Veneris had served in the South
Pacific during
World War II and said he re-enlisted because he couldn't find anything else to do and hoped Army life would provide security.
Defection At the end of military action, all POWs in Korea were given the option by their captors of returning to their home countries or remaining with the Chinese. Veneris elected to stay in China since during his time in the prison camp he was treated well and learned Chinese. He was promised employment and education if he remained in China, so he decided to remain.
Life in China Veneris and fellow former
POW Howard Gayle Adams stayed in Jinan through the turmoil of the
Cultural Revolution, sheltered by their factory co-workers and an announcement by Premier
Zhou Enlai calling them "international freedom fighters". In 1963, he was allowed to study at the
People's University of China. After graduation, Veneris returned to the same factory. His first Chinese wife died from lung disease after ten years of marriage. In 1967, Veneris married a Chinese divorcee. Together they had 2 children. In 1977, he became an English professor at
Shandong University. Veneris returned to the United States twice, first in 1976 to celebrate the
Bicentennial and again sometime in the late 1990s. He was one of the subjects of the 2005
documentary They Chose China which was directed by Shui-Bo Wang and produced by the
National Film Board of Canada. ==Personal life==