GERMAN VILLAGE
IN HEART OF ENGLAND
SELF-SUPPORTING COMMUNITY
Germans are now occupying a village in the heart of England. They have been doing so since IJKJG; and that they should be allowed to remain in occupation now when Britain and Germany are at war, is one more incidental detail in the evidence Britain is presenting that the preservation of freedom and forbearance is this country's greatest "peace aim." Named Bruderhof on local maps, and described as the "Cotswold Peace Bruderhof" in Parliament, the village is a self-supporting, socioreligious community. To-day, the strangeness of the com munity's eighteenth century way of living, which first attracted attention, has come to seem less, remarkable than the anomary that this village in England's Gotswold Hills is a characteristically German one. I't is an anomaly in the interests of international brotherhood that is only possible through the inborn strength of the democratic system. Exiled from Germany. Because.of their effort to practice the principles taught in the Sermon on the Mount the German founders of the Bruderhof movement were exiled 1 from Germany at 48 hours' notice, as soon as Adolf Hitler came to power. Granted asylum in Britain, after being driven from Lichtenstein to Austria, and from Austria to Switzerland, they quickly grew into a community of some 250 persons, that included "kindred spirits" of half a dozen nationalities, but when Great Britain's war with Germany broke out last year the village population was still 40 per cent German. On a recent day when Nazi bombs were falling upon London and the East End sky was ruddy with fire, a telephone call was put through to the Home Office by a friend who inquired about their safety and to ask where they were interned. "None of them arc interned, " was the answer. Instead they were found still living at peace in their village, subjected only to benevolent yet thoroughly adequate surveillance, in which the harshest factor is merely a curfew that fits easily into the ancient pattern of their pastoral life. Coming suddenly, upon the village, beyond the trees t'hat screen it from the road and! the outer world, it seemed once again, almost magically like a scene from the distant past. Smoke curled into the blue autumn sky from chimneys of old cottages grouped around the village green. Over a little hump-backed bridge a qarter was driving a team of draught oxen. Bearded men in a modified kind of "Pilgrim Father" costume of black homespun went about their business to the smithy, the printing press, the dairy, the workshops, and in the fields. A child sat binding her hair I with flowers ... j The women's ccstumes —as colourful as the men's is sober—was typical of the German peasant woman; houses had been reconstructed in a German style of architecture; German was being spoken as freely as English. Small wonder that when war came, all the circumstances of the community origin in Germany, and of its immigration here, seemed to its English neighbours in the Cotswold countryside, to suggest a Nazi "plant" of fifth columnists. "At first, as was almos-t to be expected, in the conditions, we were threatened several times by possess of countrymen — who sometimes brought guns to add point to their threats," a Bruderhof elder said, "but when questions were asked in the House complete but kindly precautions were taken by the Government, and eveiything was all right again." "Questions Avere asked in the House (the. House of Commons) and everything was all right again"; in those words there seems to lie testimony of a nation's" moral power in which democracy may take pride and to which tyranny must one day pay heed.
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 3, Issue 257, 13 January 1941, Page 8
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611GERMAN VILLAGE Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 3, Issue 257, 13 January 1941, Page 8
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