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
EASTER
AGRICULTURAL & THE TRADES
The Trades as Practiced in the Homeland
The Trades as Practiced in the Homeland Part 1B
The Trades as Practiced in the Homeland
My ancestors proudly owned their land - and so do I
Oh, What a Lovely War -- Horse Sense
War Costs More Than Money - Part IV
The
Walking Wounded
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.
