A 'homeland' (rel. ''
country of origin'' and ''
native land'') is the concept of the territory (cultural geography) to which an
ethnic group holds a long history and a deep cultural association with —the
country in which a particular
national identity began. As a common noun, it simply connotes the country of one's origin. When used as a
proper noun, the word, as well as its
cognates in other languages (ie. ''Heimatland'' in German) often have
ethnic nationalist connotations:
Fatherland,
Motherland,
Mother country, each having some distinct interpretation according to nationality or historical usage.
Various meanings
★ The
Soviet Union, which commonly referred to its homeland as "Mother Russia," created homelands for some minorities in the
1920s, including the
Volga German ASSR and the
Jewish Autonomous Oblast. Often, as in the case of the Volga German ASSR, these homelands were later brutally abolished and their inhabitants deported to either
Siberia or the
Kazakh SSR.
★ In the current United States, the
Department of Homeland Security was created soon after the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, as a means to centralize response to various
threats. The term is rarely used by common
United States citizens to refer to their country, which made the chosen name sound odd to many.
[1] In a June 2002 column,
Republican consultant and speechwriter
Peggy Noonan expressed the hope that the
Bush administration would change the name of the department, writing that, "The name Homeland Security grates on a lot of people, understandably. ''Homeland'' isn't really an American word, it's not something we used to say or say now".
[2]
★ In the
apartheid era in
South Africa, the concept was given a different meaning. The white government transformed the 13% of its territory that had been exempted from white settlement into regions of "home-rule". Then they tried to bestow independence on these regions, so that they could then claim that the other 87% was white territory. Four of them were declared independent nations by South Africa, but were unrecognized as independent countries by any other nation besides each other and South Africa. The territories set aside for the African inhabitants were called the
bantustan.
★ In German, homeland is translated as Heimatland, and this was a term used by the Nazis to refer to the German "Fatherland". It was also the name of a strongly pro-Nazi magazine edited by
Wilhelm Weiss during the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany.
See also
★
Homeland Security
★
Separatism
★
List of ethnic groups
★
Diaspora politics
★
Fatherland
★
Motherland
★
Bantustan
Sources
1. Reason Magazine - Hit & Run > What Does "Homeland" Mean to You?
2. OpinionJournal - Peggy Noonan, , Peggy, Noonan, ,