SHARE YOUR STORY WITH US:
oralhistory@aacvr-germany.org
“Your pictures and articles on […] 'GIs in Germany' were great, because […] they gave undeniable proof that the Negro is a human being, a creature who loves and is loved. […] If a Negro boy and a white girl find things in common and desire to associate with each other, we as believers in democratic freedom should support their democratic right to do so.“
> more Maria Höhn Wins DAAD/GSA Prize for the Best Article in the German Studies Review > more Photography Exhibition Germany: Deutsch-Amerikanisches Institut German American Institute Tübingen October 1 - November 26, 2010 USA: University of California, Berkeley, CA October 7 - November 7, 2010 A Breath of Freedom By Maria Höhn & Martin Klimke Forthcoming with Palgrave Macmillan Fall 2010 > more House Resolution Recognizing the Difficult Challenges and Heroism of Black Veterans February 24, 2010 > more Marvin Gilmore Honored for WW II Military Service > more Boston Globe article Vernon Baker, Belated Medal of Honor Recipient, Dies at 90 > more |
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Our research project explores the connection between the U.S. military presence abroad and the advancement of civil rights in the U.S. We investigate the role that African-American GIs played in carrying the civil rights movement to Germany, which was host to the largest contingent of U.S. troops deployed outside the U.S. Between 1945 and the end of the Cold War, some 15-20 million American soldiers, families and civilian employees lived in Germany. Between 2-3 million of those Americans were African American. By giving voice to their experience and to that of the people who interacted with them, we will expand the story of the African-American civil rights movement beyond the boundaries of the U.S. This digital archive has three main goals: First, it will gather and preserve materials on an important, but little known chapter of American and African-American history as well as transatlantic relations after the Second World War. Second, it will make these materials available world wide and free of charge to scholars and teachers in the humanities. Third, it will foster the growth of a community of scholars, teachers, and students who are engaged in teaching and learning about the African-American civil rights movement and its reverberations outside the U.S. For a list of U.S. military bases in Germany, please see here. For further information about our research initiative, please read our mission statement, download our flyer, or visit our press section. If you want to share your personal experience by contributing to our oral history collection or in any other way, please do not hesitate to contact us at: Diese E-Mail-Adresse ist gegen Spambots geschützt! Sie müssen JavaScript aktivieren, damit Sie sie sehen können.
By Maria Höhn and Martin Klimke “A breakthrough in international history“
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