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Felicia Langer
Felicia Langer
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Felicia Langer (Hebrew: פליציה לנגר; 9 December 1930 – 21 June 2018) was a German-Israeli attorney and human rights activist known for her defence of Palestinian political prisoners in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. She authored several books alleging human rights violations on the part of Israeli authorities. She lived in Germany from 1990 and acquired German citizenship in 2008. In July 2009, President of Germany Horst Köhler awarded her the Federal Cross of Merit, First class, which is the fifth highest of Germany's federal order of merit's eight ranks.[1] The bestowal triggered a public controversy because of her attitude towards the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In 1990, she was awarded the Right Livelihood Award for "the exemplary courage of her advocacy for the basic rights of the Palestinian people."

Key Information

Youth in Eastern Europe

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Felicia-Amalia Langer (born Felicia Veitt) was born to Jewish parents in the Polish town of Tarnów in 1930. In 1939, her family fled from the German invasion to the Soviet Union, where her father, a lawyer, died in one of Stalin's gulag prisons in 1945. Other relatives were murdered by the Nazis. In 1949, she married Mieciu Langer in Breslau, a survivor of Nazi concentration camps who had lost his entire family in the Holocaust.[2]

Time in Israel

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In 1950, the young couple immigrated to Israel, where their son was born in 1953. In 1959 she began to study law at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she obtained a law degree in 1965.[citation needed]

She briefly worked for a Tel Aviv law firm, but then opened up her own lawyer's office in 1966. After the 1967 Six-Day War, she was opposed to the conduct of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and so established a private practice in Jerusalem defending Palestinian political detainees. Langer was the first lawyer to assist Palestinians in cases involving land confiscation, house demolition, deportation, and torture before Israeli military courts.[3]

Langer only infrequently won cases in her 23-year career. In 1977, she lost her licence to defend Israeli conscientious objectors before Israeli courts and could be excluded from proceedings at any time on security grounds.[citation needed]

Langer counted her 1979 successful defense of Nablus mayor Bassam Shaka as the high point of her career. Shaka had been a PLO supporter and outspoken critic of the Camp David accords, was subsequently accused of inciting terrorism by his public statements and was issued an expulsion order. Langer defended him successfully, having the expulsion order overturned by the Israeli Supreme Court.[4]

For many years Langer was vice president of the Israeli League for Human and Civil Rights. The Palestinian scholar Sami Hadawi said of Langer that "much credit and gratitude is due for her defence, at great personal risk, of Arab detainees and prisoners."[5]

She later joined the communist Rakah party, in which she became a central committee member.[6]

In 1990 she departed from the party after an internal conflict of orientation, closed her lawyer's office and moved to Germany with her husband. In an interview with The Washington Post, Langer said she quit because Palestinians no longer can expect justice in Israel.[7]

Time in Germany

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From 1990, she lived in Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, and acquired German citizenship in 2008. She accepted teaching positions at the universities of Bremen and Kassel and continued to author books which have been translated into several languages. She became patron of the association Refugees' Children in Lebanon which assists Palestinian refugee families. After March 2009 she supported the newly founded Russell Tribunal for Palestine.[citation needed]

In her writings, lectures and interviews she criticized Israeli policy in the occupied Palestinian territories, which she considered equivalent to an annexation. Langer furthermore considered the construction of Israeli settlements in the West Bank as undermining the possibility of a two-state solution and demanded the complete and unconditional retreat of Israel from the territories conquered in 1967 and a right to return for any descendant of the Palestinian refugees.[citation needed]

Langer headed a legal team to defend the journalists who had been arrested following the closure of the Israeli newspaper Derekh HaNitzotz in February 1988.[8]

In 1990, Langer received the Right Livelihood Award "for the exemplary courage of her struggle for the basic rights of the Palestinian people."[9]

In 1991, she was awarded the Bruno Kreisky Award for Outstanding Achievements in the Area of Human Rights.[10]

In 2002, she declared that whereas the Palestinian terror attacks were unjustifiable, the Israeli policy had "paved the way" for them. Within this context, she adopted the opinion of the deputy chairman of the German Liberal Party (FDP) Jürgen Möllemann, who had called the targeted killings of Palestinian subjects by Israeli security forces an act of state terror. In 2003, she wrote the preface to a book written by Jamal Karsli.[11]

In 2005, Langer was awarded the Erich Mühsam Prize for her continuing struggle for the human rights of the Palestinian people.[12]

She was a supporter of the Campaign for the Establishment of a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, an organisation which campaigns for democratic reformation of the United Nations.[13]

Death

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Felicia Langer died on 21 June 2018, aged 87, in Tübingen, Germany.[14]

Federal Cross of Merit

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Langer was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit, First class, by the President of Germany Horst Köhler following the nomination by the government of Baden-Württemberg, itself based on suggestions by the publicist Evelyn Hecht-Galinski and the city of Tübingen. At the award ceremony, on 16 July 2009 in Stuttgart, the decoration was bestowed by Hubert Wicker, a senior civil servant of Baden-Württemberg's chancellery.[citation needed]

The official award acknowledges a lifetime effort of Langer for peace, justice and the respect of human rights, as well as her efforts for people in need of help without regard of their nationality or religion and independently of their personal political, or religious motivation or worldview. He furthermore mentioned her childhood and youth rife with distress, war, persecution and flight.[15]

Discussion about the award

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The federal state government led by Günther Oettinger had adopted the proposal after having consulted all commonly involved positions including the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs.[16]

The decision has been criticized by several Jewish municipalities as well as several prominent German Jews, Jewish and pro-Israeli organizations like the Central Council of Jews in Germany, the New York-based American Jewish Committee and the Deutsch-Israelischen Gesellschaft. Polish-German journalist and author Henryk Broder assumed that Köhler had made the decision, ignoring Langer's statements criticizing Israel.[17]

The deputy president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany Dieter Graumann declared in an interview, Germany had awarded a person who had been demonising Israel professionally, chronically and obsessively.[18]

Arno Lustiger, Ralph Giordano and Arno Hamburger announced their intent to return their Federal Crosses of Merit if Langer's award was not revoked. They said Langer had compared the Israeli policy to the Holocaust[19] and described her as a long-time "enemy of Israel" guilty of the "devastating effect" of a common German desideratum to disburden the own guiltiness by criticizing Israel.[20]

Langer said she never compared the Israeli foreign policy to the Holocaust, but considered it as a policy of apartheid.[21][22] Giordano later withdrew his announcement to return his award, maintaining his critique.[23]

The Israeli travellers' guide, Motke Shomrat, known for his advocacy for the conciliation between Israel and Germany, and honoured with a Federal Cross of Merit, returned it on 24 July 2009,[24] as Langer had supposedly consented anti-Israeli statements of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,[25] which was denied by Langer.[21] Federal Cross of Merit holder Ralph Giordano said: "No one in the last 25 years, with a one-sidedness bordering on blindness, has done Israel more damage than this supposed human-rights lawyer."[26]

The American Jewish Committee wrote a letter to Köhler condemning the award. The letter expresses an "astonishment at the decision to honour an individual who for many years was an apologist for a regime which brought untold fear and misery upon the citizens of eastern Germany", and refers to her membership of the Israeli Communist Party.[27]

A sharp criticism in German newspapers was mentioned by the spokesman of the Israeli ministry of foreign affairs Yigal Palmor. He said that Langer had a long track of supporting forces in benefit of violence, death and extremism.[28]

As a result of the criticism, and in response to Arno Hamburger´s return of his award, Gert Haller, the highest ranking state secretary in the office of the President of Germany, Horst Köhler, wrote a letter to Hamburger saying that the grievance caused by the awarding was "terribly unfortunate." After requests by Hamburger he stated there was no legal basis to withdraw the award.[29][30][31]

Educationist Micha Brumlik criticized Langer's conduct, argumentation and choice of words as too one-sided. He considers that making Israel the only responsible for the situation in the Middle East is typical of an anti-Semitic pattern of argumentation. Nevertheless, she might deserve the Federal Cross of Merit on the merits of calling the attention to the permanent violations of the human rights of the Arab population in the occupied territories on the behalf of Israel.[32]

The mayor of Tübingen, Boris Palmer, and the government of Baden-Württemberg defended the bestowal, arguing that it rewarded Langer's lifework rather than her ideology.[33]

Langer characterised the criticisms of her distinction on 23 July 2009 as a smear campaign supposed to suppress criticism against Israel and rejected to return the Federal Cross of Merit.[34][35] Several elected officials, including the Mayor of Tübingen Boris Palmer and representatives of the Government of Baden-Württemberg, underlined their support for the award.[36]

Books by Felicia Langer

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Langer's books discuss the torture of detainees, routine violation of international law prohibiting deportation, as well as collective punishment.[citation needed]

  • With My Own Eyes (1975)
  • These Are My Brothers (1979)
  • An Age of Stone (1987)
  • Fury and Hope (1993) (autobiographical)
  • Appearance and Truth in Palestine (1999)
  • Miecius Report. Youth between the Ghetto and Theresienstadt (1999)
  • Quo vadis Israel? The new Intifada of the Palestinians (2001)
  • Books in German
  • Die Zeit der Steine, Aus dem Hebräischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 1989; ISBN 9783889773791
  • Zorn und Hoffnung. Aus dem Hebräischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 1991; ISBN 3-88977-440-7
  • Brücke der Träume. Eine Israelin geht nach Deutschland. Aus dem Hebräischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 1994, ISBN 3-88977-385-0.
  • Wo Hass keine Grenzen kennt: eine Anklageschrift. Aus dem Hebräischen und aus dem Englischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 1995; ISBN 3-88977-397-4
  • «Laßt uns wie Menschen leben!» Schein und Wirklichkeit in Palästina. Aus dem Hebräischen und aus dem Englischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 1999; ISBN 3-88977-538-1
  • Miecius später Bericht: eine Jugend zwischen Getto und Theresienstadt. Aus dem Hebräischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 1999; ISBN 3-88977-539-X
  • Quo vadis, Israel? Die neue Intifada der Palästinenser. Aus dem Englischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 2001; ISBN 3-88977-615-9
  • Brandherd Nahost. Oder: Die geduldete Heuchelei. Aus dem Englischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 2004; ISBN 3-88977-644-2
  • Die Frau, die niemals schweigt. Stationen eines Lebens. Lamuv, Göttingen 2005; ISBN 3-88977-664-7
  • Die Entrechtung der Palästinenser. 40 Jahre israelische Besatzung. Aus dem Englischen. Lamuv, Göttingen 2006, ISBN 3-88977-680-9.
  • Um Hoffnung kämpfen. Lamuv, Göttingen 2008, ISBN 3-88977-688-4.
  • Mit Leib und Seele - Autobiographische Notizen. Zambon, Frankfurt am Main 2012, ISBN 978-3-88975-201-7.

Awards

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  • Hans-Litten-Award - Union of Democratic Advocates (1988)[37]
  • Right Livelihood Award (1990)[38]
  • Honorary Citizen of Nazaret (1990)[21]
  • Bruno Kreisky Award - Merit of Human Rights (1991)[39]
  • Under the top 50 of the most important women in Israel - Elected by the magazine "YOU" (1998)[21]
  • Erich Mühsam Award of the Erich-Mühsam-Association (2005) [40][41]
  • Human Rights Award - Association Protecting Human Rights and Human Dignity (2006) [42]
  • Federal Cross of Merit, First Class (2009) [43]
  • Palestinian Medal for Exceptional Merits (2012)[44][45]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Felicia Langer (9 July 1930 – 21 June 2018) was a Polish-born Israeli-German lawyer and human rights activist known for her pioneering and steadfast defense of Palestinian rights in Israeli military and civilian courts after the 1967 Six-Day War. A Holocaust survivor who lost most of her family during World War II, she immigrated to Israel in 1950, qualified as a lawyer in 1959, and dedicated more than two decades to representing Palestinians charged with occupation-related offenses, including challenging house demolitions, deportations, administrative detentions, and allegations of torture by Israeli authorities. Langer became one of the first Israeli attorneys to systematically contest the legal framework of the occupation, representing hundreds of clients in the West Bank and Gaza and bringing landmark cases such as the successful defense of Nablus mayor Bassam Shakaa against deportation in the late 1970s. Her work exposed systemic human rights violations in military courts and earned her widespread recognition among Palestinian communities and international advocates, though it also made her a controversial and often vilified figure in much of Israeli society. She documented her experiences in books such as With My Own Eyes and These Are My Brothers, and she received the Right Livelihood Award in 1990 for her advocacy on behalf of Palestinian rights. In 1990, disillusioned by what she described as the Israeli legal system's role as a mere "fig leaf" for injustice, Langer closed her practice, left Israel, and relocated to Tübingen, Germany, where she later became a citizen and continued her activism through university teaching and public lectures. She was honored with Germany's Federal Order of Merit in 2009 and the Palestinian Order of Merit and Excellence in 2012, among other recognitions, for her lifelong commitment to peace, justice, and human rights. Langer died on June 21, 2018, in Berlin, Germany.

Early life

Childhood in Poland and Holocaust survival

Felicia Langer (née Veitt) was born on 9 December 1930 in Tarnów, Poland, to a Jewish family in a city with a large Jewish population near the German border. She spent her early childhood there until the outbreak of World War II. Following the Nazi invasion of Poland in September 1939 and the rapid occupation of Tarnów, Langer fled with her parents to the Soviet Union as a child of eight. Her father, a lawyer, was arrested by Soviet authorities after refusing to accept Soviet citizenship, fearing it would prevent the family's return to Poland after the war. The family was then interned in one of Stalin's gulags for the remainder of the war. Langer's father died in 1945, shortly after the period of gulag internment. She survived the Holocaust as a child, but nearly all of her other relatives were murdered by the Nazis.

Post-war period and immigration to Israel

After the end of World War II, Felicia Langer returned to Poland with her mother, having survived the Holocaust and a period in a Soviet gulag where her father died in 1945. In 1949 she married fellow Holocaust survivor Mieciu (Moshe) Langer. In 1950 the couple immigrated to Israel to join her mother, who had already settled there and pleaded with them to follow, rather than for Zionist ideological reasons. They settled in Tel Aviv. Shortly after their arrival, Langer joined the Communist Party of Israel (Maki), remaining an avid communist throughout her life, influenced by her wartime and Holocaust experiences. As a Holocaust survivor with a Polish accent and European manners, she was regarded as somewhat of an outsider in early Israeli society. Her Marxist convictions and Maki membership reportedly limited her access to public-sector employment.

Education and entry into law

Felicia Langer studied law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. This marked an unusual pursuit for a woman with a young child at the time, reflecting her determination to enter the legal profession despite familial responsibilities. She completed her legal studies, acquiring the qualifications necessary to practice law in Israel in 1959. This education prepared her for entry into the Israeli legal system, building on her earlier experiences and ideological commitments.

Admission to the bar and early practice

Felicia Langer was admitted to the Israeli Bar in 1959 after completing her legal studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She opened her own law office in Tel Aviv and began practicing law, initially handling a range of general civil and criminal cases typical of a private attorney in Israel during that period. Her early practice reflected her longstanding commitment to social justice, influenced by her experiences as a Holocaust survivor and her involvement in left-wing politics, though it remained focused on conventional legal work before her later specialization in human rights cases.

Human rights work in Israel

Establishment of Jerusalem law office

After qualifying as a lawyer in 1959, Felicia Langer opened her own law office in Jerusalem on Koresh Street shortly after the 1967 Six-Day War. She operated this office for 23 years until 1990, when she relocated to Germany. During this period, Langer shifted the focus of her practice to specialize in defending Palestinians in the occupied territories, handling cases related to the consequences of the occupation.

Defense of Palestinian clients after 1967

After the 1967 Six-Day War and the beginning of Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Felicia Langer emerged as one of the first Israeli lawyers to defend Palestinians in the occupied territories. She opened her law office in Jerusalem and dedicated her practice to representing Palestinian clients before Israeli military courts and through petitions to the Supreme Court (sitting as the High Court of Justice). Described as a trailblazer in legal advocacy for Palestinian human rights, she was among only a handful of lawyers—often standing out as the sole Jewish woman and Communist—willing to take on such defenses in the late 1960s and beyond. Over more than two decades until her departure from Israel in 1990, Langer handled an estimated 3,000 cases for Palestinian clients, focusing on challenges to occupation practices within the Israeli legal framework. She appeared regularly before the Supreme Court, where she pursued legal arguments against systemic issues in the occupied territories, often in contentious hearings against senior judicial and state authorities. Her work reflected a commitment to using the courts to document and contest injustices, even as she increasingly viewed the system as incapable of delivering genuine justice for Palestinians. Langer pioneered legal challenges to Israeli military practices in the occupied territories following the 1967 Six-Day War, becoming one of the first Israeli lawyers to contest the expulsion of Palestinian leaders, house demolitions, allegations of torture by the Shin Bet security service, and administrative detentions without trial. She brought these issues before Israeli courts, marking an early effort to subject occupation policies to judicial scrutiny. Among her prominent representations was the 1979 appeal against the expulsion order issued to Nablus Mayor Bassam Shakaa, whom she defended before the Israeli Supreme Court after he lost both legs in a car bombing earlier that year. The High Court temporarily blocked the deportation pending a final ruling on her appeal. Ultimately, the expulsion order was overturned, allowing Shakaa to remain as mayor. Shakaa, elected mayor in 1976, was a notable figure in Palestinian municipal leadership under occupation. Langer also handled cases involving house demolitions imposed on families of suspected militants and defended individuals accused of security offenses in military courts, consistently arguing against practices she viewed as violations of human rights and international law. Her work extended to exposing allegations of Shin Bet torture, contributing significantly to public and international awareness through her legal arguments and related advocacy in the 1970s.

Personal and professional challenges

Public hostility and security threats

Felicia Langer faced intense public hostility in Israel as a direct result of her legal defense of Palestinian clients after the 1967 occupation. Many Israelis viewed her work with suspicion and animosity, branding her "the terrorists' lawyer" and regarding her as a traitor for representing those perceived as enemies. This widespread vilification created an environment of distrust and open antagonism toward her personally and professionally. The hostility manifested in everyday harassment and acts of intimidation. Taxi drivers in Jerusalem repeatedly refused to pick her up, and she could seldom walk down the street without encountering verbal or physical abuse from passersby. Her office in Jerusalem became a target of vandalism, including threatening graffiti such as the words "you will die soon" spray-painted on her door; neighbors once asked her to remove the message simply because they found it aesthetically displeasing. For security reasons, she eventually removed the office sign altogether. The threats escalated to the point that Langer lived under a permanent threat of violence and received serious death threats. These dangers forced her to hire a bodyguard to protect herself during this period of her career.

Writings

Authored books on occupation and human rights

Felicia Langer authored several influential books documenting human rights violations in the Israeli-occupied territories, drawing from her direct experiences defending Palestinian clients in military courts. These works, published primarily during her years in Israel, combine personal accounts of legal cases with critiques of occupation policies and military administration. Her first major book, With My Own Eyes: Israel and the Occupied Territories, 1967-1973, appeared in 1975 and offers a detailed eyewitness record of her professional engagements from the period immediately following the 1967 Six-Day War. The text examines issues including administrative detentions, military court procedures, interrogation practices, prison conditions, and alleged breaches of the Geneva Convention, citing specific cases from locations such as Gaza, Hebron, Nablus, Ramallah, and the Golan Heights. The 1979 sequel, These Are My Brothers: Israel & the Occupied Territories, Part II, continued this documentation of life under occupation, extending her reporting on Palestinian experiences and Israeli legal practices in the territories. Langer's An Age of Stone, published in 1988, compiled diary entries originally written for Hebrew newspapers, chronicling the escalating tension and Palestinian resistance under prolonged occupation without retrospective alterations. The book highlights growing militarist tendencies in Israeli society, declining moral standards since events like the 1982 Lebanon invasion, and persistent dehumanization, while also noting rare instances of shared humanity and solidarity amid widespread brutality. These three books, written during her time practicing law in Israel, formed a core part of her efforts to expose human rights abuses and mobilize support for Palestinians and the Israeli peace movement.

Later life in Germany

Relocation in 1990 and teaching role

In 1990, Felicia Langer closed her Jerusalem law office and emigrated from Israel to Germany, settling in the city of Tübingen in southern Germany. She announced that she could no longer serve as a "fig leaf" for the Israeli judicial system, expressing her disillusionment with its functioning in the context of the occupation. She also described the legal system in Israel as having become "a farce." Following her relocation, Langer accepted teaching positions at the universities of Bremen and Kassel, where she lectured on legal and human rights issues. These roles allowed her to continue engaging with academic audiences on matters related to international law and justice. Amid persistent public hostility in Israel toward her work, the move marked a significant shift in her professional life.

Continued activism and public appearances

After relocating to Germany in 1990, Felicia Langer continued her human rights advocacy, maintaining active opposition to the Israeli occupation and supporting peace and coexistence efforts between Israelis and Palestinians. She kept close contact with peace movements in Israel and Palestine while engaging in ongoing efforts to raise awareness about Palestinian rights. Langer made limited but notable public appearances in Germany, primarily on television talk shows where she appeared as herself to discuss her experiences and views on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with these engagements tied directly to her activism rather than any entertainment career. In 1991, she was a guest on the talk show Zeil um Zehn in an episode aired on January 25, 1991. A decade later, she appeared on Nachtcafé in the episode titled "Die Welt in Angst," which aired on September 14, 2001. These were her verified television credits, and she had no acting roles or production involvement in film or television.

Awards and legacy

Major honors and impact on human rights law

Felicia Langer received the Right Livelihood Award in 1990 for her consistent documentation and defense of Palestinian human rights under Israeli occupation. The jury recognized her as one of the first Israeli lawyers to systematically challenge human rights violations in military courts, providing legal representation to Palestinians accused of security offenses and exposing patterns of administrative detention, torture allegations, and land expropriation. This honor, commonly known as the Alternative Nobel Prize, highlighted her role in bringing international attention to these issues through her courtroom work and publications. After relocating to Germany, Langer was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit (Bundesverdienstkreuz Erster Klasse) in 2009 for her longstanding commitment to human rights and reconciliation efforts. She also received the Bruno Kreisky Prize for Human Rights in 1991 and the Palestinian Order of Merit and Excellence in 2012. Langer's pioneering legal work laid important groundwork for subsequent Israeli human rights lawyers, including Leah Tsemel and Avigdor Feldman, who built upon her strategies in defending Palestinian rights within the Israeli legal system. Her efforts contributed to the broader development of legal challenges to the occupation, fostering instances of Israeli-Palestinian cooperation in human rights litigation and advocacy. Through her cases and writings, she helped establish precedents and discourse that influenced the field of international human rights law concerning military occupations.

Personal life and death

Family and marriage

Felicia Langer married Mieciu Langer in 1949. Mieciu was a Holocaust survivor who had lost his entire family during the Nazi regime and was the sole survivor of his relatives. The marriage took place after Langer and her mother returned to Poland following the war, where they discovered that many family members had perished, and her father had died in 1945 in a Soviet gulag. The couple had one son, Michael. Mieciu Langer died in 2015. Felicia Langer was predeceased by her husband and survived by her son Michael and three grandchildren.

Death in 2018

Felicia Langer died on 22 June 2018 in Eningen unter Achalm, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, at the age of 87. According to family statements, her death occurred in a hospice near Tübingen following a long illness with cancer. She is survived by her son, Michael, and three grandchildren.

References

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