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Curators

Vollmer's Future Missionaries

In “Keeper of the Flame,” featured in the current issue, Matthew Vollmer takes a disturbing excursion:

My father glanced over his shoulder at me and emitted a wheeze-burst of laughter—an exhalation intended to express disbelief. He had led me to an underground vault containing the artifacts of the last century’s most brutal regime, and he now seemed downright giddy. I, on the other hand, didn’t know what to think or what to say. I found it difficult to process what any of this meant. That is, I didn’t know why it was here, how it had gotten from where it had been made to where it was now. Were we in the presence of some kind of monster? Or had he created this space for stuff he deemed historically significant, buried it in a moisture-controlled vault because he fancied himself one of history’s unbiased curators? Was this the product of an obsessive and sympathetic mind, one which interpreted the mainstream records of history as having been unduly cruel to the Third Reich, which had been a movement, in his eyes, about nationalism, about ancestors, about revering and honoring the past? I didn’t know. And, honestly, I was afraid to ask.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Keeper of the Flame, Matthew Vollmer, NER 33.1, Nonfiction

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“A principled stance against aggression should never turn into blind hatred. Such hatred does not help anyone to win . . .”

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