Wendelgard von Staden
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Wendelgard “Wendi” von Staden (née von Neurath) is a German author and former German diplomat. In 1979, she published a memoir Darkness Over the Valley: Growing Up in Nazi Germany where she shares memories from her youth during the Nazi era about a concentration camp on her family’s estate and how her mother tried to help the people imprisoned there.
Von Staden was born in 1925[1] to Baroness Irmgard and Baron Ernst von Neurath.[2] Her uncle was Konstantin von Neurath, who was Hitler's first foreign minister.[3] She grew up in Kleinglattbach [de],[4] and attended school in Vaihingen an der Enz, the grammar school in Ludwigsburg. She received her high school diploma in Berlin in 1943 and completed an agricultural apprenticeship on a farm near Heilbronn.[1]
She earned a degree in economics from the University of Tübingen.[2] In 1948, she studied in Paris at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques as part of the first German-French student exchange after World War II.[5] In 1950, she was an exchange student at UCLA, studying political science.[2] During this time she and friends from UCLA spent two months traveling the United States.[6]
Von Staden pursued a diplomatic career, working in the German foreign service for ten years.[4] She served as the first secretary of the West German Embassy in Washington, DC.[2] In 1961, she married German diplomat Berndt von Staden,[4] and she was forced by regulations to give up her own career.[2][7] She met her husband in Washington at an embassy dinner party. In 1963, he was posted to Washington, and they moved to Bonn in 1968,[6] returning to Washington from 1973 to 1979 where her husband served as the West German ambassador to the United States.[2] They have three children.[7]
She is the subject of the 2024 documentary film It Happened On Our Ground [de], which won the award for best Israeli documentary at the Tel Aviv International Documentary Film Festival.[8]
Darkness Over the Valley: Growing Up in Nazi Germany[9] is the autobiographical account of Wendelgard von Staden's youth originally published in German in 1979.[10][11]
References
- 1 2 Mengel, Monika (January 1, 2016). "Erlebte Geschichten mit Wendelgard von Staden" [Stories from Wendelgard von Staden's Life)]. WDR (in German). Retrieved January 26, 2026.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Harley, Richard M. (December 30, 1982). "A tale of kindness amidst the horror in Nazi Germany". The Christian Science Monitor. ProQuest 1037996981.
- ↑ "Erinnerungen an einen Meilenstein der Gedenkkultur" [Memories of a milestone in memorial culture]. Ludwigsburger Kreiszeitung (in German). March 6, 2018. Retrieved January 28, 2026.
- 1 2 3 "Berndt von Staden: Diplomat aus Leidenschaft". www.vkz.de (in German). Vaihinger Kreiszeitung. October 1, 2014. Archived from the original on January 4, 2017.
- ↑ Pond, Elizabeth (January 22, 1988). "France and West Germany: 25 years of cooperation". The Christian Science Monitor. ProQuest 1034452439.
- 1 2 La Hay, Wauhillau (July 7, 1974). "Von Stadens To See 'Real Indians'". The Knoxville News-Sentinel – via newspapers.com.
- 1 2 Gamarekian, Barbara (May 7, 1978). "Ambassadorial Wives: Some Are More Than Simply Helpmates: Beyond Small Talk 'A Different Mentality'". The New York Times. ProQuest 123718092.
- ↑ "Docaviv Winners 2024 | Israeli Competition: The Dov Yudkovsky Award for Best Israeli Documentary Film". www.docaviv.co.il. Tel Aviv International Documentary Film Festival. Retrieved January 28, 2026.
- ↑ Staden, Wendelgard Von (1981). Darkness Over the Valley: Growing Up in Nazi Germany. translated by Mollie Comerford Peters. Ticknor and Fields. ISBN 0-89919-009-X.
- ↑ Robertson, Nan (August 10, 1981). "Growing up in Nazi Germany: A Backward Look". The New York Times. ProQuest 424175494.
- ↑ Adler, Susan Seidner (January 1982). "Darkness Over the Valley, by Wendelgard von Staden". Commentary. Retrieved January 26, 2026.
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