Hannie’s family is pleased to provide free online access to her book, “Child of Two Worlds.” There is no charge to download the book, however we request consideration for a small, one-time donation to one of her personal memorial selections:
Child Saving Institute of Omaha, Special Olympics or the Boone County Foundation.
Hannie’s family is pleased to provide free online access to her book, “Child of Two Worlds.” There is no charge to download the book, however we request consideration for a small, one-time donation to one of her personal memorial selections:
Child Saving Institute of Omaha, Special Olympics or the Boone County Foundation.
...Hannie’s father’s business began to suffer because Christians stopped doing business with him. One day he referred to Hitler as...
Read More >She lost friends and was forced from public school. Eventually, she and her parents fled from Germany for their lives. Yet Hannie...
Read More >Almost 60 years later after the end of World War II, Norm Smith and Hannie Wold still aren't sure what happened...or why.
Read More >Hanne Wolf came to the United States in 1940 at age 15 with her family and other Jewish people from Ulm, Germany. She eventually...
Read More >...Hannie’s father’s business began to suffer because Christians stopped doing business with him. One day he referred to Hitler as...
Read More >She lost friends and was forced from public school. Eventually, she and her parents fled from Germany for their lives. Yet Hannie...
Read More >Almost 60 years later after the end of World War II, Norm Smith and Hannie Wold still aren't sure what happened...or why.
Read More >Hanne Wolf came to the United States in 1940 at age 15 with her family and other Jewish people from Ulm, Germany. She eventually...
Read More >