Established in 1978
Incorporated as a non-profit educational organization in Minnesota, USA


Affiliated with the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia
             Headquartered in Lincoln, NE, USA

       Affiliated with the Germans from Russia Heritage Society               Headquartered in Bismarck, ND, USA

Contact us:  dstabler@bigfoot.com (webmaster)

Alfred Opp Writings  

About Alfred Opp

 (see NDSU website parts 1, 2, 3 below)

alfredopp1  Part 1 - Interview with Alfred Opp

alfredopp2 Part 2 - Interview with Alfred Opp

alfredopp3 Part 3 - Interview with Alfred Opp

Articles (click on any article to read it):

CHRISTMAS

Froeliche Wienachten

Memories of Christmas Food

One of a Kind Christmas Eve

EASTER

Memories of Ostern

AGRICULTURAL & THE TRADES

The Trades as Practiced in the Homeland - Part II

The Trades as Practiced in the Homeland  Part 1B

The Trades as Practiced in the Homeland Part I

Hand Sickles for Harvesting Grain

Mischt  for Fuel

The Market Place

My ancestors proudly owned their land - and so do I

A Two-horse Journey to Visit Tante Katja

A Memorable Ride

 

LIFE AS IT WAS

Medic-Care

I do. . . .  A  Marriage Made to Fit

1781 - 1941  A Walk in the Shadow of Our History

Child Rearing - Love, Words and Rod

Spiritual Training of German-Russian Children and Youth

Something from Nothing - Lumpen-Schuhe and Other Treasures

FOOD WAYS

Hefariebala and the German Bake Oven

 

CUSTOMS

Schwabian Burial Customs

Life in a Bessarabian Village - Societal Vices

That Old Schnaible House

In the Shadow of Time

THE EFFECTS OF WAR

Oh, What a Lovely War -- Horse Sense

Singing In The Dark

In the shadow of a retaining wall - Buried to be forgotten

The Guard - a Time-out

XYZ - After the Tears, the Vision

Powdered Milk and Other Discoveries

War Costs More than Money - Part I

War Costs More than Money - Part II Katharina and Christian  Erfle  - The Tears Are  Mine

War Costs More Than Money -  Part III The Young and the Helpless

War Costs More Than Money - Part IV The Walking  Wounded

How the East Was Won

Weapons for Peace

"Too busy!  No Time!"  --  Ich habe keine Zeit.

Alfred New Book:

Alfred Opp’s book “Pawns on the World Stage” is now available through the NDSU website. Please go to www.lib.ndsu.nodak.edu/gerrus and select “Order” then “Books/General Books” then scroll down to “Pawns.” Clicking on the book cover will take you to ordering information.

“Pawns on the World Stage” is an autobiographical memoir that details the path of the Opp family of Teplitz, Bessarabia, through war-torn Europe in the 1940's to a new life in Canada. Alfred Opp was born into a loving family in Teplitz, Bessarabia - a community that held to the family values and traditions of the Schwabian Germans. For the first ten years of his life he experienced an idyllic setting, living out the social customs of his village, being doted upon by his grandparents and learning the wisdom passed down from his ancestors. This came to a halt in July 1940 when the Russian army rolled into town and the Iron Curtain descended. Then Berlin offered a way of escape and the entire village willingly headed back to the land of their ancestors. Resettled in war-torn Poland amid unfriendly neighbors, their new life was not what they had dreamed. In 1944 the Russian Army was once again upon them and they fled to Germany:  East Germany. Alfred Opp was too young to be conscripted into the army, but old enough to remember the horrors and terrors of life in war-torn Europe. How do people survive when they are reduced to only the clothes on their backs, fleeing for their lives! 

The quest for freedom and a decent life had led the Opp ancestors to South Russia, and now the same quest propelled Alfred Opp and his family forward. Eventually he emigrated to Canada where he started new once again with no money and no English. Newly hired at a business that would soon go bankrupt, he was then offered proprietorship of the business on a handshake. Thirty-three years later he had built one of the largest auto seat-cover manufacturing businesses in the field. Along the way he met and married his soul-mate and raised his family. 

Alfred Opp traces his ancestry back to the Urban Opp who came to South Russia in 1807. The family was settled in Glückstal [G88] when the village was established in 1809. Urban's son Heinrich Opp moved on to Teplitz, Bessarabia in 1837. Urbanus Opp was born in Rockenhausen, Rheinland/Pfälz and was one of the early Glückstal settlers, arriving after a stay in Hungary. 

Working with Alfred Opp, Connie Dahlke prepared his manuscript for publication and the Glückstal Colonies Research Association is pleased to present this story of Alfred Opp's life. Due to the generosity of Alfred Opp, proceeds from the sale of his book benefit the research activities of the GCRA.