He became a sergeant navigator in a Short Stirling bomber. On a 1941 mission he was shot down close to the German/Dutch border, was twice captured and twice escaped. Following his second capture he was tortured by the Gestapo. He was repatriated by the Germans on health grounds in 1944.[2]
He was discharged in 1947 and decorated for his persistence as an escaper. He went to live in South Africa and wrote a book-length account of his adventures, Boldness Be My Friend, which he said he wrote to exorcise the "demons" which plagued him after the war.[2] The book was brought to Anthony Blond's London literary agency in 1952 by Vanora McIndoe, Sir Archibald's daughter. After being read and approved by Blond's colleague Isabel Colegate, it was published in 1953 by Paul Elek, who paid a £600 advance.[1]
Still fighting his demons, in 1954 he drove "17,500 miles" from the North Cape in Norway to the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa, in an Austin A90 Westminster.[3] He then wrote a book, Cape Cold to Cape Hot (1956), about his adventures en route, "which came close to killing him".[2][4]
He later undertook similar endurance drives in North America for the Rootes Group and embarked on further adventures in Antarctica, where he fell in the sea at McMurdo Sound.[4]
In 1964, following the advice of his colleague Leonard Cheshire, VC, that he should "do something useful with his life instead of trying to repeatedly kill himself", Pape went to Papua New Guinea where he established a Leonard Cheshire Home for "mentally handicapped native children".[4][5][6] He also worked as Principal Publications Officer of the Australian administration's Department of Information.[7] He would spend nine and a half years in Papua New Guinea and, while there, he met and married Stephanie Prouting, a solicitor working for the Public Solicitor's Office in Port Moresby.[8]
In June 1965, Pape returned his Military Medal to the Queen in protest at The Beatles having been awarded the MBE. He was quoted as saying: "The Beatles' MBE reeks of mawkish, bizarre effrontery to our wartime endeavours."[9][10]
He died in Canberra, Australia in 1995 at the age of 79.