGustav also sends warm greetings.\u00bb<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When the sister could no longer take care of her brother because of her increasingly deteriorating eyes, a relative, Mrs. Barth, first looked after the siblings. However, Leopoldine Steiner didn&#8217;t get along with her. Then the nurse and anthroposophist Margarethe Karner took over the care of the siblings. When she herself fell ill in the 1930s, Gustav Steiner joined the Jahn-Hamburger family in 1936, first in Vienna, then in Gresten near Scheibbs in Lower Austria during the war years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-style-plain has-large-font-size is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>It is touching that in his later years, he loved copying his brother&#8217;s works: the first many prophecies and the soul calendar.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Thanks to Wolfgang V\u00f6gele&#8217;s initiative to record the memories of the daughter of this family, Gertrud Schmied-Hamburger, we know a lot about Gustav Steiner&#8217;s last years. Gertrud Schmied-Hamburger reports that he was able to speak a few words, but \u00abof course, he spoke to us in sign language\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-17-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-17-41331' title='V\u00f6gele 2011, see note. 10, p. 24.'><sup>17<\/sup><\/a><\/span>. When Gustav wanted something from someone, he tried to make himself understood with a kind of beep. He was \u00abnot shy of people at all\u00bb but approached all people and asked them about their name days. <span id='easy-footnote-18-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-18-41331' title='The name days played a significant role in the Steiner family, as the mutual congratulations on these testify.'><sup>18<\/sup><\/a><\/span> He was \u00abactually of robust health. He was loving and very happy to help, as far as he could help [&#8230;]. He got us wood [&#8230;]. He did a great job of that. He also untied strings and picked seeds. He was always helpful. He never freaked out.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-19-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-19-41331' title='See note. 17, p. 25.'><sup>19<\/sup><\/a><\/span> Obviously, his agitated nervousness, which is often reported in the family&#8217;s letters, had subsided in the later years of his life.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It is touching that in his later years, he loved to copy the works of his brother: first many prophecies and the soul calendar, then followed by \u2039How do you gain knowledge of the higher worlds?\u203a and \u2039Theosophy\u203a. As Hede Hamburger reported to Johanna M\u00fccke on June 23, 1937, this copying work was \u00abby itself the most important\u00bb to him.<span id='easy-footnote-20-41331' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/rudolf-steiners-family-iii\/#easy-footnote-bottom-20-41331' title='See note. 17, p. 27.'><sup>20<\/sup><\/a><\/span>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the end of April 1942, Gustav probably had a kind of intestinal obstruction and had to be admitted to the clinic in Scheibbs, where apparently no medical measures were applied. Gustav Steiner died of heart failure there on the first night after his admission. &#8211; Translation: Monika Werner<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Marginalia on Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s Life and Work No. 22 \u2013 The Sister had the works of her famous brother read to her after her blindness. The deaf brother copied them after his death. Rudolf Steiner had two younger siblings: Leopoldine and Gustav. Both were born in Pottschach and had godparents from the Solterer family, owners of a mill in the village. As a child, he \u00aboften spent hours\u00bb looking at picture books with moving figures with his sister, Rudolf Steiner [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9190,"featured_media":41179,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[8846,10939],"tags":[11009,8814],"class_list":["post-41331","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-history","category-obituary","tag-2022-39-40-en","tag-musings"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/41331","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/9190"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=41331"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/41331\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/41179"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=41331"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=41331"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=41331"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}