In a world where wars are started by men and paid for by mothers, Friedhilde is a quiet act of resistance.
Born from grief and urgency, this initiative launches on International Women's Day with one clear conviction: that lasting peace will not come from the same hands that wage war — it will come from women. From mothers. From the ones who carry the cost.
The name says everything. Friedhilde — Frieden and Hilde, peace and battle fused into one — stands for strength not as dominance, but as the bedrock of a world worth living in. A world where no mother buries a child for a cause she never chose.
"You cannot convince anyone with words alone, but actions speak louder than words."
— FRIEDHILDE MEIER, 1986
That is the founding spirit here — not petition, not protest, but power. Real, structural, lasting power for women.
The Meier family — one of the most common family names in Germany, shared by millions — did not choose this name to stand out. They chose it because it stands for everyone. Every family. Every mother. Every child lost to a war no woman declared.
Spanning 47 languages, Friedhilde reaches across every border drawn by conflict, inviting women everywhere to find their voice — in their own tongue, on their own terms.
The family's business website remains dark until the wars are over. That is not a marketing choice. It is a statement.
Until then — More Power for Women.