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Adamic has been commended for his humanism on many occasions. His conce-rn for his fellow man is evident in each book and each word he wrote. i', Native Land, published in 1943, is 'hr story of Yugoslavia under the Axis domina-tion. In this book Adamic's political opinions are most evident. He is extremuly critical of governments and statesmen on the whole. He goes beyond the basic problems in the Balkans and deals with the issues that the world had to face at that particular time. He tends to do this through the use of personal stories. He tells a personal story abaout people and then enlarges it, going from the specific to the general. He compares his village life in 1932 when he returned to the situation in 1942 when he wrote The Natives Return. He talks about a young couple killed by Italian forces. The incident is an allegory of the youths personifying the future, the intellectual forces destroyed by ignorance and the almost Barbarian attitude of Fascism. Another story was entitled "One Man's Sacrifice". Briefly, there had, been some action by the Partisans and the Germans said they would kill ten Serbs per day until the assassin was caught. There is a man in the story who sacrificed himself in order to save the community. He was a very mild mannered individual who couldn't possibly kill a German but he decided to sacrifice himself to save the hostages. The decision was wholly and solely his own. He didn't even know these people. Why he make such a sacrifice? Adamic goes on to discuss the German technique of depopulizing the population. The Nazis believed them systematically as was done with the Jews. A minor excuse was, "Will, you killed one of us, we'll kill ten of you per day until the guilty party owes up". In his opinion, it was better to kill one than ten. A brigade of guerilla fighters was formed in the mountain banded together under his name to perpetuate it. He had a very touching segment in his book, called "The Dying Guerilla's Testa-ment" about a young fellow recently married who writes a letter to his unborn child. He writes this letter about the future and why he's fighting so hard to make a better society, a better world. He doesn't realize that his wife has been killed by the Germans and his child will never be born. These types of sympathetic stories appear thoughout the book. Yugoslavia officially-collapse- d April 17, 1941 and the country was divided up. The talians were given Nontenegro and Dalma tia (the Coast of Croatia). The Italians also took southeast Slovenia, which borders on Italy. The Germans wanted to reduce the population so the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes couldn't recover after the war. They would use as many as they could for slave labour. They would just exterminate anyone who wasn't useful. It was very important that the Yugoslavs couldn't reorganize. They couldn't have any sort of economic, political or cultural life. It took a while for the Yugoslav people to realize what the plan was. To prevent Partisans from uniting, the Nazi's played up all the ancient rivalry and bitterness that had existed between the various regions in Yugoslavia. Thev ordered wides-pread massacres of Croatians and blamed it on the Serbs. Adamic uses a quote in the book that is supposed to come from Hitler saying that he would put a river of blood between the Serbian and Croatian people so they would never, ever unite. Not only did they kill people, they also wanted them to hate and fear each other. This way there would be no possibility of a concentrated action against Nazis by the occupies country. Their plan was to make the land "German for Me.". They wanted to create living space for the German people and their families. They would kill off the native inhabitants and relocate German families. People began dying of starvation and disease by the end of 1941. From 1941—43 the Nazi and Italian forces levelled to the ground over 200 towns and killed off an estimated population of 1 milion, 500 thousand persons. The occu-pying forces wanted to impress Rome and Berlin of what they could do. Their attitude was the more Serbs they killed now, the fewer they would have to cope with later. In My Native Land Adamic spends a lot of time talking about the atirosties perpetrated on the Yugoslav people by me Germans and the Italians. Vicious acts of retaliation occurred such as if an Italian was shot by the guerillas the village would be burned. In Slovenia under the Germans, Priests were treated worse than any other people. This book chronicles man's inhumanity and the disaster that is bred from intolerance and prejudice. Adamic's con-cern for the future of mankind can be noted in his telling of the mental and verbal duel between Winston Churchill and F.D. Roosevelt during the early part of World War II. The attitudes and antagonisms of these two statesmen can be observed by reading Dinner at the White House (1946). It begins with Louis Adamic and his wife Stella, being invited to dine with President and Mrs. Roosevelt at the White House on Tuesday, January 13, 1942. In October of 1941, Adamic published a book called Two Way Passage which interested Mrs. Roo-sevelt. She read the book and wished to discuss it with him. This was one of the reasons they were invited to the White Hoi se. One of the other guests for dinner was the Prime Minister of Great Britain, Winston Churchill. Adamic's social and political philosop-hies were diametrically opposed to Chur-chill was an "Empire Builder". Adamic thought many Americans were anti-Britis- h. He takes for example, the large Irish Catholic groups, the German element which was also very large in society and the negros who didn't like the British colour policy. Churchill was given a copy of Adamic's book, Two Way Passage to read. In the latter part of the book, Adamic has -- a plea for a united world and he wondered what Churchill would think of this Utopian idea. Adamic feels Churchill's morality, integrity and honour are bound up in the empire system. He is a Tory imperialist patriot prepared to do absolutel-y anything in order to perpetuate what he believes to be good (for Great Britain). His personality encompasses the tradition and ethos of. the British Empire and all the blundering and crime that went with it. In any other nation's code of right or wrong, he thinks that Churchill feels Great Britain and the empire come first. If you save Great Britain and the empire, you are saving the world. Churchill's empirical purposes don't begin and end with the Axis powers. When he sizes up Churchill in this way, he feels that his ideas at the end of Two Way Passage, Churchill would consider to be nonsense. Churchill told Adamic he read his book and he thought it was interesting, that it opened up new vistas. Adamic feels Churchill doesn't want any new vistas opened up, not the kind of vistas that would spell the end of civilization as he believes in and he is willing to fight for, which he is out to conquer. He compares the two leaders, Roosevelt and Churchill and in his opinion he fells that Roosevelt wanted to be identified with the common man and doesn't think this would go over well with Winston Churchill. P-'osev-elt's New Deal (spread of democra-cy) wouldn't sit well with Churchill. Churchill doesn't want the new deal expanded to India, the Balkans or any other place where the British Empire is in control. He doesn't like the idea of being friend to the underdog. Roosevelt doesn't know the common man in the colonies. He can ameliorate the colour problem in M;ssissippi but can't understand what British fact in Asia and Africa. Adamic says tho issue between them was liberalis versus conquest. Churchill wanted conqu-est, Roosevelt wanted liberation. Adamic felt that if Roosevelt came out on top it would be a miracle. Roosevelt had to come out on top because too much depended on him for him to fail. Adamic thought these two men had entirely too much power between them. The whole future of the world depended on these two individuals. That was too much power for anyone to have. Louis Adamic was a great believer in personal growth everywhere, for everyone, regardless of race, religion or colour. In his writings he expresses the right of each individual to have a good life in terms of food shelter, clothing, education, etc. He also is critical of statesmen. Leaders should be elected who carry out the wiches of the people. The political, economic and social system should be geared for meeting the crisis of the future, certainly not to satisfy the selfish ambition of a few. Productive friendly relations with other countries must be promoted. He proposed a United Nations — One World idea. The simple final alternative — One World or No World.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, May 05, 1982 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1982-03-10 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | nanod2000144 |
Description
Title | 000125 |
OCR text | Adamic has been commended for his humanism on many occasions. His conce-rn for his fellow man is evident in each book and each word he wrote. i', Native Land, published in 1943, is 'hr story of Yugoslavia under the Axis domina-tion. In this book Adamic's political opinions are most evident. He is extremuly critical of governments and statesmen on the whole. He goes beyond the basic problems in the Balkans and deals with the issues that the world had to face at that particular time. He tends to do this through the use of personal stories. He tells a personal story abaout people and then enlarges it, going from the specific to the general. He compares his village life in 1932 when he returned to the situation in 1942 when he wrote The Natives Return. He talks about a young couple killed by Italian forces. The incident is an allegory of the youths personifying the future, the intellectual forces destroyed by ignorance and the almost Barbarian attitude of Fascism. Another story was entitled "One Man's Sacrifice". Briefly, there had, been some action by the Partisans and the Germans said they would kill ten Serbs per day until the assassin was caught. There is a man in the story who sacrificed himself in order to save the community. He was a very mild mannered individual who couldn't possibly kill a German but he decided to sacrifice himself to save the hostages. The decision was wholly and solely his own. He didn't even know these people. Why he make such a sacrifice? Adamic goes on to discuss the German technique of depopulizing the population. The Nazis believed them systematically as was done with the Jews. A minor excuse was, "Will, you killed one of us, we'll kill ten of you per day until the guilty party owes up". In his opinion, it was better to kill one than ten. A brigade of guerilla fighters was formed in the mountain banded together under his name to perpetuate it. He had a very touching segment in his book, called "The Dying Guerilla's Testa-ment" about a young fellow recently married who writes a letter to his unborn child. He writes this letter about the future and why he's fighting so hard to make a better society, a better world. He doesn't realize that his wife has been killed by the Germans and his child will never be born. These types of sympathetic stories appear thoughout the book. Yugoslavia officially-collapse- d April 17, 1941 and the country was divided up. The talians were given Nontenegro and Dalma tia (the Coast of Croatia). The Italians also took southeast Slovenia, which borders on Italy. The Germans wanted to reduce the population so the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes couldn't recover after the war. They would use as many as they could for slave labour. They would just exterminate anyone who wasn't useful. It was very important that the Yugoslavs couldn't reorganize. They couldn't have any sort of economic, political or cultural life. It took a while for the Yugoslav people to realize what the plan was. To prevent Partisans from uniting, the Nazi's played up all the ancient rivalry and bitterness that had existed between the various regions in Yugoslavia. Thev ordered wides-pread massacres of Croatians and blamed it on the Serbs. Adamic uses a quote in the book that is supposed to come from Hitler saying that he would put a river of blood between the Serbian and Croatian people so they would never, ever unite. Not only did they kill people, they also wanted them to hate and fear each other. This way there would be no possibility of a concentrated action against Nazis by the occupies country. Their plan was to make the land "German for Me.". They wanted to create living space for the German people and their families. They would kill off the native inhabitants and relocate German families. People began dying of starvation and disease by the end of 1941. From 1941—43 the Nazi and Italian forces levelled to the ground over 200 towns and killed off an estimated population of 1 milion, 500 thousand persons. The occu-pying forces wanted to impress Rome and Berlin of what they could do. Their attitude was the more Serbs they killed now, the fewer they would have to cope with later. In My Native Land Adamic spends a lot of time talking about the atirosties perpetrated on the Yugoslav people by me Germans and the Italians. Vicious acts of retaliation occurred such as if an Italian was shot by the guerillas the village would be burned. In Slovenia under the Germans, Priests were treated worse than any other people. This book chronicles man's inhumanity and the disaster that is bred from intolerance and prejudice. Adamic's con-cern for the future of mankind can be noted in his telling of the mental and verbal duel between Winston Churchill and F.D. Roosevelt during the early part of World War II. The attitudes and antagonisms of these two statesmen can be observed by reading Dinner at the White House (1946). It begins with Louis Adamic and his wife Stella, being invited to dine with President and Mrs. Roosevelt at the White House on Tuesday, January 13, 1942. In October of 1941, Adamic published a book called Two Way Passage which interested Mrs. Roo-sevelt. She read the book and wished to discuss it with him. This was one of the reasons they were invited to the White Hoi se. One of the other guests for dinner was the Prime Minister of Great Britain, Winston Churchill. Adamic's social and political philosop-hies were diametrically opposed to Chur-chill was an "Empire Builder". Adamic thought many Americans were anti-Britis- h. He takes for example, the large Irish Catholic groups, the German element which was also very large in society and the negros who didn't like the British colour policy. Churchill was given a copy of Adamic's book, Two Way Passage to read. In the latter part of the book, Adamic has -- a plea for a united world and he wondered what Churchill would think of this Utopian idea. Adamic feels Churchill's morality, integrity and honour are bound up in the empire system. He is a Tory imperialist patriot prepared to do absolutel-y anything in order to perpetuate what he believes to be good (for Great Britain). His personality encompasses the tradition and ethos of. the British Empire and all the blundering and crime that went with it. In any other nation's code of right or wrong, he thinks that Churchill feels Great Britain and the empire come first. If you save Great Britain and the empire, you are saving the world. Churchill's empirical purposes don't begin and end with the Axis powers. When he sizes up Churchill in this way, he feels that his ideas at the end of Two Way Passage, Churchill would consider to be nonsense. Churchill told Adamic he read his book and he thought it was interesting, that it opened up new vistas. Adamic feels Churchill doesn't want any new vistas opened up, not the kind of vistas that would spell the end of civilization as he believes in and he is willing to fight for, which he is out to conquer. He compares the two leaders, Roosevelt and Churchill and in his opinion he fells that Roosevelt wanted to be identified with the common man and doesn't think this would go over well with Winston Churchill. P-'osev-elt's New Deal (spread of democra-cy) wouldn't sit well with Churchill. Churchill doesn't want the new deal expanded to India, the Balkans or any other place where the British Empire is in control. He doesn't like the idea of being friend to the underdog. Roosevelt doesn't know the common man in the colonies. He can ameliorate the colour problem in M;ssissippi but can't understand what British fact in Asia and Africa. Adamic says tho issue between them was liberalis versus conquest. Churchill wanted conqu-est, Roosevelt wanted liberation. Adamic felt that if Roosevelt came out on top it would be a miracle. Roosevelt had to come out on top because too much depended on him for him to fail. Adamic thought these two men had entirely too much power between them. The whole future of the world depended on these two individuals. That was too much power for anyone to have. Louis Adamic was a great believer in personal growth everywhere, for everyone, regardless of race, religion or colour. In his writings he expresses the right of each individual to have a good life in terms of food shelter, clothing, education, etc. He also is critical of statesmen. Leaders should be elected who carry out the wiches of the people. The political, economic and social system should be geared for meeting the crisis of the future, certainly not to satisfy the selfish ambition of a few. Productive friendly relations with other countries must be promoted. He proposed a United Nations — One World idea. The simple final alternative — One World or No World. |
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