Reunited with his family he led a life of an engineer, entrepreneur and traveled the world making up for the lost opportunities not available to the citizens of the Soviet regime.
In later years he became a prolific writer dedicating his free time to writing autobiographical books and philanthropic pursuits in support of the forgotten and underprivileged Siberian Jewry.
Born in the Soviet Union at the end of the depression into a family of Jewish Hungarian immigrants, Vladimir’s childhood was scarred, at the age of three, by the arrest of his father Ferenc in 1938, along with millions of other innocent people during Stalin’s Great Purge.
Along with mother Regina and older brother Jozef, Vladimir endured the stigma of being the family of the "Enemy of the State" during the Soviet regime.
When the Soviet regime collapsed, the invading Nazis imposed their own order in Belarus, life for the Jewish population of Bobruysk saw a traumatic change.
Their third child Edwin, was born after the family moved to Togliatti where Vladimir became the head of Installation and Maintenance of Machinery department of the LADA VAZ - Volga Automobile Plant, supervising 1,500 employees.
These historical documents inspired him to write several books starting with "My Father’s Letters from Siberian Prison,"[3] which were purchased by many Hungarian high school libraries and became part of the curriculum.
[7] Dedicated to the memory of his parents, Vladimir has written this book in which he invites the reader to visit a Hungarian village at the turn of the 20th century, to spend time together with him during his school days, as well as through the German occupation of Bobruysk (Belarus); to learn about the ways he became an engineer in Siberia – in the university city of Tomsk, to follow the stages of the challenging construction and production at the "Lada-VAZ" – the Volga Automobile Plant in Togliatti.