Hedwig von Beverfoerde


Baroness Hedwig von Elverfeldt gennant Beverfoerde zu Werries is a German conservative political activist and Roman Catholic fundamentalist. A former member of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany who worked to shorten daycare hours in Saxony-Anhalt and protect parental rights, she is the founder of the Family Protection Initiative and an organizer of the Demo für Alle rallies in Hanover and Stuttgart, campaigning against marriage equality in Germany.

Early life and education

Von Beverfoerde was born Baroness Hedwig von Lüninck in 1963 at :de:Haus Ostwig|Ostwig House, a mansion in Bestwig, North Rhine-Westphalia, owned by her family. She is a member of the :de:Lüninck |Von Lüninck family, who are part of the German nobility, and is a relative of the politician Baron Ferdinand von Lüninck. After graduating from :de:Kloster Wald|Kloster Wald, a Catholic boarding school for girls in Wald, Baden-Württemberg, she trained as a secretary in Brussels before studying business administration at a university in Münster.

Career

After graduating from university, Von Beverfoerde worked as an assistant sales director of a stock corporation in Magdeburg. In 1993 she left business to pursue political activism. She was an active member of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany until December 2016, serving as a district board member of the Jerichower Land. She left the party in 2016, stating that she could not remain in the party as "a faithful Catholic" while under the leadership of Angela Merkel, and due to her disagreement with the party's acceptance of opening German boarders to Muslim refugees. Her earlier political career was focused on public education and childcare. From 1999 until 2000 she served as a spokeswoman of the national citizen's movement ABC-Schützen! She worked to protect parental rights and campaigned for shorter daycare hours.
Von Beverfoerde is the founder and chairwoman of the Family Protection Initiative, which promotes conservative, traditional views on marriage and family life. She is an active member of the Forum of German Catholics, a lay organization founded in opposition to the Central Committee of German Catholics. In 2014 she co-organized a bus tour to support "traditional marriage" in Germany with Austrian conservative activist Alexander Tschugguel.
Alongside Beatrix von Storch, she organized the Demo für Alle rallies, focused on protesting the 2015 education plan of the liberal government of Baden-Württemberg, same-sex marriage, gender ideology, and demanding the protection of "traditional" values. The protests turned violent and led to police arrests.An outspoken opponent of same-sex marriage and teaching gender studies in public schools, the LGBTQ network Enough is Enough! Open Your Mouth! accused her of using hatred and fear against LGBTQ people, referring to her as Miss Homophobia in 2015, stating that she is one of "the most active representatives of fear and hatred towards lesbians and gays in Germany."
On 18 January 2020 von Beverfoerde took part in a silent prayer protest in Munich to ask Pope Francis and the German Bishops' Conference for "clarity and coherence" and to end "dissimulation and deception" in the Catholic Church in Germany. She protested alongside other conservative Catholic leaders and activists including Tschugguel, Roberto de Mattei, Gabriele Kuby, and Archishop Carlo Maria Viganò. The group, protesting under the name Acies Ordinata, included 130 members of the laity from Germany, Austria, Italy, Brazil, Chile, Canada, and the United States.
Von Beverfoerde serves on the advisory board for the online newspaper FreieWelt.

Personal life

Von Beverfoerde is married to Baron Josef von Elverfeldt gennant Beverfoerde zu Werries, a businessman who owns a construction company in Magdeburg. Her husband's family, the :de:Elverfeldt genannt von Beverfoerde zu Werries|Von Beverfoerde, a cadet branch of the :de:Elverfeldt |Von Elverfeldt, are also part of the German nobility. She and her husband have three children. A Catholic, she served as chairwoman of the board of trustees of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Magdeburg's Edith-Stein School Foundation from 2002 until 2012.
In 2015, an arson attack was made against Von Beverfoerde and her family at her husband's business headquarters when a radical left-wing activist lit a car on fire.