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Übersetzung auf Deutsch
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German-Americans Maintain their Culture and Language
Americans of German descent have a great desire to pass the customs,
traditions and language on to their children. The singing and
dancing, the wearing of costumes (Trachten) and celebrations of Germanic events and family festivities, the cooking and beverage traditions, the visiting of family and friends, Gemütlichkeit and Spaß,
Steuben Parades with Princess, German American Day, Oktoberfests, Karneval and Christkindl Markets. DANK Clubs and Schools will introduce you to these customs and traditions and to people
who share the same values. |

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Popular DANK Spatzen Children's Choir performing in Berlin.
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| America's German American Heritage |
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"Since the earliest days
of the settlement of North America, immigrants from Germany have
enriched our Nation with their industry, culture and participation in
public life. Over a quarter of all Americans can trace their ancestry
back to German roots, but more important than numbers are the motives
that led so many Germans to make a new beginning across the Atlantic.
America's unparalleled freedoms and opportunities drew the first German
immigrants to our shores and have long inspired the tremendous
contributions that German Americans have made to our heritage.
In the course of over 300 years of German emigration to this great land,
German Americans have attained prominence in all areas of our national
life. Like Baron von Steuben in Revolutionary times, many Americans of
German descent have served in our military with honor and distinction.
In the sciences, Albert Michelson and Hans Bethe immeasurably increased
our understanding of the universe. The painters Albert Bierstadt and
modernist Josef Albers have enhanced our artistic traditions, and
composers such as Oscar Hammerstein have added their important
influences to American music.
Yet even there many distinguished names cannot begin to summarize all
the gifts that German Americans have brought to our nation's history.
While parts of the Midwest, Pennsylvania and Texas still proudly bear
the stamp of the large German populations of the last century, it is
their widespread assimilation and far-reaching activities that have
earned German Americans a distinguished reputation in all regions of the
United States and in all walks of life," states President William J.
Clinton in his 1995 German American Day Proclamation.
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| German-Americans Become Proud Americans |
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Organized German
immigration to the United States commenced when the Quaker William Penn
invited German Pietists and Mennonites, suffering from religious
persecution in Germany, to settle in his Quaker colony. In 1678 some
Krefeld Mennonites joined the Quakers, and 13 Mennonite Krefeld families
started the long journey to the "New World" in 1683. they established
the first permanent German settlement on American soil in Germantown,
Pennsylvania.
They were the first to oppose and object to slavery. General von Steuben
and his German American soldiers fought for and helped to make American
Independence possible. For more than three centuries, German immigrants
in the United States have built a long tradition of loyalty in both
peace and war. German American Day, October 6, serves to honor them, and
all the German immigrants who participated in the creation of this
nation.
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| Almost Fifty-Eight Million Americans Can Claim German Heritage |
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German Americans
constitute the largest ethnic group and the historically staunchest
supporters of the democratic values. The result of the 1990 US Census
indicates that the total US population was 248,709,873 at that time with
the five major heritage groups in their percentages of the total: |
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Germans |
57,985,595
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23.3%
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Irish |
38,739,518
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15.6%
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English |
32,655,779
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13.1%
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Italian |
14,714,939
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5.9%
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Polish |
9,366,106
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3.8%
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| German-Americans are Bridge Builders |
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American and German youths enjoy exchange visits and learn about one another. The USA/Federal Republic of Germany Youth Exchange Program, created by President Reagan and Chancellor Kohl
allows students from both countries to visit each other. Life-long friendships start at an early age. |
Link of interest:
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