October 19, 2023
Volume 53 - No. 42
A Question of National Pride and Loyalty
Jesse Owens at the Olympics
The Reichstag
By Tom Morrow This is a story of fiction based on factual historic occurrences. About the only thing as strong or more powerful than familial ties is one’s loyalty to national identity. Denying one’s roots can be an almost impossible task … Johann “John” Trask knew of such a dilemma. He held one of the exalted positions of town barber in Lone Tree, Iowa. Next to Father Mike of
The Graf Zeppelin
The Eiffel Tower
St. Mary’s or The Reverend Samuel Storms of the town’s Lutheran Church, John was the primary receptacle for depositing local semiimportant community information and confessions. For those in the small farming community who had known John as a young man his life story had paragraphs of astonishing revelations. He was American born but to a German immigrant family who never shed the shackles of their national identity.
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After surviving the stigma of being the primary cause of a world war and the threat of a second, those with a strong German heritage were trying to leave things in the past. John was a “Volksdeutscher” of the first order. He was an American, to be sure, but as long as his father, Wilhelm Trask was alive, homage was secretly paid to their home country. It was an edict that came with a cost. The old man paid the tab during and after World War I, now John was the second generation to
experience what it would cost to be a Volksdeutscher. The upper Middle West of America during the 19th and early 20th centuries saw a heavy settlement of German immigrants which caused a considerable amount of angst during the several European wars. The question of national loyalty became a serious problem … many native-born Germans felt they were betraying the Fatherland if they joined the American military, while others returned to their native soil
Pride
See Page 2