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Irmgard A. Hunt has been an executive at a number of environmental organizations, including the Nature Conservancy and the Environmental Partnership for Central Europe, a project of the German Marshall Fund. After years as a consultant to several international not-for-profit organizations, she retired and began to write her memoirs. She holds a B.A. from Columbia University (which she earned at age fifty-two) and an M.P.A. from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. She lives in Washington, D.C., and has two children and two grandchildren.
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Patriotism generally has positive connotations of love and loyalty
to ones country. What does patriotism mean to you now?
Patriotism is one of the most misused terms in our political
vocabulary and thanks to my childhood experience I am always suspicious of its
use. Hitler and the swastika flag aroused fervent "Vaterlandsliebe"
(love of the fatherland) in Germans, including myself at times during my
childhood. These symbols are used to motivate citizens to sacrifice their lives
or even kill others in the name of patriotism. Feeling pride in ones culture
and roots is obviously acceptable, but, unfortunately, leaders of all ilks
easily exploit these feelings in order to obtain blind support for highly
questionable objectives. Citizens in a democracy have a duty to object if, in
the name of patriotism, their government tries to dismantle laws that assure
freedom.
In addition to documenting the German peoples way of life during WWII,
what can people today take away from your memoir?
Most pertinent to todays situation, in reflecting on my Nazi
childhood on Hitlers mountain, I learned thateven in the United Statesfreedom
and democracy must not be taken for granted. Threats ...
Great political questions stir the deepest nature of one-half the nation, but they pass far above and over the ...
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