10 research outputs found
1798 : Tod eines Diplomaten oder 200 Jahre Berliner "Türken-Friedhof"
Donated by Klaus KreiserReprinted from in : INAMO, Nr.16, Winter 9
Tod und Geschichte oder Wie in Berlin prominente Muslime bestattet wurden.
Donated by Klaus KreiserReprinted from in : Verlag Das Arabische Buch, 1996
Zwischen-Aufenthalt : Mohammed Essad Bey in Deutschland.
Donated by Klaus KreiserReprinted from in : Berliner LeseZeichen, Heft 1/2 Januar/Februar, 1996
Gewaltsame Begegnungen. Muslime als Kombattanten, Gefangene und Überlaufer in Deutschland - eine andere Seite des deutsch-türkischen Waffenbündnisses im Ersten Wletkrieg.
Donated by Klaus KreiserReprinted from in : Der Islam, Bd. 77 Heft 2, 2000
Selective Remembering: Minorities and the Remembrance of the First World War in Britain and Germany
Remembering the war dead, so historical writing suggests, was considerably easier for the victors than for the vanquished. Yet, as this essay suggests, this strict dichotomy was not quite as rigid as the historiography implies. In both Britain and Germany, ethnic, religious and national minorities did play some role in nascent memory cultures. However, while some groups were remembered, other minorities, such as Britain’s African troops or Germany’s Polish soldiers, were all too often missing from the commemorative landscape. The absence of minorities from the remembrance process, then, had less to do with the outcome of the war, but was rather contingent on place, time and the minority group in question