"New Germany" was meant to become a new homeland for members of the "Aryan race." This was the idea of the German settlers who founded a colony in Paraguay in 1886. The project failed, and the village remained.
Due to the Jews, German culture and virtues were under threat, argued the fervent anti-Semite, Berlin teacher Bernhard Förster, at the end of the 19th century. For his racist propaganda, he repeatedly faced the courts in the German Empire. The school where he worked initiated disciplinary proceedings against him, and ultimately, he was even put on the wanted list. In these circumstances, Bernhard Förster saw no future for himself in his homeland and dreamed of a new 'Jew-free' Germany that would thrive 'renewed and full of strength' under his leadership.