The New Fatherland

The statue of Germania stands at the border of the German fatherland where the plunging Rhine murmurs its tales against its banks. In her raised right hand she holds a shining sword while the shield in her left hand glitters in the midday sun. Her eyes are turned to the west where many of her sons,...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of African American history 2006-09, Vol.91 (4), p.450-450
Hauptverfasser: Du Bois, W. E. B., Marcum, Ursula
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container_title The Journal of African American history
container_volume 91
creator Du Bois, W. E. B.
Marcum, Ursula
description The statue of Germania stands at the border of the German fatherland where the plunging Rhine murmurs its tales against its banks. In her raised right hand she holds a shining sword while the shield in her left hand glitters in the midday sun. Her eyes are turned to the west where many of her sons, nourished at her bosom, had gone to a new fatherland. They came to a foreign country to live among a foreign people who are sons of Adam, but whose faces, alas, are black, faces they have been taught to despise, and, what is more, that contact with them would stain them.
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identifier ISSN: 1548-1867
ispartof The Journal of African American history, 2006-09, Vol.91 (4), p.450-450
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2153-5086
language eng
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects African Americans
Black history
Document
German Americans
Homeland
Immigration
Social aspects
title The New Fatherland
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