I almost started writing this post with the words, "My native Germany ...", however, after more than sixty years of having lived just about everywhere else but Germany — and proudly calling myself an Australian despite this country doing its level best to throw away everything that had once made it the best country in the world and embracing everything that will turn it into one of the worst; think diversity, multiculturalism, the Labor Party, and the list goes on — I am as much a native of Germany as I am of the planet Mars.
Anyway, as I was not going to write, my native Germany is a nation of specialists. It's a place where even qualifications have qualifications. Where you can study for seven years to become a window cleaner. That's fine but it left me, who'd been tossed out on the street after just eight years of primary school, nowhere to go but to Australia where I could reinvent myself and become anything I wanted to become.
I didn't need a vocational guidance councellor to tell me what I wanted to beome. In my native Germany I already had my commercial training with an insurance company and followed this up by being paymaster for a large construction company that built autobahns all over Germany.
Lacking any higher education I would never have been dull enough to become an accountant in my native Germany, but after only two years in Australia I became an accountant in South-West Africa, and then an audit clerk in a firm of chartered accountants in New Guinea and then, also in New Guinea, the senior accountant on what was at the time the biggest construction project in the world. Four years later I was chief accountant for a French oil company in Burma, and many years later, financial controller for a firm of commodity traders in Saudi Arabia.
Despite the unbroken column of "sehr gut" — except for religion which already then I thought was irrelevant, and Naturlehre which I knew was irrelevant after the teacher had answered my question "Why do I have a belly button" with an evasive "So your stomach can breathe" — in my native Germany they'd still look at my "only" primary school certificate even today and think, "This chap is only good enough for lion taming".







