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[8] Hitler Youth and BDM in China, 1935. As in the HJ, separate sections of the BDM existed, according to the age of participants. Girls between the ages of 10 and 14 were members of the Young Girl's League (Jungmädelbund, JM), and girls between the ages of 14 and 18 were members of the Bund Deutscher Mädel (BDM) proper. [9]
Klain Bund (Yiddish for 'Little Bund') was a youth organization in the Russian Empire, connected to the General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia. Klain Bund was founded in 1903. [1] Klain Bund recruited secondary school pupils, students, apprentices and young workers. The average age of Klain Bund-members was around fourteen.
She was born in 1902 to a German nationalist family. She never completed gymnasium , [ 2 ] and joined the German nationalist youth movement by the 1920s, [ 3 ] becoming a Bund Deutscher Mädel leader. [ 4 ]
Alphonse "Al" Bundy (), the head of the Bundy family, is doomed to fail in all aspirations because of the "Bundy curse."Once a promising fullback for fictional Polk High School (his proudest moment in life was scoring four touchdowns in a single game), he was on his way to college on a scholarship until he broke his leg, and ended up as a shoe salesman at "Gary's Shoes" in the "New Market Mall ...
[10] [11] [12] [14] [17] The German American Bund severed its connection with the German American Settlement League in 1940, and the League took over the Camp with the announcement that henceforth it would be "non-political." [20] Nevertheless, the camp was seized and shut down by the U.S. government when Germany declared war on the United States.
The "Queen Louise League" (German: Königin-Luise-Bund, often shortened to Luisenbund) was a German monarchist women's organization. It was established in 1923 during the time of the Weimar Republic and lasted until the first years of Nazi Germany .
The BDM-Werk Glaube und Schönheit (German for BDM Faith and Beauty Society) was founded in 1938 to serve as a tie-in between the work of the League of German Girls (BDM) and that of the National Socialist Women's League. Membership was voluntary and open to girls aged 17 to 21.
Created before the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party (RSDLP), [15] the Bund was a founding collective member at the RSDLP's first congress in Minsk in March 1898. [16] [17] Three out of nine delegates at the Minsk congress were from the Bund, and one of three members of the first RSDLP Central Committee was a Bundist. [18]