Ingrid Rimland

Ingrid A. Rimland, also known as Ingrid Zündel, (May 22, 1936 in Halbstadt (Molotschna), Ukraine – October 12, 2017) was a writer. She wrote several novels based upon her own experiences growing up in a Mennonite community in Ukraine and as a refugee child during World War II. Her novel The Wanderers (1977), which won her the California Literature Medal Award for best fiction, tells the story of the plight of Mennonite women caught in the social upheavals of revolution and war.[1] Rimland died on October 12, 2017.[2]

Ingrid Rimland
Born(1936-05-22)May 22, 1936
Molotschna, Ukraine
DiedOctober 12, 2017(2017-10-12) (aged 81)
Tennessee, United States
OccupationAuthor and child psychologist
NationalitySoviet Union, Paraguay, United States
Notable worksThe Wanderers
SpouseErnst Zündel
(2001–2017, his death)
Website
soaringeaglesgallery.com

Biography

Born into a Russian-German Mennonite community in Ukraine[3] she grew up trilingual (German, Russian and Ukrainian) in the then-Soviet Union. Her family had been wealthy prior to the Russian revolution, but the community faced persecution under the communist regime due to their pacifist beliefs and heritage. In 1941, when she was five years old, her father was deported to Siberia. Fleeing the Red Army, she ended up in Germany with her mother in 1945. After several years as a refugee, they emigrated to an isolated Mennonite community of Volendam in the rainforests of Paraguay in 1948, with the help of Dutch and American Mennonites.

In Paraguay, she married and had one son. The family immigrated to Canada in 1960, settling in St. Catharines, Ontario, where their second son was born, and then to the United States in 1967, where she eventually became a US citizen. In 1971, she graduated from Wichita State University with a bachelor's degree. She earned a Master's and then, in 1979, a doctorate of education (Ed.D) from the University of the Pacific, California. [4]

Rimland worked as an educational psychologist in California public schools, specializing in special education and migrant education for children. She later worked in the state as an education consultant and testing specialist in an area consisting of six school districts comprising approximately 40 schools, and simultaneously running a private practice in child psychology.

Literary works

Most of her literary work is autobiographical to various extents. Her 1977 novel The Wanderers traces the decimation of the pacifist Russian Mennonite community during the Russian Revolution, anarchy, famine, the Stalinist purges, escape from Ukraine, and eventual resettlement in the rain forests of Paraguay. Her 1984 book, The Furies and the Flame, is her autobiography as an immigrant and deals with her struggle to raise her handicapped child.

In her third, and least known, book, Demon Doctor, Rimland tells of her quest to find Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele in the 1980s with the help of, notably, Simon Wiesenthal. She had believed that Mengele worked as a doctor in her Paraguayan Mennonite community of Volendam, but was unable to prove this.[5]

Her trilogy Lebensraum (literally, "life-space"), was written after her conversion to Holocaust denial in the 1990s and is a "Mennonite history saga, permeated with anti-Semitism and romantic German nationalism."[5]

Political activism

In the 1990s, Rimland met and befriended German Holocaust denier Ernst Zündel, then resident in Canada. He later became her second husband and they moved to Tennessee.[6]

Following his deportation from the United States and imprisonment in Germany, she and Zündel met a few times a year until he died in August 2017.

References

  1. Wilfred Martens, Book review: The Wanderers, Direction, 1979
  2. "Soaring Eagles Gallery". Soaring Eagles Gallery. 2017-11-14. Retrieved 2017-11-14.
  3. Klassen, Abraham and Cornelius Krahn. (1956). Halbstadt (Molotschna Mennonite settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 15 February 2011.]
  4. http://soaringeaglesgallery.com/who-is-irz.html
  5. James C. Juhnke, Ingrid Rimland, the Mennonites, and the Demon Doctor, Mennonite Life, vol. 60 no. 1, 2005
  6. James C. Juhnke, Ingrid Rimland, the Mennonites, and the Demon Doctor, Mennonite Life, vol. 60 no. 1, 2005
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