Imagine it's war time and nobody goes
- Written by Portal Editor
It was this quote, which is commonly and often attributed to Berthold Brecht, that we found among other graffiti under a car bridge in Weil and thus obliged us to do a little research.
How much deeper meaning there is in this statement again and again, especially now in the face of the criminal war in the Ukraine. By no means should the other conflicts and wars remain unconsidered. Will people one day become so "smart" and stop listening to hate speech, power-mongers and despots, regardless of whether they are political or religious?
This probably the most popular slogan of the former peace movement became famous in America in the version "Suppose They Gave a War and No One Came" in an article by the author Charlotte Keyes from 1966, and also appeared in Germany at the end of the 1970s, where it was soon erroneously called Bertolt Brecht was foisted on. The influential language critic and style teacher Wolf Schneider, for example, illustrated the greatness of Bertolt Brecht's language with this American quote, "in the chiseled simplicity that he schooled on Luther":
"The poet Bert Brecht, however, achieved great things for the German language and through it: on the one hand in the chiseled simplicity that he schooled on Luther ("Just imagine, it's war and nobody goes there"), on the other hand in the cheeky , cynical power - from the 'The Threepenny Opera' [...] to his 'Second Psalm'".
Author is the American poet Carl Sandburg
"Imagine it's war and nobody goes there. Then the war will come to you!
Those who stay at home when the fight begins and let others fight for their cause must be careful: for those who have not shared the fight will share the defeat. He who avoids battle does not even avoid battle, for he will fight in the enemy's cause who has not fought in his own cause."
Carl August Sandburg was an American poet, novelist, journalist, and historian, best known for his poetry and his Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Abraham Lincoln. The line from his poem The People, Yes, "Sometime they'll give a war and nobody will come" (translated as: "Imagine, it's war and nobody's going") became particularly popular in German-speaking countries.
Life and work of Carl August Sandburg
"Hog Butcher for the World
Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat
Player with Railroads and the Nation's Freight Handler
Stormy, Husky, Brawling, and City of the Big Shoulders”
His only novel "Remembrance Rock" was published in 1948. He also wrote autobiographical works ("Always the young strangers" 1953, "Ever the winds of change" 1983).
Sandburg has worked on screenplays for film and television five times. He wrote his first screenplay in 1941 for the documentary film Bomber. Carl Sandburg wrote the foreword for the catalog of the exhibition The Family of Man, which his brother-in-law Edward Steichen curated.
On August 8, 1962, Lee Strasberg read a eulogy written by Sandburg at Marilyn Monroe's coffin.
In 1928 he moved to Herbert, Michigan, where he was again active in the socialist movement during the economic crisis of the 1930s. From 1945 he lived in Flat Rock (North Carolina) on his property "Connemara", which is now managed by the National Park Service. While Sandburg was able to write there in peace, his wife took over the farming.
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