Blog Post

From Vienna to Melbourne: Jewish Refugees 

Patrick Burtscher • Nov 24, 2018

The National Fund of the Republic of Austria for victims of National Socialism

On our walking holidays we also talk about tradition and history. Austria's involvement and role in both world wars and the resulting suffering has been the driver for many individuals and organisations to write books, plays, movies to deal with their own memories and pains, but also to remind younger generations of the damage any war does.

Just recently the National Fund of the Republic of Austria for vixtims of National Socialism (celebrating its 80-year anniversary this year) published three books with stories from (mostly Jewish) refugees fleeing from Europe to Australia. Around 2000 left Austria to survive and have a better life in Australia.

The interviews and stories are painful and fascinating at the same time. Like the Swiss Duldig family, who came from Austria via Switzerland and Singapore to Melbourne. Duldig playred 'professional' tennis which allowed him to travel and see a future in Australia. Interesting is also that Duldigs' wife invented the first foldable umbrella.

Or the story of other refugees, who arrived in Australia - to them a very different place to 'home' - just being referred to 'reffos' and treated badly; many of whom didn't settle and moving back to Austria after the war in 1946.

History is valuable, because we can learn from it. (looking at today's political environments around the world, it often doesn't seem we're learning though).

Read more on: https://www.nationalfonds.org/home.html

By Catherine Marshall 05 Oct, 2019
"Never pick flowers in the springtime before the bees have sipped their fill of nectar", says Walser woman Elisabeth Burtscher, " and always leave the blooms alone when it has rained, for if they're sodden when you pluck them, they won't be able to transmit energy stored from the sun." "You don't need to tell anyone in this valley not to do this – they know it's the rule of nature," she says. "We don't just collect plants, we collect wisdom and healing." Elisabeth imparts this ancient knowledge as we walk through wildflower-speckled grasses in the village of Fontanella in Austria's western-most province, Vorarlberg. Tucked between Lake Constance and the Austrian Alps, this region encompasses Grosses Walsertal, or Big Walser Valley, a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and European Destination of Excellence which has been inhabited by the Walser people since they arrived here from neighbouring Switzerland in the 14th century. Settling in the high Alps – beyond the reach of meddling authorities – the Walsers forged a winter-toughened, hard-working, resourceful mountain culture of which Elisabeth and her family remain guardians today. So devoted is her son, Patrick Burtscher, to his Walser heritage (and the mountains which moulded him), he returns here each year from his adopted home, Melbourne, with his Australian wife Maree and their two young children, Levin and Kiera. The couple run a Nordic Walking academy in Australia but, come spring (and, as of next year, winter), they change codes, guiding guests on alpine walks through Grosses Walsertal with their boutique company, Austrian Alps Active. This is Patrick's childhood playground. He spent his earliest years exploring these mountains, became Austria's youngest ski instructor at just 16 and was principal of the local school. It's a homecoming of sorts for Maree, too. After meeting Patrick in Australia she spent two years here with him, exploring a little-known pocket of Austria interlaced with unblemished rivers and valleys, meadows and limestone peaks – and those flowers and herbs so cherished by the Walsers. Now Elisabeth is taking petals from paper bags and laying them on a lace cloth so old she fears it will fall apart if she touches it. She encourages me to do the same. "I could prepare easily a table like this as you have in a buffet, but you have to do it yourself," she instructs. "It's very important for you to do things using both hands. These days you just spend hours and hours using one finger to move the mouse." And so I add my offerings to Elisabeth's botanical smorgasbord, and we select from it clippings with which to create pots of berg tea: stinging nettle and sage, blackcurrant and elderflower, dandelion and red clover and raspberry. The tea, drunk for aeons by the Walser people, is ambrosial and deeply soothing, tasting of nectar left over by the quenched bees. Outside, where the mountains yawn open to reveal secretive valleys, the air is mint-fresh. Across the ravine is the village of Marul, sinking slowly down the hillside each year. High above it, along a zigzagging road, is Alpe Laguz, gateway to the region's highest peak, Rote Wand. From here, one Alp impedes our view of the next. Their ice-licked peaks soar into the clouds from an earthly bed of emerald green. Nature's tableau is disturbed only by a scattering of summer huts and cows grazing on alpine grass and wildflowers. The herd's milk will be churned into organic Alpkase (cheese made from the milk of Alp-grazed cows) – the most coveted and lofty of cheeses produced in this biosphere. But the clouds are gathering about us now, a ghostly cloak erasing the view. Dewdrops speckle our faces as we wander up and over Garmil Pass, passing along the way Breithorn Mountain, whose limestone precipices are concertinaed together like organ pipes. "This is where the European and African tectonic plates collide, which is why the mountains are moving," says Patrick, explaining why that little village of Marul is subsiding into its lush foundations. The mountains are faint etchings behind the fog now, the elderflowers bright quivers in the grass. At Martha's Hut, which materialises fairytale-like from the mist, Martha Bickel is mixing elderflower spritzes and ladling kasknopfle, a traditional dish of pasta buttons and rich alpine cheese, on to our lunchtime plates. "If you don't finish the pot," she warns, "there will be bad weather tomorrow." We require no such inducement, for the brisk walk and crystalline air has sharpened our appetite. We return for seconds and knock them back with shots of home-made schnapps.
By Patrick Burtscher 03 Jul, 2019
All Austrian Alps Active holidays combine authenticity, culture and history, immersion with the locals, alpine walking, 'nature sightseeing' and fine dining as well as traditional cuisine. The 10-Day 'Classic' Walking Holiday is set for June and July every year. That time is perfect for alpine flowers to bloom in abundance, very nice temperatures to walk and hike in, the farmers will have just moved their cattle up 'to the alps.
By Katrina Lobley 18 Jun, 2019
Katrina Lobley spent a few days in Grosses Walsertal, together with Maree and Patrick from Austrian Alps Active, exploring the scenery, the mountains and what the 10-day walking holiday is all about.
By Patrick Burtscher 01 Feb, 2019
The edelweiss is a remedy against abdominal and respiratory diseases
By Patrick Burtscher 20 Dec, 2018
'Stille Nacht', the world famous Christmas song
By Patrick Burtscher 02 Nov, 2018
Vorarlberg is the westernmost federal state of Austria. Home to our walking holidays and retreats.
By John Borthwick 01 Nov, 2018
In the high green valleys of Vorarlberg, John Borthwick discovers that life goes on to a rhythm of cattle migrating to summer pastures, mass on Sundays and too many wicked cheese dumplings at dinner.
By Patrick Burtscher 19 Oct, 2018
Austria is quite a mountaineous country - did you know that (because of that) only 40% of Austria's land is inhabitable? Also, Austria is famous for its' alpine farmers.
By Patrick Burtscher 17 Oct, 2018
Culture and traditions of the Walser people, Grosses Walsertal, lost tribes
By Patrick Burtscher 11 Oct, 2018
Custom and tradition in the villages of the Austrian Alps. Fontanella celebrating Fronleichnam (Corpus Christi) with brassband, fire brigade, school children, choirs, ...
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