I love the song "Barges," about someone sitting by the window watching ships sail by and longing to travel along with them [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dF2i6RQUqAE].
However, sometimes travelling by ship can be a nightmare. I sometimes think about the Titanic, the British passenger liner that sank in 1912 the year my father was born. Then, in more recent times, we read stories of people, desperate for asylum, crowding onto small makeshift crafts without food or water, just looking for a place that is safer than the one they come from. Many die at sea -- either of malnutrition, lack of water, or by drowning. No one seems to care for them or about them.
Lately, with the onset of the Coronavirus, cruise ships have been the center of attention. People who just wanted to enjoy a holiday in an ultra-luxurious environment, suddenly find themselves stranded at sea with no place to go, hoping they will not test positive for the virus. Once they are taken off the ship, they still have to spend time in quarantine. For people who are accustomed to having everything they need and want, this is quite a hardship!
Our family also made a perilous journey by ship in February 1947, thirty-five years after the sinking of the Titanic. My father made sure our family secured passage on an old Dutch passenger ship, the Volendam, which finally departed from Bremerhaven, Germany for Paraguay, South America, with over 2,000 refugees on board.
Recently, Hardy and I viewed a new documentary about that experience, called Volendam: A Refugee Story. This is part of my story and that of my family.
My parents did not talk much about this adventure when we were growing up, but I do remember a picture that I often gazed at because the people on it looked so beautiful. Their names are Elfrieda and Peter Dyck, a young couple, just married three years and working for Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) in war-torn Europe. For a newly married couple, they carried a lot of responsibility, helping to set up refugee camps in Germany for thousands of Mennonites who had fled Ukraine and other parts of eastern Europe.
These refugees were now in danger of being sent back to a country that branded them "enemies" and would send them to Siberia and other remote places where they would endure hard labor and starvation. Like the boat people of recent times, we had nowhere to go. However, we did have people who cared about us and MCC worked hard to find a solution. Paraguay was the only country ready to accept us, and people desperate to flee the Communist regime were willing to go there (even to the wilderness of the Chaco). Peter and Elfrieda were able to secure a huge Dutch freighter, The Volendam, and filled it to overflowing with refugees.
Elfrieda and Peter Dyck
The Volendam with C.F. Klassen, Elfrieda Dyck's older brother
Some of our family's passport pictures: My sister (right) is not happy. She was just having a meal when she was interrupted to have this picture taken. (If you look closely you can see she is holding a spoon in her hand!) She knew, from a very young age, what was most important for survival! I am the smiling girl in the middle.
Our family before boarding the Volendam
In the Mennonite Heritage Archives I found this photo of people on board the Volendam and I think I recognize my dad helping to move what looks like bales of some kind. This is symbolic of the life he lived, working hard to keep his family safe and happy.
In a previous blog post entitled Hunger (May 30, 2017), I wrote about the famine in Ukraine around the time my mother was born (1921) and how American Mennonites formed a relief organization (MCC) to help the starving Mennonites there. A young man by the name of Clayton Kratz (1896-1920), was one of the Mennonite relief workers. He mysteriously disappeared and was never heard from again; to this day no one knows what happened to him. He gave his life in the service of MCC. Without his willingness to help, at the risk of his own life, my mother, a toddler at the time, and thousands of others like her, would have died of starvation. I and many others owe our lives to him.
Clayton Kratz
While doing some research for this blog post, I discovered that six-year-old Peter Dyck was one of the children who, like my mother, benefitted from the first MCC relief program in Ukraine and likely would have died had food aid not been available. His family emigrated to Canada shortly after. When he decided to work for MCC as a young man, he was simply expressing gratitude for the help he had received as a starving child -- by helping others as he had been helped.
My 12-year old granddaughter, Lena Kate, who lives in Ontario and likes to chat with me on the phone, recently asked me a question that made me pause and think for a while. She asked, "Oma, are you and Opa rich?" We chatted for a little while about what it means to be rich. From a global perspective we are wealthy because we have a home, a car, food on the table and clothes to wear. Lena Kate doesn't think of that as being wealthy because she takes these things for granted. When we were refugees, we weren't so fortunate. But we children never felt like we were poor because we had our parents, our grandmother and our uncle with us. They looked after us. And they had MCC, with people willing to risk their lives to help us survive. Yes, Lena Kate, Opa and Oma are rich! And you have a rich heritage!
Clayton Kratz and Elfrieda and Peter Dyck are my heroes!
... And of course my courageous dad, Bernhard Neufeld (1912-2005)





Elfrieda, you are indeed rich! You would have loved the class I taught at Goshen College in 1998. In the class was the grandson of Peter Dyck. He and other students did a documentary film that told a piece of the Russia story. Our class met in the Ad Building, close to the Kratz dormitory, named for Clayton Kratz, still a hero to young people when they hear his story.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing that, Shirley. Was it a Mennonite history class?I had opportunity to meet Peter Dyck and thank him personally when he came to Conrad Grebel University College a number of years ago. It was a high moment for me.
DeleteNo. The class was called The Literature of Spiritual Reflection and Social Action. The students themselves initiated projects. I had a special fund from a Presidential Leadership Award at the time, and I gave them travel money from it to do the documentary.
DeleteBeautiful Elfrieda!! Thank you!@ My father and moher also benefitted from MCC food and help from Canadian Mennonites in the 1920s when they came to Canada as refugees. Later they served 4 years in Paraguay with newly-arrived Mennonite refugees (1952-1956). They also taught us to see how rich we were even without a lot of cash etc. Rich in community and opportunities and love.
ReplyDeleteWhat a legacy! Thanks for sharing this, Marlene.
DeleteOh my Elfrieda, that brought back a memory for me. I was about 7 or 8 years old and Dad and I were walking. I was holding his hand. I asked him if he was he sad that he wasn’t rich and he said to me that his family made him feel like the richest man in the world! It’s a very warm and loving memory! Makes me feel rich!
ReplyDeleteWe didn’t know how rich we were! Now we do!
ReplyDeleteHow rich you are, mining the wealth of your Mennonite heritage - for friends to read and for your descendants to appreciate.
ReplyDeleteI have a soft spot in my heart for MCC also. As a girl, I learned first-hand the gifts of Christian love observing my Grandma Longenecker hard at work sewing baby clothing and making comforters for the needy as I mention in my memoir.
Our son has been on a cruise ship with his family returning from Cozumel, Mexico and the Cayman Islands. They are due back tomorrow. We hope and pray they are not detained in Tampa, FL.
Yes, that Corona virus is giving all of us a pause. Let’s hope your son and family will be okay!
DeleteYour grandma’s comforters have given comfort to many, I’m sure.
Such an important reminder, Elfrieda, in this time of market downturn and health fears, what it is that makes us truly rich. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteYes, it’s the relationships!
ReplyDeleteThis reminded me of a story that mom told me later on in adulthood. When I was little ...can't remembermy age ...someone came to our door in Didsbury with some "hand me down" clothes. I was with mom when she went to the door and asked her if we were poor because someone brought us used clothes. After all we had a large family, lived in a small house and with only a small income to support us. But I never felt poor...hence the question. I always felt safe, had decent clothes, plenty of food and love. Just goes to show that money cannot replace the safety, security and love of a caring family😍Great blog Elfrieda😍
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ruth! Our parents really knew how to stretch their grocery money too, by buying very ripe bananas and cheaper cuts of meat like liver. We had liver a lot! I still like it. And we always had a good chicken dinner on Sundays. And no matter what messes the week brought with it, Saturday was clean up time, and ohm those heavenly few hours when the house was actually clean (from Saturday afternoon to Monday morning!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Elfrieda, for your thought provoking blog. We have reason to be grateful. Like my sister used to say..."we were poor, but we were happy". This is rich!
ReplyDeleteRich indeed, because our happiness did not depend on the things we owned but on our parents’ love and care for us!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this reminder of stories from our past. We are presently going through photos from our ancestors. Many stories behind the pictures-- many lost however.
ReplyDeleteYes, it’s too bad about the lost ones!
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