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Champions of Charity - War and the Rise of the Red Cross (Hardcover)
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Champions of Charity - War and the Rise of the Red Cross (Hardcover)
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A character in an Evelyn Waugh novel once remarked that ?There's
nothing wrong with war?except the fighting.? In Champions of
Charity, John Hutchinson argues that while they set out with a
vision to make war more humane, the world's Red Cross organizations
soon became enthusiastic promoters of militarism and sacrifice in
time of war.The mass armies of the nineteenth century were stalked
by disease and slaughtered by ever more destructive weaponry,
arousing the indignation and humanitarian concern of self-appointed
battlefield Samaritans, who envisioned a neutral corps of volunteer
nurses who would aid and comfort wounded soldiers, regardless of
nationality. But the champions of charity soon became champions of
war.Florence Nightingale was among the few at the time to recognize
the dangers lurking in the Red Cross vision. She refused to join,
and warned its founders that the governments of the world would
cooperate with the Red Cross because ?it would render war more
easy.? She was right; starting in the late 19th century armies
simply used the Red Cross to efficiently recycle wounded men back
into the frontlines.In World War I, national Red Cross societies
became enthusiastic wartime propagandists. This was true in every
combatant nation, and it is a transformation well portrayed by the
fascinating selection of art in this book. Soon Red Cross personnel
were even sporting military-style uniforms, and in the United
States, the Red Cross became so identified with the war effort that
an American citizen was convicted of treason for criticising the
Red Cross in time of war!The Red Cross played an especially
important role in encouraging the mass involvement of women in the
?home front? for the first time. It did this through magazines,
postcards, posters, bandage-rolling parties, and speeches that
blended romantic images of humanitarianism and war into a unique
brand of maternal militarism. A true pioneer in mass propaganda,
the Red Cross taught millions that preparation for war was not just
a patriotic duty, but a normal and desirable social activity.The
Red Cross societies had proven their usefulness in mobilizing
civilians in wartime, and most of their functions were taken over
by government agencies by the time of World War II. Gradually the
Red Cross became better known for its work in public health,
disaster relief, and lifesaving classes. But the legacy of a darker
past still lingers: the red cross on a white background found on
army ambulances, or the unsubtle subtext of sacrifice and heroism
in Red Cross television advertising.It is a legacy the Red Cross
itself has preferred not to acknowledge in its own
self-congratulatory literature. For not only was the humanitarian
impulse that inspired the creation of the Red Cross easily
distorted, but this urge to militarize came from within its own
ranks. This startling and provocative history of the Red Cross
reminds us of the hidden dangers that sometimes come cloaked in the
best of intentions.
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