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    Sharing the heart of Europe

    Sharing the heart of Europe

    Photo By Tech. Sgt. Alexa Culbert | Eva Newman, White House of Confederacy tour guide, poses in front of the White House...... read more read more

    MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA, UNITED STATES

    01.25.2016

    Story by Airman 1st Class Alexa Culbert 

    Air University Public Affairs

    MAXWELL AIR FORCE BASE, Ala. - Guests gather around First White House of Confederacy tour guide, Eva Newman as she tells the stories of the house. Her bright blue eyes light up with excitement at the chance to share her knowledge of the house and its role in the Civil War. She wears a bright welcoming smile and her patriotism shines through as she speaks, however, a strong accent suggest that she once hailed from another country. Newman loves telling America’s story, but she too has a story to tell. Her journey to becoming the patriot she is today began 78 years ago in the Czech Republic.

    In 1937, Newman was born in Nova Paka, Czech Republic during the occupation of Nazi forces.

    “I had a childhood, but the only emotion I had was fear,” said Newman. “I was afraid to go to school because of the bombings, afraid of going hungry and afraid that my father would be arrested for something.”

    In 1948, her father made the decision for the family to escape the country and made their way across the border into Austria, but the authorities quickly caught up with them.

    Her father was taken with the other men to become re-educated while her mother and her siblings were locked away in a large cell with 500 other women and children.

    After three months of being in an insect infested cell with lack of food, all 500 prisoners were rounded up and taken downstairs where they were ordered to remove their clothing.

    Suddenly spigots lowered and all the women slammed their bodies against the floor to shield the children from what they believed to be gas, but it was only water.

    During one shower, the gate behind them didn’t click. At the young age of 12, Newman was ordered by her mother to squeeze through the gate opening and retrieve her clothes. Her mother and siblings followed and they made their way through an empty hallway with a door waiting for them at the end.

    They pushed through the door not knowing if it would lead them to freedom or right back into captivity. They landed in the middle of downtown Budapest and hurriedly made their way to the train station

    After begging for passage on a train, they ended in Vienna, Austria, where they reunited with her father.

    They were then put into a deportation camp and awaited approval to immigrate to America. After two and a half years permission was granted and they immigrated to the United States.

    In 1951, the family arrived in New Orleans and relocated to Iowa to begin a new life, where her father eventually opened a bakery.

    After high school graduation, Newman wanted to further her education at the Art Institute in Chicago; however, her father had another idea.

    In 1957, at 18-years old, she was put on a plane to Austin, Texas with nothing but a wedding dress and $5 in her pocket, to meet the man she was arranged to marry.

    Waiting for her at the airport was a man that her father had met while in the Austrian displaced persons camp, Frank Newman.

    However, married life was cut short two months later when Frank who had just enlisted into the United States Army was called to serve 18 months in Korea.

    “He said, Eva, I have to take you back to live with your parents. I have to go to 18 months to Korea and I don’t want you here in Texas alone,” said Eva. “I started crying, ‘I don’t want to go home, I’ll have to work in the bakery again!”

    When he returned, the couple began their military life, moving from base to base. Over the next six years, Frank and Eva became the parents of three children; life was good for the Newman family.

    However, in 1970, the family was ripped a part by the death of Frank while serving in the Vietnam War.

    Frank began his military career as an enlisted soldier and ended it as a Lieutenant colonel.

    Frank Newman’s last assignment was at the International Officer School as the Czech Republic adviser at Maxwell Air Force Base. After he passed, Eva decided to stay in Montgomery and raise her children.

    She felt like she needed to learn more about the history in her new home in the South, so she began volunteering at the White House of Confederacy.

    “When Frank died, I absolutely had to influence the young people about patriotism and the honor of in our flag and what it means to us as a nation,” she said. “That’s what I started doing and that is what I do to this day.”

    During a normal day at the White House of Confederacy, Eva was in for a surprise that would propel her back into her Czech Republic nationality.

    “I never believed the day would come that I would have Czech Republic officers walk in… Frank never got to finish what he started so I had to sponsor and teach these Czechs,” said Eva Newman.

    In 2002, she became a Goodwill Ambassador, a program created by IOS to help support international officers and their families while they are attending school at Air University. Over the next 9 years she sponsored a total of 55 Czech Republic International Officer School students.

    Newman’s dedication and service was officially recognized Aug. 8, 2015, when she was awarded the Czech Republic Medal of Merit by the Czech Republic Defense Attaché Brig. Gen. Jiri Verner.

    Eva Newman was recognized for her love and loyalty to her mother country through the work she did at IOS, however, Eva never forgot the blood and tears that went into immigrating to America and the chance of a new life that it gave her.

    “She has earned the right to become an American, she really gives you a sense of patriotism, when you think of someone who is from a different country and is more patriotic than you, it really stirs you up inside,” said Henry Howard, White House of Confederacy tour guide.

    Newman’s love and pride for her country shows through to the people she meets and reminds others what it means to be a proud American.

    “We gave everything, our heritage and our language for an intangible called freedom and it is my upmost obligation to give until my last breath to a nation that so graciously adopted us,” said Newman.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 01.25.2016
    Date Posted: 01.25.2016 11:05
    Story ID: 186951
    Location: MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA, US

    Web Views: 36
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN