Hans Gerhard Fürth was born to
Jewish parents, Hugo and Jula Fürth, in
Austria and baptized into the
Catholic Church at the age of 16. As a child, he was trained in
classical piano and active in
Austrian Boy Scouts. Shortly after the 1938
Anschluss of Austria into Germany, Furth fled the
Nazis; first to
Croatia, as a dependent of his mother who had married an elderly Croatian acquaintance to gain entry into that country. Upon achieving the age of majority, Fürth would have been evicted from Croatia, so he obtained a visa to travel to Belgium. En route, he jumped off his train in
Switzerland, and lived illegally with a Swiss family. From Switzerland, he obtained a visa to travel to the
United Kingdom by volunteering to work in the
Australian
outback. After arriving in England, he abandoned the Australian venture, and lived with a professor of music. He graduated from the
Royal Academy of Music in
London in 1940 hoping to become a
concert pianist and, after being interned as an
enemy alien, performed at
internment camps for
Jewish refugees in various locations throughout
Britain (pictured), as well as
Hutchinson Camp on the
Isle of Man. He spent the next decade as a monk in the
Carthusian order and then emigrated to
North America. ==Career in North America==