[The following is taken from a memoir of Irmgard A. Hunt, who grew up in the mountains under Hitler’s Eagles Nest during the Second World War.]
With this second baby my mother referred to her battered baby book. She grated fewer carrots for the fresh, vitamin-rich juice that had given my skin an orange hue.
[…]
The green paperback, written in the 1920s, had been meant for a miserably poor middle-class readership. It was filled with hints for how to deal with tiny, windowless city apartments with no heat or fresh air, or with the inability to take the baby outdoors or to hag its wet, hand-washed diapers outside to dry.
[…]
She was amused that the authors of the green book found it necessary to warn against toughening the baby in ice-cold water. “Must have been a Prussian custom, for who else would think of such a thing,” she said, shaking her head.
Source:
Hunt, Irmgard A. “Ominous Undercurrents.” On Hitler’s Mountain: Overcoming the Legacy of a Nazi Childhood. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2005. 62-63. Print.
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CANCEL-CAT-FACTS ago
The mindset stil exists. My Eastern European friend taught her young son to swim by picking him up and flinging him into the deep end of a pool while he was crying about being scared of the water. Today he is hoping to get a college scholarship for swimming. Thanks.
pitenius ago
Welcome to Siberia, too.
CANCEL-CAT-FACTS ago
Showering at -20 and going out in the cold; all before 7:30 am and breakfast -- those are some hardcore kids. Thanks.
pitenius ago
I used to live next to a school dormitory in Japan. Wake up call at 5:00 over loudspeaker, group exercise, and no heat in the building. Chinese exchange students complained.