Did your grandparents or parents experience war?
I'd be interested to know.
I'd be interested to know.
I know some people who can work as geriatric nurses and health professionals in Switzerland. Second, if you know Swiss German, should you speak it? Since I grew up with Swiss foster parents, I can already speak it.
Hey, I'm M/13 My family is actually from Ukraine, but we were expelled (to Lower Silesia), and I'm currently considering abandoning my original plan to emigrate to the Czech Republic and moving to Ukraine after the war. Is it worth it? I mean, that's my real home, anyway; I want to move to either Lviv…
What is better in the Netherlands than in Germany, or which living conditions, etc. are better there?
Yes,
I grew up in my grandpa’s house, a former military soldier. Only a few months ago I read his war and captive journal again.
I am not happy with what he had to experience and sometimes wanted from different things at the time (in the context of time for me to understand, even if nobody wants to hear it today, because “all” are so self-righteous and omniscient), but I am very happy to reflect on how he was then dealing with the “Schei*ß”. A Christian in conflict with guilt and humanity, yet after that, bravely build and reconciliation.
You can’t deny that time has shaped his behavior forever, and I think it’s valuable to me that I have learned so much from him.
My grandfather’s father’s side was in World War II. There he was put in prison in Russia and came only close to life. Mother’s side was in Switzerland.
In the First World War our Uropa was motherly with the riders.
The first of our family, from which our last name comes, is from a French ship during the French-German war, where he had fled and fled to Germany.
My grandfather (“1912) and one of my grandmothers (“1910) have witnessed World War I and the other (*1920) “only” the second. My grandfather had to fight in France during the Second World War and would have almost come to Russian captivity.
Both parents were born after World War II.
My dad was moved in, but secretly helped deserters and helped undermine the regime. One of the few Jews who survive through false names.
My mom and her mom were interned in various camps.
But my uropa then dealt better in the Russian prison (he was caught) because he played violin. He had a splinter of a splinter grenade in the bein, and could not run well. That was also his cause of death.
LG. ThinkingMonkey
My grandparents both world wars and my parents the last years of World War II.
My grandparents as young people have experienced wk2.
My grandfather then under mustolini in the 2 WK and indirectly it was really unpleasant in Italy in certain years of the cold war, where it was not a war.
The grandparents the first, sometimes the second, the parents the second.
Yes, my mother was 2 when the war began and my father was 9. My grandma even experienced both wars, which was born around in 1915.
My parents the Second World War, the grandparents both world wars.
Hoked in the bomb cellar and banged around her life.
Everybody’s too young.
my grandma no
My grandpa, yes.