U.S. Department of Homeland Security was established after the terrorist attack on September 11.
Soon after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks,
President George W. Bush appointed a director of the Office of Homeland
Security in the White House. The next year, the U.S. Congress approved a new
executive-level department called the Department of Homeland Security. This
department took responsibility for parts of the country’s borders,
transportation system, ports and other important structures.
The dictionary tells us that a current definition of
homeland refers to the country where someone was born or grew up, or a large
area where a group of people can live.
Historically, the Old English word hamland meant
"enclosed pasture" — a protected field for animals. The word homeland
first appeared in Modern English in the 1660s. It combined the nouns “home” and
“land.”
But a deeper look at how the word homeland was used
outside of the U.S. shows why some people are not comfortable with it. The
government of South Africa used the word homeland for areas it created for only
African peoples during the period of apartheid. These “homelands” separated the
Africans from white citizens.
Friederike Eigler is a professor of German at
Georgetown University. She said that in Germany in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, people used a similar word to homeland – heimat – to express intense
national pride.
“It became more and more a political term because it
was sort of meshed up with ideas of the nation and nationalism. And then that
kind of came to a head during World War II. It became very much tied up very
much with notions of the German race, and the nation, nationality or national
socialism, and so in that sense it got very discredited as a result in the postwar period.”
In the early 2000s, when the U.S. government created
the Department of Homeland Security, some objected to the name. Peggy Noonan
writes for the Wall Street Journal. She thought the Bush administration should
change the name. She said homeland “isn’t really an American word.”
James A. Bartlett blogs for The Ethical Spectacle.
He thinks the problem is that the word homeland has to do with the idea of
being a native. He quotes the second Merriam Webster definition of homeland:
"a state or area set aside to be a state for a people of a particular
national, cultural, or racial origin."
Mr. Bartlett believes the word homeland does not
describe the United States well. The U.S. is a diverse country of immigrants.
Are those immigrants also able to call the U.S. their homeland?
Yet an increasing number of Americans seem to like
the word. Some people are proposing it as the name for the group of people born
between 2005 and 2030. For instance, many voters in a 2005 web poll wanted to
call the group the “Homeland Generation.” The White House used the term in an
October 2014 report.
Professor Eigler at Georgetown University observed
that today’s generation is growing up with the war on terror.
“My sense is, the larger context again is, with that
term, is the importance of issues of national security in the context of the
global war on terror and that larger context that is very much part of our
contemporary life, and has been for quite some time. And of course, they grew
up with that. It wasn’t something new, but it was part of, or is part of their
lives from the very beginning.”
Writer Anne Boysen even titled her book about
today’s children “Homelanders.” But she is not certain the term will stay with
this generation.
And that’s Words and Their Stories from VOA Learning
English. I'm Christopher Cruise.
Dr. Jill Robbins wrote this story for VOA Learning
English. Kelly Jean Kelly was the editor.
The song at the end is ‘Homeland’ from Miriam
Makeba’s 'Homeland' album, which was nominated for a Grammy award for Best
World Music Album in 2000.
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