"God Sleepeth Not"

Formaldehyde

Both Fair And Balanced
Joined
Jan 29, 2003
Messages
33,999
Location
USA #1
Eighty years ago, socialist and radical activist Helen Keller wrote this draft of a letter to the students of Germany in response to their plans to burn books, including her own. It was then edited by one of her assistants:

KellerToGermanStudentsFinal.jpg.CROP.article920-large.jpg


Here is the final transcript of the letter as the AP published it:

To the student body of Germany:

History has taught you nothing if you think you can kill ideas. Tyrants have tried to do that often before, and the ideas have risen up in their might and destroyed them.

You can burn my books and the books of the best minds in Europe, but the ideas in them have seeped through a million channels and will continue to quicken other minds. I gave all the royalties of my books for all time to the German soldiers blinded in the World War with no thought in my heart but love and compassion for the German people.

I acknowledge the grievous complications that have led to your intolerance; all the more do I deplore the injustice and unwisdom of passing on to unborn generations the stigma of your deeds.

Do not imagine that your barbarities to the Jews are unknown here. God sleepeth not, and He will visit His judgment upon you. Better were it for you to have a mill-stone hung around your neck and sink into the sea than to be hated and despised of all men.

In mid-May 1933, Americans learned that students in German universities planned to burn a long list of books deemed “un-German.” Helen Keller, whose How I Became a Socialist was on this list, wrote this open letter to the students a day before the burning took place.

Keller, who’s now remembered as a gentle, uncomplicated symbol of persistence in the face of lifelong deafness and blindness, was a radical thinker and activist in her time. While Keller was born into an influential and wealthy Southern family, her activism on behalf of blind people, many of whom lived in poverty, caused her to turn to the writings of H.G. Wells and Karl Marx. She eventually became a socialist, a women’s rights activist, an early supporter of the NAACP and the ACLU, and an advocate for free availability of birth control.

This first draft carries hand-written annotations by Polly Thomson, who was, along with Anne Sullivan, one of Keller’s primary aides. The paragraph added at the bottom of the page, which was eventually incorporated into the version sent to the Associated Press for publication, professes understanding for the causes of German discontent, while roundly condemning the response.

This letter is notable for its early concern for the “barbarities to the Jews,” which Keller warned the students in no uncertain terms would cause God to “visit His judgment upon you.”
Most people know about the early years of Helen's life from the movie. But I had no idea she went on to earn a PhD from the University Glasgow and became such a firebrand advocate of human rights.

Image.asp


Did you know this about Helen?
 
I first read about this when it came on an SAT reading passage a while back. She's basically taught as an inspiration to school children who can learn lessons of endurance and the value of struggle. But the people who make the elementary school curriculae typically ignore her history as an activist. As a result of that and the movie most people just know her has a deafblind girl.
 
Keller was amazing. I still help collect glasses for redistribution due to a challenge she leveled at Lions Clubs early in their existence. Hadn't read this particular letter though, thank you for sharing.
 
Cool. I didnt even knew her name. Tough woman.

The older I get, the more recent World war II seems... When you first learn the horrors of the third reich as a child in school, it seems so ancient. I truely believe that something similar could happen again. Humans did it, humans can do it again.
 
You should definitely rent The Miracle Worker, or watch it online.

[YOUTUBE-OLD]EHwoRFe70jk[/YOUTUBE-OLD]

I didn't realize it had been colorized:

[YOUTUBE-OLD]_4XJ-hPa8G0[/YOUTUBE-OLD]

Here is a reenactment of her Lions International Convention speech in 1925:

[YOUTUBE-OLD]rfr6YO-zLZc[/YOUTUBE-OLD]
 
Cool. I didnt even knew her name. Tough woman.

The older I get, the more recent World war II seems... When you first learn the horrors of the third reich as a child in school, it seems so ancient. I truely believe that something similar could happen again. Humans did it, humans can do it again.

We can always go backwards. It's a miracle driven by toil every decade that we do not. In some ways, we learn so very little as a species.
 
Yes. Keller was a tireless campaigner on behalf of Eugene V. Debs' numerous electoral campaigns for the Socialist Party ticket. She was an extraordinary person, not the least because of her numerous physical handicaps.
Yeah, Keller's politics and activism are quite well-known in lefty circles. She's one of the examples of "socialists you already admire" that can be useful to bring up to sympathetic liberals. (There's a lot of these guys! Far more than most people, at least in the English-speaking world, seem to realise.)
 
I always think of the Helen Keller dancers in South Park's production of the Miracle Worker.
 
Back
Top Bottom