Ron
Kurtz
reveals, , Churchill’s unlikely source for the historic phrase ‘Iron Curtain’
Churchill’s historic phrase “Iron Curtain”: goes back to Signal’,
1943?
WER suchet, der findet [seek, and ye shall find]:
I have just come across an editorial in a 1943 issue of the
German foreign propaganda magazine Signal, which also ran a headline using the “Iron
Curtain” phrase.
[Signal, May 1943]
On page two of issue 9, published in the first half of
May 1943, there is a brief article titled “Hinter dem
Eisernen Vorhang” [Behind the Iron Curtain]. The phrase again appears in the text.
Using a common propaganda trick, the article quotes a number of Allied newspapers to make its point of Bolshevism having the most harrowing effects on the Soviet population, so it is not entirely inconceivable the phrase may actually have originated with a British or US periodical.
Though not stated, Giselher Wirsing is a likely author of the piece. From early 1943 he contributed the leading article or an editorial to almost every issue of
Signal.
I do not know if the “Signal” editorial precedes the
Völkischer Beobachter article that you mentioned. Perhaps you could specify the year the VB
ran its “Iron Curtain” headline? Personally I believe that it would absolutely befit the creative genius of Wirsing to have coined the phrase himself.
I would be interested to see if other readers will be able to add further insights.
Alexander
Zöller
Oberursel, Germany
-
Churchill
index -
Ron Kurtz asks, was Goebbels
the unlikely source for Churchill’s historic ‘Iron
Curtain’ phrase at Fulton? -
Free download of David Irving’s books Bookmark the download page to find the latest new free books
See Also
- Churchill's War (Document)
- Churchill's War: Volume I Excerpts (Book)
- Churchill, Poison Gas, and Bio-Terror (Book)
- Churchill's War: Volume II Excerpts (Book)
- Churchill, Anthrax, and Bio-Terror (Book)