Stolen Dishonor

John David Duke Jr

David was begotten and conceived in the ordinary way in the middle of 1972, possibly on his father's birthday. Since then, it's been an unremarkable go, except for the time his dad took him to help disarm a Cherokee woman who was shooting at her mother with a rifle.

Related Post Roulette

4 Responses

  1. John Puccio says:

    This was excellent. Thank you for sharing it.

    But does Opa’s kindness to strangers absolve him of a lifetime of sins committed against the ones who most depended upon him? Is husband #2 really condemned and deemed “worse” for sins he may have committed (perhaps ignorantly) as a child?

    Value judgements on such matters are a complicated calculus. I wouldn’t let Opa off the hook.Report

  2. Chip Daniels says:

    This was beautifully written.

    One of the difficulties with passing judgements on previous generations is the awkward implication of how we will be judged by our children.

    We like to imagine that moral questions in history were obvious and clear. Why, it was obvious who were the good guys and bad guys and had I been there, well you can bet I would have stood up and done the right thing.

    But of course, nothing is ever as clear as we wish and it is never as easy to do the right thing as we would like.

    In some future day there will be memoirs written about the horrors of Abu Ghraib or Gitmo or what it was like during the Trump years and our children and grandchildren will ask us surely you were fighting for right side, and surely you weren’t, y’know…

    What will we say? That it was complicated, that both sides bad and well you have to understand?Report

    • Slade the Leveller in reply to Chip Daniels says:

      This past spring, I spent a few days in Amsterdam and had the chance to visit the Museum of the Dutch Resistance. I’ll never forget the running theme of the displays: Adapt, Collaborate, or Resist. The first is easy, just keep your head down. The other 2 will cost you something. Guess which option most people took.Report

  3. Charlie Baer says:

    What a story! This is very cool. I have an oddly similar family history, so here goes…

    My father was a German Jew, came over to New Orleans at age 15 in ’36. My Opa and Oma followed him over in ’37. Opa had been an infantry sergeant in the Kaiser’s army in the Great War. Wounded, gassed, almost died of typhoid (still had both butt cheeks, far as I know). Like the author’s opa, he showed me his medals, including an iron cross. He died when I was 15, I never asked him what he did to earn his medals, which I inherited, along with some amazing German army battle maps of Verdun. My dad said Opa told him “I never aimed my rifle at another man” and left it at that.

    Mom was a New Orleans native, her maternal lineage being the sort of Episcopalians that had lost their money following the Recent Unpleasantness, but not their sense of entitlement. If they owned slaves, I never heard about it.
    Her dad – my Grandpa – was a German Lutheran who worked for a German timber company and was stranded in New Orleans when the US entered WWI. He was imprisoned up in Georgia as an enemy alien, from where he won my grandmother’s heart with his passionate love letters.
    When we were cleaning out my maternal grandparents’ house, we came upon some family memorabilia, which included my great, great, great-grandfather’s discharge papers from the Crescent City Regiment of the Army of the Confederacy. Every white Louisianan has a relative who “rode with General Beauregard”; who knows, maybe my Great^3-grandfather really did.

    My Opa fled the Nazi’s, but my Grandpa’s family remained in Germany. My great-grandmother was killed by an American bomb “that landed in her living room”. For all I know, some of my relatives were SS. Metaphorically, and perhaps literally, I had relatives on both sides of the fence at Auschwitz.

    But here’s the point. I honor the courage of my Jewish Opa, and the courage of my Rebel great^3-grandfather just the same. Maybe my one of my German great-uncles performed courageously in combat against the Americans; if he did, I honor it, too.

    I’m glad the Germans lost WWII, and I’m glad the North won the Civil War. But I’m not ashamed of my relatives that happened to be on the wrong side, morally speaking. If there’s one thing I hate, it’s seeing a Yankee waving a Rebel flag. You know he’s not “honoring his ancestors”.Report