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Luck Through Adversity: The Memoir of a Dutchman's
Luck Through Adversity: The Memoir of a Dutchman's
Luck Through Adversity: The Memoir of a Dutchman's

Luck Through Adversity: The Memoir of a Dutchman's Flight to Freedom Through the Dutch-Paris Escape Line of World War II

Product ID : 47839565


Galleon Product ID 47839565
Shipping Weight 1.19 lbs
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Manufacturer Weidner Foundation Books
Shipping Dimension 8.9 x 5.98 x 0.87 inches
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About Luck Through Adversity: The Memoir Of A Dutchman's

Product Description Luck Through Adversity is the memoir of a remarkable evader of the Nazis during the Second World War. Pieter "Rudy" Zeeman's escape to freedom from Nazi-occupied Holland led him across four countries and thousands of miles by rail, car, foot, and sea. With the aid of the members of the Dutch-Paris Escape Line (founded and led by the intrepid John Weidner), as well as others, he reached safety after passing through a long and winding gauntlet of Nazi patrols and other dangers. Luck Through Adversity is not only the story of Zeeman's flight to freedom during World War II. It is also the story of his subsequent experiences in the former Dutch East Indies as a member of the Free Dutch Forces, of his courtship and marriage to Marie Bernadette Mortimer, of his post-war life, and of his immigration to Australia as his adopted home. This book is a vital act of memory that will help to keep alive the story of the Dutch resisters and evaders of World War II, and their inspiring resilience, for future generations. It is filled with keen observations from a life well-lived. Review "This book tells the story of Rudy Zeeman's escape from Nazi officers in Paris, and his harrowing trek over the Pyrenees Mountains with downed Allied flyers, to achieve freedom in England. His research and recall of times, names and places, combined with his unvarnished prose, shines a light on the courage shown by Dutch and French resisters in World War II. Rudy does not promote himself as a hero, but he was brave-and he was lucky!"-Coleman O'Flaherty, Member of the Order of Australia, Professor Emeritus, University of Tasmania"Rudy Zeeman is a unique and valuable witness to World War II. Like many other young people in the occupied countries of Europe, he went into hiding rather than submit to deportation for work in Germany. He escaped to England from The Netherlands through France with a grueling and dangerous crossing of the Pyrenees on foot through deep snow. He held many administrative positions in the Pacific in the final months of the war with Japan and in the postwar period. His is a fascinating and vivid account."-Janet Holmes Carper, author of The Weidners in Wartime"Zeeman's escape through Nazi-controlled territories makes for compelling reading. His colorful descriptions and encyclopedic mind put the reader at his side as he side-steps capture. He has to be one of World War II's most resourceful and elusive evaders."-Kurt Ganter, The John Henry Weidner Foundation for Altruism"This is a compelling story of escape from Nazi-occupied Europe in World War II. It was fascinating to compare with my father's own experiences, with many similarities as well as striking differences. Highlights of this tale were the hair-breadth escape from the Gestapo in Paris, and the grueling crossing of the Pyrenees in winter. These stories need to be told, and the experiences remembered for future generations."-Ian Schagen, co-author of A Wartime Journey Revisited"One gets a sense of Rudy's humour immediately in the first few paragraphs of his fascinating memoir, when he details his first meeting with Robert van Exter in Spring 1943. This was the first step in his extraordinary journey from Holland through Paris, across the Pyrenees to Spain. Hiding from German patrols, climbing up the snow-covered mountains, hiding in abandoned houses, it describes his arduous, physically demanding and adventurous escape to freedom."-Jos Scharrer, author of The Dutch Resistance Revealed About the Author Pieter Rudolph (Rudy) Zeeman was born in the Dutch East Indies in 1919 and spent his early childhood years there. After finishing high school in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, he entered tertiary education. In 1943, he escaped the Nazi occupation of Holland to England and joined the Free Dutch Forces. He then served in Australia and the former Dutch East Indies. After World War II, Rudy was awarded both the Kruis van Verdienste (Cross of Merit) an