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Finding Home : A War Child's Journey to Peace

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Franz (Frank) Oberle was nine years old when his family was relocated from Forchheim, Germany to Poland.

There, he was taken from his parents to an isolated school where adolescents were being prepared for indoctrination into Hitler's Youth Movement.

As the tide of war changed, he became a refugee fleeing the Russian advance only to arrive in Dresden as the city became the target of the most horrific Allied bombing raid of the war.

Surviving on grass and stolen eggs, Franz and a friend walked 800 kilometres to his ancestral village on the edge of the Black Forest -- only to find that his parents had not returned and to be rejected by his remaining family.

The indomitable Franz not only survived amid a disillusioned populace of the Fatherland, but, with Joan, his youthful sweetheart at his side, he also dreamed of a new life in a new land.

With her blessings, he set off for Canada, promising to send for her when he was able to provide for her.

Their subsequent life together in BC has encompassed tragedy and pure joy, hard work and hard times, failure and triumph as Frank Oberle rose from self-educated immigrant to acclaimed federal politician. 'Finding Home', the first volume of Oberle's memoirs, is set against backdrops of World War II and the raw British Columbia frontier.

It covers Oberle's fascinating life story up until the time he, as a successful business person, returned to Germany after little more than a decade in the promised land, knowing that in Canada, he, Joan and their children had found their true home.

Rich in detail, drama, and humour, this is a love story, an inspirational saga, and a book that sings the song of the Canadian immigrant.

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Product Details
1894384768 / 9781894384766
Paperback / softback
01/05/2005
Canada
336 pages, Illustrations, unspecified
152 x 228 mm, 514 grams