Andrew OerkeAndrew Oerke traveled the globe as a pioneer in the Peace Corps, a founder of microloan nonprofits, a restorer of endangered ocean waters, and as a poet. The son and grandson of Lutheran ministers who established churches across Minnesota and Wisconsn, Oerke eschewed the family business but maintained a pastoral sense of empathy, particularly through his writing. Oerke, whose poetry appeared in publications such as the New Yorker, died recently of a heart ailment exacerbated by a long struggle with the effects of malaria contracted years earlier in Africa. He was 80. U.S. Poet Laureate and Pulitzer Prize-winner William Meredith once wrote of him: Andrew Oerke's work is a window on the world, a world seen through the compassionate eyes of a fellow pilgrim. In 2005, Oerke was given the United Nations Award for Literature by the U.N. Society for Writers and Artists for his books African Stiltdancer and San Miguel de Allende. Born in La Crosse, Wis., Oerke graduated from high school in Emmons, Minn., began his college studies at St. Olaf in Northfield in 1948, and won a Fulbright scholarship to Freie Universitat of Berlin, and scholarships to University of Salamanca, Spain, the University of Mexico and Baylor University in Texas. Oerke taught English literature at Bemidji State University after working on his Ph.D. at Iowa State University. Read More Read Less
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