By any measure, Andrew Wiseman (born Weizman) is a lucky man. The only son of a Polish father and an American mother, Andy was born and grew up in Berlin, just as Adolf Hitler was coming to power. As
By any measure, Andrew Wiseman (born Weizman) is a lucky man. The only son of a Polish father and an American mother, Andy was born and grew up in Berlin, just as Adolf Hitler was coming to power. As a Jew educated at the famous Werner Siemens Real Gymnasium in Schoneberg, he left only months before his school was closed down and fled with his family to Poland, one step ahead of the Nazi persecution that was to follow and later take the life of his father.
From Poland he again fled to England, this time without his parents, arriving as a 16yearold with little or no grasp of English. After a crash course in the language, he avoided being called up into the Polish army in exile thanks to the timely intervention of no less a man than General Sikorski himself, to enlist in the RAF to train initially as a pilot and then as an air bomber in South Africa.
On his return to the UK he was posted to an allAustralian Squadron (466 Squadron) equipped with the Handley Page Halifax. After his first operation in which he was nearly shot down, Andrew survived a handful of eventful trips before falling victim to one of the Luftwaffe's top night fighter pilots and landing in France.
Briefly on the run he was betrayed and captured, spending the next 12 months as a prisoner of war, using his knowledge of Russian, Polish and German to act as one of the principal camp interpreters, and working as a 'scrounger' for the 'X' committee of escapers. Moved from camp to camp, he was one of those forced into the 'Long March' by the Germans attempting to escape the Russian advance, and afterwards played a key role in avoiding the potential bloodshed that threatened when the Russians refused to allow the British and Norwegian prisoners to return home - a role for which he was later recognised by the King of Norway.
Upon his release, Andy used his language skills to work with the BBC monitoring service and later, BBC Television as a producer, sharing many adventures with the great broadcasters of their time, including David Dimbleby and Raymond Baxter.
Sean Feast started his career in journalism and PR after leaving Haileybury in 1985. Now a director of Gravity London (formerly the AGA Group), one of the UK's leading independent business-to-business communications agencies he is still a regular contributor to a number of newspapers and magazines. Sean is a well-respected aviation historian whose past titles for Grub Street have been
Heroic Endeavour, Master Bombers (now in paperback),
A Pathfinder's War (with Ted Stocker), and
Churchill's Navigator (with John Mitchell) and, most recently,
The Pathfinder Companion. Married to Elaine and with two teenage sons, Matthew and James, he lives in Sarratt, Hertfordshire.
Visit his web site at www.seanfeast.com.
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