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My refugee dad’s level head is what we all need

His life and attitide to global events taught me that it’s best to keep a sense of perspective

January 14, 2022 09:42
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In war, the extraordinary is ordinary: everyone has a tale to tell. This was my Dad’s story.

Aged seven, Fredi Felsenburg and his family had to flee their comfortable existence in Vienna after the Anschluss for the safety of Antwerp. You know how long that lasted, and less than two years later his mother used her fluent French to secure passage for her and her children on one of the last boats out of Dunkirk, Luftwaffe bombs falling around them as they crossed the Channel. 

And here’s the kicker: two weeks later, as a refugee in north London, he was legging it from a gang in pursuit of the “Jew boy” who could hardly speak a word of English. They caught up with him and threw him into Clapton Pond. He couldn’t swim. He only survived by clinging on to a log.

How did that start in life shape him? Well, for one thing, despite that unpromising welcome, he would later always profess his love for his adopted home country and its generosity and tolerance.

Topics:

Refugees