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Alexandra Rezko

Interview conducted by Elisabeth Edwards for research for Orange Migration Heritage Project, with Alexandra Rezko.

Background

Alexandra was born in Germany, her mother was Ukrainian and father, Belorussian. She started her journey to Sydney Australia from Naples, Italy. Alexandra was a very young child when she and her family arrived in Australia. Her father was sent to work as a labourer on the railways.

They first settled at the Bathurst migrant camp/hostel and then the Parkes migrant camp. After leaving migrant accommodation Alex's father lived in a tent alongside the railway line; later they lived in a cottage at Huntley, south of Orange.

Interview

My mother Janina was Ukrainian, born in Ostrov, near Lvov, Poland (now in Belorussia). My father Mikolaj was born in Belorussia. In 1939 he was in the army but from September 1939 he was a prisoner of war. From 39-45 he was a farm worker in Bulleneuth, Germany, and from 46-47 he worked in a porcelain factory in Mitterteich, Germany. In 1948 he was a labourer at a military post in Garmisch and in 1949 he was in camps at Luttensee and Mittenwald.

My father was a cook on the ship to Australia. I remember the Suez Canal. I do remember my first Christmas at the Parkes camp.

We came to Huntley in about July 1951. My father worked for 31 years on the railways. They lived in tents in Orange along the track. He saw this shack in Huntley and he got a perpetual lease and stayed there for many years. The house had a main bedroom and a sitting room, a bit of a verandah and a kitchen. There was no electricity, no water, no sewerage. We had cows for milk and butter, we grew our vegetables and bread was delivered from [Dutch migrants] Bobeldyk's at Spring Hill. Mum used to pick peas at Worboys' place in Spring Hill for extra money for her kids. She used to pick apples as well.

There were many migrants in Spring Hill - Vankovich, Zagorski, Dluzniak, Kochanowski.

As kids, we went to Sunday school, we were free, we adapted easily but we never invited people to our house because we didn't have much. We fitted into the Spring Hill community very well. We joined the Methodist Church there. We picked up English very quickly. But I knew my parents couldn't help me. I studied under a kerosene lamp. I went to Orange High. I spoke a mixture of Ukrainian, Polish and Russian. My father could speak Polish, German, Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian. Dad picked up English on the railways and through films.

From about a six-year-old I wanted to become a teacher. I got a teacher's scholarship. My childhood was basically happy.