"Women are not an addition to the trade," emphasized Jessica Beitzel, a funeral director, entrepreneur and mother of two from Dormagen.

"Women are not an addition to the trades. They are part of its future." Jessica Beitzel is a master funeral director, entrepreneur, and mother of two. She was a speaker at the "National Networking Meeting of Women in Trades." (Photo: © Kirsten Freund)

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More visibility for women in the trades

The "Nationwide Network Meeting of Women in Crafts" in Bielefeld sent a strong message: It was about greater visibility, role models and the importance of networks.

Around 150 participants from all over Germany came to the Campus Handwerk of the Chamber of Skilled Crafts East Westphalia-Lippe (HWK OWL) for the "National Network Meeting of Women in Crafts". The Chamber of Skilled Crafts (HWK) had organized the event together with the Federal Association of Women Entrepreneurs in Crafts (UFH) and the Central Association of German Crafts (ZDH) invited. The central message: Women in the skilled trades don't want a special role, but genuine equality.It doesn't need "perfect women, but visible women."

Women now make up around a third of the 5,6 million people employed in the skilled trades; almost one in four businesses is run by a woman, and in many other family businesses, women play a key role in management. And yet, even today, they are still viewed as oddities by many male colleagues, trainers, teachers, and especially customers.

Image gallery

Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Starke / HWK OWL)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark / HWK OWL)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)
Nationwide networking meeting of women in crafts
(Photo: © Thomas F. Stark)

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"Isn't that too difficult for you?", "Can we speak to the boss?", "Can you manage that?", "Who will look after your children while you're at work?" – Almost every woman who works in a trade, runs a business, or is in training is familiar with these kinds of comments. Some swallow them down, others fight back – either way, these everyday forms of discrimination leave their mark. A new way of thinking about gender roles is needed, it was said in Bielefeld. 

Peter Eul: "Let's shape the future of craftsmanship together."

"Women are not an add-on in the trades," he emphasized. Funeral director and mother Jessica Beitzel (Hüsgen Funeral Home) from Dormagen. "They are part of its future. Not better, not worse – just different. And this difference is what makes transformation possible." The future of skilled trades, the speakers agree, will not be decided solely by machinery, AI applications, or new building materials. "What good is the best technology if the attitude doesn't change?" asks Jessica Beitzel.

Photo: © Thomas F. Starke / HWK OWLPhoto: © Thomas F. Starke / HWK OWL

The first welcoming address was given by a man, namely Peter EulPresident of the East Westphalia-Lippe Chamber of Skilled Crafts, Eul emphasized that equality in the skilled trades concerns both women and men equally and that the meeting should foster a sense of unity. While the focus of the day was on female perspectives, Eul added, "Let's shape the future of the skilled trades together." He also thanked the event's sponsors: IKK classic, Signal Iduna, and Commerzbank. 

The goal is to have more women in leadership positions and in voluntary roles. The trades organization is prepared to go the extra mile to achieve this. One example cited is the chamber's new women's forum, where women from apprentices to business owners can network. In the Bielefeld chamber district alone, nearly 17 percent of all apprentices are female, 64 women recently passed their master craftsman's examination, and 7.296 female tradespeople run their own businesses.

"Network!"

The keyword "Networking" Networking was a recurring theme throughout the event. It's a strength that has long been established in many male-dominated structures and that women in the trades should also make greater use of: whether in the "Women Entrepreneurs in the Trades" or in WhatsApp groups, the message "Network" was repeated throughout the day. 

This also called for Juana Bleker, State Chairwoman of the Women entrepreneurs in the craft sector NRWThe fact that the UFH network has existed for 50 years, making the achievements of women in the trades visible and strengthening them, speaks for itself. It also demonstrates how strongly women in the trades are networked on an equal footing. Bleker emphasized: "We are a fixture in the trades."

Video messages from Jörg Dittrich and Dorothee Bär

They addressed themselves via video message ZDH President Jörg Dittrich and Dorothee Bear, Federal Minister for Research, Technology and Space, to the guests.

President of the German Confederation of Skilled Crafts, Jörg Dittrich, pointed to the tense situation in the skilled trades: declining sales, dwindling order books, and vacancies for which too few skilled workers can be found. For precisely this reason, the skilled trades need more women to take over businesses and train skilled workers, as well as more women in honorary positions within skilled trades organizations. ZDHThe president pledges to make the prospects of women in the trades visible and to "strengthen their hands so that they can pitch in without hindrance".

Minister Dorothee Bär welcomed the idea of ​​the nationwide networking event and the goal of making women in the skilled trades more visible and dispelling stereotypes of it being a "male-doer". She congratulated those present on finding their way into the skilled trades and acting as "doers" and role models for young women. 

Dorothee Bär presented the High-tech agenda her ministry and referred to the important issue Research on women's health, for which her ministry now has its own department. Women in skilled trades often perform physically demanding work, are simultaneously underrepresented, and issues such as prevention or gender-sensitive medicine are frequently neglected. Her ministry promotes research on women's health "across a broad spectrum." The goal is for the results to benefit all women, their families, their businesses, and society as a whole.  

"The future doesn't need perfect women. It needs visible women."

Jessica Beitzel, At 37, she is a master funeral director, a mother of two, owner of Hüsgen Funeral Home – a company she took over – a family grief counselor, and teaches at a master craftsman school. For 21 years, she has accompanied people "in the worst moments of their lives," as she puts it. In these situations, no title, no facade matters anymore. "Then real words, real people, real encounters count." It is precisely this attitude, this sensitivity, that are strengths women bring to the trades – strengths that are simply absent from the old image of "the man with a machine on the construction site."

Photo: © Thomas F. Starke / HWK OWLPhoto: © Thomas F. Starke / HWK OWL

When she wanted to start her training as a funeral director at 16, her high school teacher strongly advised against it. "If you go into a trade, you'll never amount to anything." Jessica went anyway. At vocational school, 75 percent of the trainees were men; at the cemetery, she was the only woman, and at 16, the youngest. "I not only had to learn the technical skills, but also learn to assert myself—in a world that didn't even consider the possibility of a woman doing this job well." She became the chamber, state, and national champion, later a master craftswoman, and top of her class.

And yet she experiences the same scenes time and again: When she's at trade fairs with her husband and team, eyes automatically wander to the men first. A grieving family scrutinizes her from head to toe at their front door and asks: "You're going to explain to me how this works? Do you even know what it means to say goodbye?" "That's the moment," says Jessica Beitzel, "when we have to prove ourselves before we've even begun. When we're judged not on our performance, but on an image." These images, as the entire conference demonstrates, persist stubbornly – across all trades.

Jessica Beitzel has set up a children's play area in the attic of her funeral home so that she—and, if needed, her employees—can bring their children along. In an industry where pregnant women are no longer allowed to care for the deceased, she's creating new procedures to keep them involved in the business. "I believe I'm a better funeral director because I'm a mother. And a better mother because I'm a funeral director."

She also calls on all women in the trades to network. She herself is, for example, a member of... Club of Women Entrepreneurs of Commerzbank, a nationwide network of female entrepreneurs in Germany.

"The wind has changed, the tone is becoming harsher"

Business psychologist Lisa Schleker Photo: © Thomas F. Stark / HWK OWLBusiness psychologist Lisa Schleker Photo: © Thomas F. Stark / HWK OWL

The extent to which the social mood is currently changing was outlined by the Business psychologist Lisa SchlekerShe looks at many industries professionally – and sees the same thing everywhere: "The tide has turned. The tone has become harsher. Issues like equality, diversity, and sustainability are being questioned again." The current polycrises are creating uncertainty. "And uncertain people tend to long for the good old days – with clear roles and clear visions."

This desire for simplicity is the breeding ground for the current backlashEquality is being downplayed ("Haven't we achieved enough?"), diversity programs are being vilified, and "wokeness" is becoming a dirty word. On social media and talk shows, complex structural problems are reduced to simplistic blame: "Women who pursue careers no longer take care of their children."

For Lisa Schleker This is no proof that equality has failed. "Progress in equality is never linear," she says, referring to the history of the women's movement. Every wave of emancipation—the right to vote, to have one's own bank account, the right to work—has been followed by a counter-movement. "But it never completely goes back."

The current level of aggression is a sign of how effective visibility has become: "The louder we are, the louder the others become." She calls suggestive remarks on the construction site, condescending questions, and doubts about competence microaggressions – small pinpricks that, in total, wear one down. 

It's a field of tension. Especially in the skilled trades, tradition clashes with innovation, creating constant friction. "Women are urgently needed, but the structures often don't yet align." Her message: "We will remain steadfast, even when the tide turns."

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Text: / handwerksblatt.de

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