[On June 26th, 1963, President John F. Kennedy delivered his famous “Ich bin ein Berliner” speech in West Berlin. That was just one of many interesting moments that brought the two nations together, so for the speech’s 60th anniversary I’ll AmericanStudy it and other German-American histories!]
On three
distinct but complementary ways to contextualize an American
Nazi organization.
1)
That Rally: I said a great deal of what I’d
want to say about the justifiably infamous February 1939 Madison Square
Garden rally in this
Saturday Evening Post column
(that first, hyperlinked short documentary is well worth your time if you want
to learn more about this historic and horrific night). “If George Washington
were alive today, he would be friends with Adolf Hitler,” said German American
Bund secretary
James Wheeler Hill in his introductory remarks. We can find plenty of
despicable statements about American ideals across the course of our history,
but Hill’s has to be very high on that list.
2)
The Great War’s Legacies: There is quite
literally no excuse for such statements or attitudes, and I am certainly not
going to make any in this space. But individual historical moments don’t happen
in a vacuum, and just as the rise of Nazi Germany has to be contextualized with
what occurred
in that country during and after the Great War, it’s likewise important to
recognize that the U.S. featured a
great deal of anti-German prejudice and xenophobia during and after that
war. Which makes it entirely understandable that in subsequent years German
Americans would seek community and solidarity in civic and cultural organizations—it’s
just pretty unfortunate that as of the 1930s the largest and most influential
such organization was one started by both American
and German Nazis.
3)
White Supremacy: In recent years, there’s been
a lot of overdue
and important attention paid to the way in which Adolf Hitler and the
German Nazi Party learned about turning prejudice into policy from
Jim Crow and other American systems. At the same time, it’s important to
think about a distinct but related trajectory: how communities of white
immigrants have, too often, contributed to American white supremacist ideas and
ideologies. A main story in my
current book project features an Irish American immigrant who became
the national face of the anti-Chinese movement, for example. And I think we
can see the same process at work with the German American Bund, as exemplified by
one more quote from the 1939 rally: in his closing remarks, Bund leader Fritz Julius Kuhn
told the audience that “the Bund is open to you, provided you are sincere, of
good character, of white gentile stock, and an American citizen imbued with
patriotic zeal.”
Last
German-American history tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? German-American contexts you’d highlight?
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