Grete Reiner (20 November 1885 – 8 March 1944) was a Czech-German magazine editor and writer, who is notable for being the first translator of The Good Soldier Schwejk, the antimilitarist satirical novel by Jaroslav Hašek.Her 1926 translation of Schwejk from the original Czech into German (or what was known as Prager Deutsch or Pražská Nemcina) was highly prized by many including Bertolt Brecht and Erwin Piscator in Berlin, who used it as the basis for a play in 1928.
Reiner's work, Die Abenteuer des Braven Soldaten Schwejk was followed by an abridged English translation by Paul Selver in 1930.Reiner was born in Prague under the name Grete Stein.
On its publication in 1921–23, Max Brod had immediately recognised Schwejk as a major work of literature, and had tried to translate a portion of it into German himself in the weeks following Hašek's death in 1923.
Greta Reiner's full translation was published in 1926.
Brod subsequently created a German play from the novel, collaborating with Hans Reimann.
According to the Biographia Judaica Bohemiae, on 22 December 1942, Grete Reiner was deported to the Sammellager in TerezĂn (Theresienstadt) as a result of the Nazi measures for the "final solution of the Jewish question", and from there on 6 September 1943, to KZ Auschwitz.
Unless she fell victim to other abuse, Grete Reiner was gassed with the entire transport on the night of 8–9 March 1944.
Much of the scant information about Grete Reiner comes from another writer in Prague at the time called Lenka Reinerová (no relation), who became the Grand Old Dame of German language Prague literature.
At the age of 19 Lenka was asked to take Greta Reiner's place as editor of Deutsche Volkszeitung and was the only member of her family to survive the Holocaust.