Marie Lanham – World War II, the BBC and Hope

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Pioneers, The Great Depression, Women’s Rights, the Holocaust, and the Allure of Postwar Paris

Literally and figuratively the amazing sea voyage with Ali Baba was all part of a youthful quest to discover Europe in the aftermath of World War II. Watching it with horror from Canada everyone asked, “What will be left of Europe?” After closely following it by radio, and the press, then working my way to France by sea with Ali, on a federal government contract in December 1950 I was able to enjoy two fascinating and illuminating years. I had arrived in time to savour the popular, early postwar era in Paris before the winds of change issued in the modern European world.

This book is written in remembrance also of all those teenagers, as we were in 1939, taken in Europe as slave labour from school to produce armaments for the Nazis. We had been shocked at the time by such news. Even before 1939, the Nazis were persecuting, imprisoning and exterminating Jewish teenagers and their entire families as we looked on.

About Marie Lanham

In 1955, living in Montreal, I found myself in the midst of war-weary European women, many Holocaust victims and survivors among them, newly arrived as immigrants. Following the course of some of their lives has been inspiring as to the enormous strength of the human spirit.

It was there that in 1960, I witnessed the end of the centuries–old theocratic governance isolating Quebec from the modern world. With the birth of secular democracy equality for women and freedom for all invigorated Quebec society. Never far from my mind, I also got a close-up view of the deprivation of First Nations people.

“This book offers a serious, compassionate, and sometimes wry perspective on these years, showing a strong sense of justice for oppressed people, an eye for details of human character and of natural and human environments. She writes with the heart of a healer and the eye of an artist.”
Mark Kunen

“From beginning to end, this book is a page-turner, the voice flowing easily from one episode to the next. Female survivors of World War I and II are brought to life with understanding and admiration, as are those challenged by the early twentieth century days of immigration, the Great Depression, and deprivation of life on the reservations.”
Trudie Fellner

8.5 x 5.5 – 428 Pages – $ 24.95