According to the United Nations, every minute, 8 people leave
everything behind to escape war, persecution or terror. According to the UN, at
the end of 2011 throughout the world there were 42.5 million forcibly displaced
people of which 12 million were stateless. Seven decades earlier, my father,
Dr. Oswald "Valdik" Holzer, became a stateless and displaced person when the
Nazis occupied his Czech homeland in March, 1939.
With his well-founded fear of persecution by the Nazis, my
Jewish father said good-bye on May 21, 1939 to his parents, Arnost and Olga
Holzer, at Prague's Woodrow Wilson Train station. He was boarding a train for
Paris on his way to Marseilles to catch a ship to China. One document of his Nazi-required
emigration paperwork said he was going to work for the Bata Shoe Company in
Singapore. It wasn't true. It was just
necessary paperwork to go with his black market bought visa and boat ticket to
China. The Bata document saved his life. Three years hence, in May 1942, his parents
became victims of Sobibor Death Camp. Forty-two other relatives perished at
other concentration camps.
When he departed Prague, he carried only a suitcase with a few
important documents, clothing, camera, and medical equipment that he later used
to practice medicine for the American Brethren in Ping Ting Hsien, Shanxi Province.
In China, 1939-1941, Valdik was stateless. He did not have a recognized
nationality and therefore belonged to no country. Czechoslovakia had ceased to
exist. The Czech lands became the German Protectorate of Bohemia and
Moravia. When he left his chaotic
homeland, he had no idea his journey in search of a final safe harbor would
last six years and cover five continents. His fate included falling madly in love in 1940
in Peking (Beijing) with a beautiful American missionary, Ruth Alice Lequear
{later to become my mother}.
It was in America that my father rebuilt his life. On a peaceful
island on the east coast of Florida he created a new home for my mom, brother,
sister and I. He became a proud and
loyal American citizen, valuing the many freedoms that come, sometimes not
easily, with our democracy. A family physician in Melbourne, Florida for over forty
years, one year he delivered over 200 babies. He gave generously of his time, talents,
and money to community services for the needy, disabled, and elderly. He
donated ten years of his life as Campus Doc at Florida Institute of Technology.
My father represents what is great about the many immigrants who have adopted
our country as their own.
But he never forgot his native land nor the many friends and
family who lost their lives during WWII. He supported relatives who survived
the war but then were forced to live behind the Iron Curtain under Communism. After
their homes and businesses were nationalized and their human rights taken away,
they needed help. In the 1960s, our family temporarily housed a Cuban family
that also was displaced by a communist regime which confiscated their property
and threatened their well-being.
World Refugee Day -- June 20, 2013 -- reminds us all of how precarious
life can be. With the turn of a page in history, whether from a persecution,
war, terror, or the effects of natural or human-made disasters - things can
change drastically in a minute.
Take time on June 20th to remember how important it
is to help those less fortunate than you - people just like you who suddenly become
refugees against their will.
Joanie Holzer Schirm is an Orlando, Florida author of the
recently published Adventurers Against
Their Will. Described by former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright as "a
brilliant and compelling account of men and women caught in the turbulence of
war-- Adventurers is based on
revelations from a secret treasure trove of 400 WWII letters by 78 Czech
writers. As a modern day sleuth, Schirm
goes in search of 7 of the letter writers who turn out to be friends and
cousins who wrote to her father as displaced people from within the Czech lands
during the occupation or from places where they escaped to like Great Britain,
France, South America, China and America.
www.joanieschirm.com