*The Lincoln Historical Society*

*“Did You Know …?”  When America Welcomed Refugees in 1956-1957 *

Adele Peterdi Harvey of Lincoln knows something of what it means to flee
from war and find refuge in the United States.

Adele was eleven years old when Soviet tanks rolled through the streets of
her village, to crush the Hungarian Uprising against Soviet rule in 1956.

Her father, A. John Peterdi, had been a reconnaissance pilot for the
Hungarian Air Force during World War II and spent the last few months of
that war as a POW on the Russian Front.  From 1946 to1956, John held
various jobs in Budapest ranging from commercial pilot to delivering
groceries on a motorbike, eventually working at a machine design firm as a
draftsman…whatever it took to feed his family.

The Hungarian Uprising had lasted only ten days when the Soviet army
invaded.  Her parents decided the family should flee.  Her father contacted
his brother, who lived in far western Hungary, for aid in getting the
family over the border into Austria.  The brother knew farmers living in
the border area, and the farmers knew the safest places to cross, unseen by
guards.


[image: Adele Peterdi Harvey.jpg]

Adele Peterdi Harvey 1959

Days later, Adele and her father departed for his brother’s home.  If
stopped and questioned, Adele's father hadprepared the excuse that his
daughter was ill (Adele was small and thin) and the trip was for health
reasons.  The next day, Adele’s mother followed with one of her adult sons.
 (The other son would cross the border later.)  Her prepared excuse was
that she was joining her husband for their daughter’s convalescence.  To
avoid suspicion, none of them carried any luggage, save for one small
briefcase containing papers.

A day or so later the family boarded a train headed west.  They were
instructed to exit the train at a stop near the Austrian border, to run to
the nearest building, and then wait for the guides who would arrive after
dark.  At nightfall, local people took them through ploughed fields toward
the Austrian border.  They were instructed to drop to the ground and stay
still if they saw searchlights or the bright headlights of border patrols.

There came a moment in the darkness when Adele believed they had reached
Austria.  She reached down, grabbed a handful of dirt, and put it in her
pocket.  This time when headlights appeared, their guides told them to run
through a ditch and toward the lights.  They were indeed in Austria, and
they were safe. The car was driven by two young American men who had come
to that area specifically to assist Hungarians fleeing the invading
Russians.

Eventually, 200,000 Hungarians fled their country during the Uprising, and
many found their way to the U.S.  Adele’s mother used her fluent German and
capable English to contact a cousin who lived in Detroit, and he agreed to
sponsor the family.  A month or so later, the family was flown to the U.S.
and taken to Camp Kilmer where “Operation Safe Haven” welcomed thousands of
Hungarian refugees into the United States.  By chance, Adele’s father was
recognized by a Hungarian-American who had immigrated years before and was
volunteering with the re‑settlement process.  He arranged for Adele’s
family to live with people in Connecticut who had volunteered to take in a
Hungarian family.  Thus began their life in America.

Ultimately, Adele’s father learned English, qualified as a draftsman,
completed an undergraduate degree in electrical engineering, got an MBA,
and enjoyed a long career.  Her mother got a job on Wall Street as a
receptionist and eventually became an administrative assistant.  The
brother who had accompanied them received a law degree from the University
of North Dakota and made his career as an attorney for the Federal
Government.  Adele got her degree in English Literature from Northwestern
in 1967.  In 1978, Adele moved to Lincoln with her husband and two sons,
and in 2003, her father joined them in Lincoln as well.

Adele’s family could not have seen the Statue of Liberty from Camp Kilmer.  But
for these refugees from war, Liberty’s torch burned bright and welcoming.

Gus Browne

The Lincoln Historical Society
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