My Name Is Liza Kalvelage
My name is Lisa Kalvelage, I was born in Nuremberg
And when the trials were held there nineteen years ago
It seemed to me ridiculous to hold a nation all to blame
For the horrors which the world did undergo
A short while later when I applied for I was a G. I. bride
An American consular official questioned me
He refused my exit permit, said my answers did not show
I'd learned my lesson about responsibility
Thus suddenly, I was forced to start thinking on this theme
And when later I was permitted to emigrate
I must have been asked a hundred times, where I was and what I did
In those years when Hitler ruled our state
I said, I was a child or at most a teenager
But this always extended the questioning
They'd ask, where were my parents, my father, my mother
And to this I could answer not a thing
The seed planted there at Nuremberg in 1947
Started to sprout and to grow
Gradually, I understood what that verdict meant to me
When there are crimes that I can see and I can know
And now I also know what it is to be charged with mass guilt
Once in a lifetime is enough for me
No, I could not take it a second time
That is why I am here today
The events of May 25th, the day of our protest
Put a small balance weight on the other side
Hopefully, someday my contribution to peace
Will help just a bit to turn the tide
And perhaps I can tell my children six
And later on their own children
That at least in the future they need not be silent
When they are asked, "Where was your mother, when?"
And when the trials were held there nineteen years ago
It seemed to me ridiculous to hold a nation all to blame
For the horrors which the world did undergo
A short while later when I applied for I was a G. I. bride
An American consular official questioned me
He refused my exit permit, said my answers did not show
I'd learned my lesson about responsibility
Thus suddenly, I was forced to start thinking on this theme
And when later I was permitted to emigrate
I must have been asked a hundred times, where I was and what I did
In those years when Hitler ruled our state
I said, I was a child or at most a teenager
But this always extended the questioning
They'd ask, where were my parents, my father, my mother
And to this I could answer not a thing
The seed planted there at Nuremberg in 1947
Started to sprout and to grow
Gradually, I understood what that verdict meant to me
When there are crimes that I can see and I can know
And now I also know what it is to be charged with mass guilt
Once in a lifetime is enough for me
No, I could not take it a second time
That is why I am here today
The events of May 25th, the day of our protest
Put a small balance weight on the other side
Hopefully, someday my contribution to peace
Will help just a bit to turn the tide
And perhaps I can tell my children six
And later on their own children
That at least in the future they need not be silent
When they are asked, "Where was your mother, when?"
Credits
Writer(s): Peter Seeger
Lyrics powered by www.musixmatch.com
Link
Other Album Tracks
- Oh Yes I'd Climb (The Highest Mountain Just For You)
- Seek And You Shall Find
- The Sinking Of The Reuben James
- Waist Deep In The Big Muddy
- Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream
- Down By the Riverside
- Nameless Lick
- Over The Hills
- East Virginia
- My Name Is Liza Kalvelage
All Album Tracks: Waist Deep In The Big Muddy and other Love Songs >
Altri album
- Every Morning At Half Past Four
- Think Globally Sing Locally
- The Bottom Line Archive Series: In Their Own Words with Vin Scelsa (100th Birthday Celebration / 25th Anniversary Edition)
- Abiyoyo
- Pete Seeger: The Smithsonian Folkways Collection
- This Land is Your Land (Live at University of Tulsa, 1976) - Single
- Musical Moments to Remember: Pete Seeger (Remastered 2016)
- Pete Seeger Live
- Live At the Newport Folk Festival 1959 -1960
- Strangers and Cousins: Songs from His World Tour (Live)
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