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9781585442126

Casualty of War

by
  • ISBN13:

    9781585442126

  • ISBN10:

    1585442127

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2002-11-01
  • Publisher: Texas A & M Univ Pr
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List Price: $34.95

Summary

Not all casualties of war die on the battlefield. In the wake of World War II, Yugoslavia purged its territory of the ethnic Germans who had formed a part of its human mosaic. Tarred with their ethnic origins and the conscription of their fighting-age men into the Waffen SS, the Volksdeutsche, as these settlers were called, were rounded up at the war's end and herded into concentration camps. Those who were not murdered or did not die from the harsh conditions were expelled from the village homes their families had known and loved for three hundred years.
Nine years old when she entered the concentration camp in 1945, author Luisa Lang Owen survived the persecution of the Danube Swabians, eventually finding herself in America, where she made a new life for herself, a life that nonetheless held within it the memories and lessons of the atrocities she had experienced in her homeland.
Her haunting memoir provides a window into the ethnic cleansing that preceded the recent exterminations in Bosnia and Kosovo by fifty years - an episode of horrors that has not appeared as even a footnote in descriptions of the more recent atrocities practiced in that region. Her testament, as a casualty of war, bears historic witness and gives insight into the personal experiences of ethnic cleansing. It stands as witness to a massive crime that has been conveniently forgotten, a corrective to a bit of neglect that did away with its victims as a people, and a personal depiction of what ethnic cleansing is really about. "The problem was not just that they did not want us to have or to be," Luisa Lang Owen writes, "they wanted us not to have been."

Author Biography

Luisa Lang Owen is professor emerita of art education at Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrationsp. IX
List of Mapsp. XI
Forewordp. XIII
Prefacep. XXV
Acknowledgmentsp. XVII
Introductionp. 3
Sacred Groundp. 15
Extended Familyp. 35
The Larger Villagep. 54
Changes, Love, and Warp. 79
Move into Darknessp. 101
A World of Countless Separationsp. 124
This Side of the Sugar-Crystal Windowp. 147
Rudolfsgnad Is Knicaninp. 164
The Death-Wagon Movesp. 184
Land of the Lostp. 204
A New Identityp. 224
Freed to Consigned Laborp. 234
Lisi Neni's Gardenp. 242
A Place of Light and Reunionp. 255
Germany, a Window Viewp. 270
America, a New Beginningp. 283
Epiloguep. 293
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.

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