Now the story of my other grandparents.
Irmgard was a young woman during the 1930s. She travelled a lot with a friend of her. She told me that they visited the propagandistic Summer Olympics 1936 in Berlin. She was really fascinated and reached to enter the infield. She bought a camera and told the security that she is a journalist and they let her pass. After this event she met a young NS-officer and was invited to a party at the "Reichstag". She always told, that their was a singer at her table, named Jopie Hesters.
When the war started she had to work at a manor in the (old) east of Germany. There she learned her life motto: "I felt asleep and dreamed that they lif is only duty; I woke up and saw the duty is joy."
Irmgard died a few weeks ago and I read her diary. She never talked about the end of the war and why she moved to the west of Germany. In her detailed diary are missing the first two years after the war. I found an entry where she wrote, that she never would talk about this time, because to much horrible things happened. But these horroble thing let her flee into the west.
In her new home town she was looking for a husband and found Heinz.
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This is one of those games that doesn't show up as being owned although I already have this.
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I think it is because of the 2-Pack. Thanks for reminding me to look at the winners profile. :-)
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Is it alright to enter if we own one of the two?
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If you want to play it, enter.
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Thanks!
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This story of your grandmother reminded me something. I've once read a biography of Jan Karski, polish diplomate and resistance movement fighter. In 1943 he met with F.D. Roosevelt and reported him about the situation of Jews in occupied Poland.
When he was starting his career as a diplomate he was sent to Reichsparteitag in Nurnberg, in 1936. When he arrived there and was walking the streets of Nurnberg he encountered some crowd, then came closer. He recognized Unity Mitford. He "hailed" to her with nazi gesture, then even told her he's from Poland, so she commented: "Good to see polish facists here".
Later when he tried to explain that moment of weakness, as he was always before and further totally against nazism, he told that it was just the magic of the crowd, the atmosphere in there.
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The fascination of the croud is powerful. It still exists today. And you can feel the power of such a crowd. When you stand together in a soccer stadion or when you cheer to your favorite band at a festival.
And I think younger people are more "in danger" to follow blind the masses. (Including me, when I was younger ;-) )
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Thank you very much :)
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You are welcome, BlackBoxe. :-)
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