Bei der Veranstaltung in Wien spricht Ulrich Schwarz-Gräber über die „American Relief Administration in Vienna’s Hinterlands“.
- https://www.ruralhistory.at/de/veranstaltungen/sonstige-veranstaltungen/symposium-post-world-war-i-aid-in-austria-and-central-europe
- Symposium: Post World War I Aid in Austria and Central Europe
- 2019-09-26T10:00:00+02:00
- 2019-09-27T12:00:00+02:00
- Bei der Veranstaltung in Wien spricht Ulrich Schwarz-Gräber über die „American Relief Administration in Vienna’s Hinterlands“.
- Was Forschung Schwarz Termin
- Wann 26.09.2019 10:00 bis 27.09.2019 12:00 (Europe/Vienna / UTC200)
- Wo Austrian Academy of Sciences, Great Hall, Dr. Ignaz Seipel-Platz 2, 1010 Vienna
- Termin zum Kalender hinzufügen iCal
This year, 2019, marks a hundred years since World War I left Austria and other Central European countries devastated. Austria in particular suffered from the lack of food and fuel leading to widespread child malnutrition. 78% of all Austrian children under 15, and 92% of those in Vienna, were affected. The American Relief Administration provided on average 300,000 hot meals a day to school children over a period of several years. Over 200,000 children were sent to Switzerland, the Netherlands and Scandinavia to escape the famine in Austria. Yet these, as well as a multitude of other international aid efforts from this period, have almost completely disappeared from the collective Austrian consciousness, despite the fact that there are an estimated one million descendants of children who benefited from this relief program.
Historians and scholars from Stanford and Oxford, as well as from Austria and other Central European countries, will highlight these extraordinary multinational efforts over one and a half days.
Presenter names and themes are listed in the Pre-Program below.
Jointly organized by:
The American Austrian Foundation (AAF)
Austrian Academy of Sciences
Austrian Marshall Plan Foundation
with additional funding from the Botstiber Institute for Austrian-American Studies
Keynote Speaker
Leon Botstein, President, Bard College and Chairman Central European University
The Relevance of the Great Humanitarian Actions Post World War I Seen through a Contemporary Lens
Guest of Honor
Eric Wakin, Deputy Director, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Presenters in alphabetic order:
Franz Adlgasser, Austrian Academy of Sciences
The American Relief Administration and Austria – Aspects of its Work
Nikolay Bogomazov, St. Petersburg State University
“Food Barrier Against Bolshevism”: American Relief Administration Supplies to Russian Anti-Bolsheviks and Baltic States in 1919
Mary Cox, University of Oxford
Hunger in War and Peace 1914-1924
Tibor Glant, University of Debrecen
At the Crossroads of Politics and Relief: The American Red Cross in Hungary, 1919-1922
Dieter Hecht, Austrian Academy of Sciences
Jewish Relief Organisations for Jewish Children in Vienna after World War I
Barbora Jakobyová, Slovak Academy of Sciences
Post World War I Relief in Czechoslovakia: The Case of Czechoslovak Child Care
Friederike Kind-Kovács, Central European University
Not just for a Summer: The Moral Dilemma of International Children’s Trains
George H. Nash, South Hadley, Massachusetts
Master of Emergencies: Herbert Hoover and Humanitarian Relief of Austria after World War I
Jenny Öhman, Uddevalla, Sweden
Austrian Children sent to Sweden
Bertrand M. Patenaude, Stanford University
Deliverance: America’s Role in the Emergence of the New Central Europe
Ursula Prokop, Vienna
Margaret Stonborough-Wittgenstein and American Food Aid to Vienna
Chelsea Sambells, University of Huddersfield
The Emergence of Children’s Rights to the Practise of Protection: A Study of the Swiss-led Child Evacuations in the Second World War
Renate Schreiber, Vienna
Swedish Aid after the First World War in Vienna
Ulrich Schwarz-Gräber, Institute of Rural History, St. Pölten
Starving Countryside. The Work of the American Relief Administration in Vienna’s Hinterlands
Image Source: József Egry, Polievka chudobných, Slovenská národná galéria (SNG) Public Domain.