Early years, 1899–1925 Engler was born on 27 September 1899 in
Schwiebus as daughter of Maria Franziska Engler and her husband Gustav Engler, a maker of slippers. Engler had eleven siblings, the family lived in poor conditions. The father died in 1912, in the following year Selma left school at the age of fourteen. In 1914 the mother moved to Berlin with some of the children. As the eldest of the siblings, Engler worked to support the family, initially as a saleswoman, later as an office clerk and accountant. From 1921 on, making a living was taken over by her siblings, who had grown up in the meantime; Engler presumably ran the family household at Nostitzstraße 61 for the next few years. This provided her with economic and temporal leeway for the coming decade, which she also used for her education; she learned English and the violin, and at the same time she found the time to pursue her "literary inclinations for a few hours a day". Engler's work as an activist began either in 1925 or 1926 (probably the latter) with the founding and editorship of the magazine
Die BIF – Blätter Idealer Frauenfreundschaften ("Papers of ideal women's friendship").
Die BIF ceased publication after three monthly issues in 1927.
Die BIF was unique among lesbian publications of the time as it was the first one published, edited and written solely by women; both competing magazines were dominated by men. From 1927 to 1929, Engler contributed to the magazine
Frauenliebe and from 1929 to 1931 to
Die Freundin. Beside many texts related to her activist work her writings included, in particular, short fiction, poems and serial novels. As an activist, Engler sought to improve the organization of lesbian women, following the lead of gay activists such as
Friedrich Radszuweit and
Carl Bergmann. She particularly asked lesbians to join Radszuweit's
Bund für Menschenrecht. In addition to her work as a writer, she organized ladies' clubs to allow lesbian women to gather without distraction. From 1926 to 1927, she ran the weekly "Damen-BIF-Klub", and in September 1929, she opened the ladies' club
Erâto on the premises of the
Zauberflöte, a well-known gay and lesbian venue. It appears to have been popular, as some of the club's events took place in venues with a capacity of some 600 persons. The club shut down after a few months and reopened in January 1931 on a smaller scale. It was last recorded as active in May 1931. After May 1931, Engler is no longer recorded as being active in the lesbian movement. Her name or that of the club
Erâto does not appear again in scene publications.
Life in the Third Reich In 1933, Engler sent a play titled
Heil Hitler directly to
Adolf Hitler. As Engler never before or after showed any nationalist or antisemitic attitudes and never got involved with the
NSDAP or any other national socialist organisations, this step is currently understood as either being an opportunistic step towards a writer's career or an attempt to show herself as a loyal citizen in view of her own past. The Reich Dramaturgist,
Rainer Schlösser, approved of the play's ideology, but believed that it lacked artistic and dramatic merit. In 1933, 1938 and 1943, Engler filed an application for membership in the
Reichsschrifttumskammer (RSK), part of the
Reichskulturkammer, the state organization to which all artists were required to belong. Due to a lack of publications, her application was rejected. On the basis of the RSK-files, poems, prose texts, dramas and an opera libretto can be traced, she also gave occasional lectures, but none of her works has survived.
After the war After the war, Engler continued to live in
Berlin-Kreuzberg in the Ritterstrasse as a writer, however, there are no known publications. In 1956, she was briefly observed by the East German
Stasi, whose report described her as "1.69m tall, of stable figure, has a full face and was carelessly dressed." At that time, she made a living by subletting. She moved at the beginning of the 1970s to
Berlin-Marienfelde, where she died shortly thereafter in April 1972. ==Legacy==