Welcome back, JOANP! BUENAS DIAS! That means something?
Good morning, possibly? I once knew a little Spanish, but you have to keep it up. Years ago on a trip to Costa Rica, that lovely little country, so undeveloped at the time, I knew more, but we laughed and laughed at some of our interpretations using our English/Spanish dictionary. A laugh at yourself helps.
THE PEACE CORP. The anniversary was on the news. JFK will long be remembered for its establishment, its success. Your husband, I am sure, has many memories, stories to tell. What an adventure for him. Is it on the Web? I'll go look, but......
A good Peace Corp documentary -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgco9rR9wic&feature=relatedWe haven't dicussed Adenauer and West Berlin much at all have we? The Fourth person pictured above. He is facing, during this time, an election campaign with a younger man, Willy Brandt, the existing mayor of Berlin and he is also facing an angry crowd of West Berliners.
"For West Berliners, initial anger at the commnists was now accompanied by a growing fury over American betrayal. The talk around town was all about how the Americans had not sent a single platoon on August 13 to demonstrate solidarity, nor had they imposed a single sanction on the East Germans or Soviets to punish them for their action."Adenauer knew the border closure would hurt him with voters. He knew they were questioning his age, his ability, but he hoped the facts that West Germany's thriving ecnomy and stability within the Western Alliance would weigh in his favor.
It was a nasty campaign and then, Willy Brandt, in an unprecedented move for a city mayor, wrote a letter to President Kennedy and the President fumed.
President Kennedy "considered the border closure a potentially positive turning point that could help lead to the end of the Berlin Crisis," but later, in response to Brandt, the President did send troop reinforcements.
"The communist move also allowed Kennedy to score public opinion points for the U.S. across the world. The communist enemy had been forced to build a barrier around its people to lock them in. Nothing could have been more damning. One couldn't buy a better argument in favor of the free world, even if the cost was the freedom of East Berliners, and, more broadly, Eastern Europeans."
That paragraph was a new way for me of looking at the wall. In a way, it was containment of the enemy, which we all heard so much of during those years!