Ducal splendour and daily deprivation

On my tenth birthday -wearing my pearlsInline image 1

A life – This is the eighth instalment of an autobiographical series before I revert to my normal blogs)

There was a legend that there were no birds in Belsen, that they had fled this dreadful place. That I don’t remember, but I do remember the strange energy, a sense of shifting sands, and unknown menace. The Germans seemed hostile (understandably), and refugees from East Germany trudging past were distant, pre-occupied with despair.

And as well as the British Army, there were also posse’s of Yugoslav soldiers in navy-blue greatcoats, armed with rifles, who constantly patrolled the place, guarding it, though I never discovered what they were guarding it from or why they were there. They had a reputation for being dangerous and unpredictable, and every now and then, one would shoot himself or a comrade.

And our succession of German maids left constantly, Helena after stealing tea, Elsa taking nylon stockings, Hilde our meagre meat ration, and finally Hannah who left to get married;  Kuntz, the big taciturn batman, suddenly disappeared in a rush of joy, when he had word that his wife who he had thought was dead, had surfaced in Berlin.

Behind our house was a pine forest, rich in bilberries, where the local Germans would come in autumn to pick this source of food in a starving land, and beyond that, a mile down the road, was the DP’s camp. Displaced Persons were the survivors of Belsen, still waiting for passports or permission to make their way back home across the bomb- blasted continent to find their scattered families.

One fine summer’s day they torched the pine forest, and our homes were in danger until the fire was checked. The DP’s had set the forest on fire as a desperate gesture to show their frustration and get some action from post -war authorities. I don’t think it made the slightest difference to their plight.

The Allied authorities were dealing with twenty million people trying to get back to homes and families after the war. Many had no homes, families or countries to go to. The problem grew under our eyes, as refugees, another two million in the next four years, fled from Eastern Europe and the Soviets. They came straggling down Hoppenstadt Strasse carrying bulging bundles wrapped in blankets on the end of sticks hoisted over their shoulders like pictures of Dick Whittington.

Unlike him they were not seeking streets paved with gold, but something more precious – freedom. Sometimes they were found sleeping or sheltering in our empty garages, or taking desperately needed clothes from the washing line, and were hurried on or arrested by the implacable Military Police.

The currency was changed from the cardboard money we knew, to the new currency, the Deutschemark. This triggered the months of tension, which even we children were conscious of, when Russia began the process of harassing and then blocking all traffic in and out of Berlin, by road or river. This finally culminated in the historic Berlin Airlift to save the citizens of West Berlin.

Stalin‘s intention was to starve and freeze the Berliners into submission and oust the Allies. He failed, thanks to the extraordinary air-lift when planes flew in and out of Berlin every four minutes bringing in food and fuel for over two million Berliners, and World War Three was averted.

The conquerors shared the hardships of ravaged Europe. Our meagre rations were delivered once a fortnight in a cardboard box. I remember my stepmother looking at a small pile of cucumbers, our vegetables for the next two weeks, and asking in despair what we could do with cucumbers for a fortnight. We only ever had revolting, evaporated, tinned milk to drink for there was no organised milk supply and no pasteurised herds.

Every night for two hours from six till eight the electricity was switched off to save power, and we sat in the darkness playing games like twenty questions to while away the pitch- black hours. There were no candles. Our puppy seized the darkness as an opportunity to chew the rubbers/erasers my father used for the crossword.

The Daily Telegraph crossword was one of the most popular diversions in the regiment, and I achieved minor fame and popularity in the officers mess then. Whoever wrote the crosswords had a penchant for using ‘Alice in Wonderland’ and ‘The Wind in the Willows’ for clues, and a phone call would come from the mess for me. This would then put my parents on to the clue if they hadn’t already. In retrospect, I think there must have been a daily sweepstake for first past the post, judging by the competition to get the thing finished.

The officers mess was the Duke of Hanover’s palace, a little way out of Belsen, and splendid it was. (What had he made of the concentration camp on his doorstep?) We went there occasionally for drinks before lunch on Sundays, and for the children’s Christmas Party, when we played musical chairs in the ballroom under the shining chandeliers, slipping and sliding on the marble floor while little gilt chairs were subtracted from the circle. Then, when the party ended, like nearly every other party of my childhood, we danced Sir Roger de Coverley, with all the parents standing round clapping in time to the music.

Some weekends, we drove out to the Duke’s hunting lodge in the middle of a pine forest, where deer darted out onto the road, and wild boar lurked. This gemutlich little pile was now the officers club, run by a friendly middle-aged German couple. Had they always been the stewards of this place, I wondered later? Did they transfer their loyalties to their new employers in the interim, and hold the place in trust until the Duke regained his ancestral homes – if indeed he did?

Anyway, their speciality were delicious, lavishly sugared doughnuts, stuffed with butter icing. The glory of these doughnuts in a life of total gastronomic deprivation and war-time rations was utterly memorable (Did the Duke enjoy them too, before and after us?) My parents managed to get some of these dough-nuts for my tenth birthday.

It was the first birthday I had ever spent with my father, who went off to war when I was ten -months- old and my mother was pregnant with my sister. The previous year when I was nine, we were still in Yorkshire while he was battling his way to Belsen. He seemed more excited than I. The night before, when I went into the garden to say good-night to them, sitting in wicker chairs with their gin and tonics, I was allowed to stay up beyond seven o’clock, so my father could give me my birthday presents.

He was too excited to wait until morning. He gave me a string of pearls and a black fountain pen with a gold clip and nib. When the next birthday came, it was different, for he and my stepmother had a baby son, and my sister and I were rather a chore by then.

My stepmother had learned German and French at school, and rather fancied herself as a linguist. So she seized this opportunity to try to turn us into cosmopolitans too. Thanks to the puppy we’d become friendly with the local German vet from Bergen village five miles away. His twenty year old  daughter Suzanne became our German teacher, and she came every Sunday afternoon to teach us nouns and verbs and the endless der, die, and das, to be sorted through and applied to each noun.

She left us with piles of homework to do, and extraordinary medieval -looking text books with print that looked like something straight off Caxton’s press. The print was extra black, and the S’s and F’s and W’s and V’s expressly designed to trick baffled and ignorant nine and ten- year- olds.

She also told us how lucky we were, because her younger sister Hildegarde and brother Carljurgen had no paper and pencil at school, just broken, leftover stubs, and had to write in the margins of printed books when they wrote answers and essays. I didn’t always feel lucky. Her father, Herr Muller, called regularly, whether our various dogs needed his attentions or not. He regarded my parents as friends – or at any rate, their gin bottle.

In return for the generous helpings of gin he sipped – unobtainable in civilian Germany – he would bring my stepmother a specimen of the many extraordinary varieties of exotic orchids which he grew. I thought they were awful, not like flowers at all, but fantastically petalled and bearded and contorted in strange fluorescent pinks and acid greens and sharp yellows. He would arrive bearing this gift, and bend over my stepmother’s hand, clicking his heels together and bowing, in a strange old- fashioned Prussian ritual.

After some months of laborious social intercourse – his English becoming more broken with the quantity of gin consumed – we were invited to his house in Bergen to meet his wife. We had tea on exquisite Meissen china, but because they could get sugar at the time, but no flour, we had no cakes or biscuits, but dipped sour apples from the garden into the sugar, as a substitute for cake. The grownups managed with a cup of tea.

The vet’s wife was a fair-haired, washed-out, melancholy woman. When I exclaimed enthusiastically over the beautiful porcelain, she told me that they’d hidden it with all their other treasures in a hole under the cellar, so the invaders wouldn’t loot them. Even as a child I thought this was rather tactless. Invaders? Was she talking about us?

She also reminisced about the awfulness of the war to my parents, she and her daughter Suzanne, our teacher, describing the anguish of seeing their poor, wounded soldiers in blood- stained bandages in passing trains. Back home I heard my stepmother snort indignantly: “If they saw those trains, how come they didn’t know about the others!”

Since I didn’t understand what she was talking about it stuck in my mind, but some years later, I realised she was referring to the trains of the condemned heading for Belsen. In her book “The Children’s House of Belsen,” Hetty Verolme describes the platform at Celle lined with thirty SS men and Alsation dogs straining at the leash as her train pulled in from Holland. They then, eleven hundred young and old, sick and exhausted, hungry and thirsty, straggled the fifteen  miles or so to Belsen on foot and apparently unobserved by the local population, who denied all knowledge of the camp when the British authorities discovered it and questioned them.

But the friendship limped on. One summer’s day, Hildegarde and Carljurgen, the one with long fair plaits, and wearing a dirndl skirt and long, white, lace socks, the other, just as fair haired and blue-eyed, wearing leather lederhosen, long, white lace socks and black boots, took me driving in their farm cart, rumbling and swaying down narrow farm tracks between fields of blazing blue and purple lupins shimmering with tiny butterflies in the sunshine. Carljurgen let me hold the reins. He avoided that other field, where there were miles and miles of burnt -out German tanks my parents had shown us one dank winter’s day.

My father said I was learning to ride like a Prussian officer. The army stables were run by an aristocratic Prussian officer- not, of course, using his military rank now – but known merely as Herr Freiser. He took great pains with me, never guessing that I was terrified of the huge jumps he put me over. Fear runs along the reins, I would remember from reading Black Beauty, and hope I was bluffing the huge, far -too- big military horse I rode regularly. A big brushwood jump was one thing, but the fence on the wall was too much, and I came off every time, never knowing what had happened until it was all over.

Herr Freiser’s blonde, classically beautiful Prussian wife regarded me with loathing, as though I was a pet cockroach her husband was training. But I decided she hated all English, and was probably still a Nazi lady. They lived in the groom’s quarters by the stables, and were lucky to have a job and a home in their ruined country, though she obviously didn’t think so.

Their gilded furniture, rescued no doubt from their Prussian schloss, was piled right up to the ceiling in one room, while they lived in the other. Herr Freiser seemed as frightened of her as I was. She would stalk through the stable yard in her immaculate jodhpurs, her glare like a blue flame from her icy blue eyes.

To be continued –  back to England

Food for threadbare gourmets

Having eaten a lot of curry in hot climates like tropical Malaya and humid Hongkong, it seems quite normal to me to eat it in our hot humid summer days at the moment. Curry Tiffin on Sunday in the Officers Mess was a hallowed ritual, and I used to love the choice of beef, lamb or chicken curry, gently simmering in large casseroles on the long polished table. These days, since I shattered my leg, and am less interested in standing for hours over a hot stove, I’m always looking for short cuts and now use some quick ingredients I’ve shunned in the past.

So I used both ready-made chopped garlic from a jar and also ginger for this old recipe, and it worked like a treat. I mostly do vegetarian curries these days… chop an onion and a couple of tomatoes, and in a blender whizz them to a paste with two cups of water, a dessert spoonful of prepared garlic, half a dessert spoon of ginger, several dessert spoons of tomato paste, a dessert spoon of curry powder, a good sprinkling of turmeric and half a teaspoon of stevia powder, or brown sugar.

Tip half this mixture into a pan with half a cup of cream, and let it boil and reduce while five or six chopped mushrooms are gently frying in butter or olive oil.

Combine the two when the curry mixture has thickened, and add some ginger marmalade to soften the sharpness if necessary. Hard boil an egg and chop it over the curry. This amount serves one greedy person, and I ate it with chopped steamed cauliflower instead of rice. (I try to avoid rice since I read that it contains two to three times the amount of carbohydrate than bread. I would also eat this mix with lentils)

The other half of the curry sauce I freeze for another time, when I would curry cauliflower and peas instead of mushrooms, or even some chicken.

Food for thought

Nobody is superior, nobody is inferior, but nobody is equal either. People are simply unique, incomparable. You are you, I am I.                                                                         Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh  Indian guru

Some facts about post-war Bergen-Belsen for those who may be interested…

Adults didn’t tell us much back then… so I’ve done a lot of research to try to understand what was going on around me then. First of all, I discovered, Belsen became the holding place for DP’s from many other camps, who were unable to return to their homes behind the Iron Curtain. The facilities were the best, since they were accommodated in a Panzer training depot next door to the camp, and we all know that Hitler’s military got the best!

But many DP’s were not only depressed and traumatised but hostile to all authority after their experiences, and not all refugees were upright, honest pillars of the community – there was riff-raff as well. They were very difficult for the British to deal with – who were also tired and traumatised after six years of war, and their own social problems like returning to families who hadn’t seen them for six years.

The Jewish leader in the camp, Josef Rosensaft, a charismatic Belsen survivor, would only communicate with the frustrated British in Yiddish, even though he was a perfectly fluent English- speaker. He agitated for everyone to go to Palestine, as it then was, instead of trying to find other countries. (The Americans were still only taking in tiny numbers of refugees or displaced persons) And the British were constrained by the Mandate, (a responsibility given them after World War 1) and were not allowed to let unlimited refugees into Palestine.

The Arabs – rightly as it turns out -were concerned about their place in their own country. After the Balfour declaration, a quota of Jews had trickled in, but this didn’t bother them, when it was two thousand a year. Come Hitler, numbers jumped to 60,000 the first year and continued to rise, until the Arabs were fearful they would be outnumbered (they were right to be fearful). The British were caught in the middle of this.

Also, Europe was in chaos at the time, and the British Zone had very little farming land, so food was a real problem for the British authorities, both in England and in their zone of Germany. Labour Prime Minister Attlee considered at one stage reducing the ration for the English to 1700 calories a day, they were so up against it, with paying off the huge loans to the Americans for Lend lease – which they finally paid with all the interest in 2006.

This was also the time of the changing of the currency and the Berlin Airlift. At the same time the Black Market was a nightmare for the authorities, and it was discovered that Belsen was the biggest hub of the Black Market. British Lieutenant General Sir Frederick Morgan, chief of “displaced persons” operations for UNRRA, recorded in his memoir that :‘under Zionist auspices there had been organized at Belsen a vast illegitimate trading organization with worldwide ramifications and dealing in a wide range of goods, principally precious metals and stones. A money market dealt with a wide range of currencies.’

The British wanted to go in and search the place, and stamp it out. But Josef Rosensaft held them off for nine months, stalling over the idea of German police or British soldiers trespassing on their hallowed refuge after all they’d been through with the Nazis. By the time the British got into the camp, the evidence had been hidden or destroyed. All these events built up real hostility and dislike, which is why, I suppose, so many people, unable to distinguish between the ‘goodies and the baddies’, became unsympathetic to the D.P.s.

Ninety-six young English medical students volunteered to help the doctors and nurses coping with the disaster they had found in 1945. In the two months following, 14,000 more people died, too far gone from disease and starvation to save. Many could literally no longer stomach food, and many solutions were tried. Apart from the trials of Kramer, his infamous women guards/tormentors, and a dozen or so other guards from Auschwitz as well as Belsen, by the British, no-one else was ever held to account by the Germans for the deaths of more than 50,000 people.

29 Comments

Filed under army, birds, british soldiers, cookery/recipes, history, life and death, life/style, military history, The Sound of Water, Thoughts on writing and life, uncategorised, Uncategorized, world war two

29 responses to “Ducal splendour and daily deprivation

  1. Your writing can’t get much better than this. I am impressed with your ability to describe so graphically the horrific experiences you had as a young girl. You should consider publishing your posts as a book.
    I have no doubt most people living close to the concentration camps must have known about their existence. As a matter of fact, in contrast to the so-called death camps in eastern Nazi occupied Europe, the hundreds of various camps in Germany were well advertised from 1933 on by the government controlled newspapers as places to receive all the ‘undesirable’ elements harmful to the system (including socialist, communists, JWs, homosexuals, and common criminals). The propaganda machine’s aim was to scare people into submission with a warning to ‘behave’ . I hope, Valerie, that you do not think that I am trying to excuse these people for turning a blind eye to the atrocities. It was merely providing background information and an explanation for the puzzle that hardly anybody had the guts to speak out against the evil of all evils.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Thank you Peter, for your wonderful response to this week’s instalment… I agree with everything you say…I have often wondered if I would have had the guts to speak up if I had children who might suffer… but have also been cheered to learn of Wermacht officers who refused to carry out orders for atrocities, and who were safely transferred with no penalties… and of the village in Holland and one in France where the villagers took in a family of Jews each and fed and hid and supported them throughout the war…(I wrote a blog about them some time ago) sometimes the human spirit rises above evil and shines a light in dark places…

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Another post both fascinating and horrific in its detail. I echo the comments made by others in this and other posts, that this would make an amazing book.
    I am pleased that there was some beauty in your life and that you can look back and still find some good things amongst the horror. I have the Paul Coelho quotation form your last post in my head. It is now in my special book of words that please me. Thank you. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    • Sally, thank you for the beautiful things you say… it is so cheering to know that you and others are ‘enjoying’ this series….
      Yes, I loved the Paul Coelho quote too.. it makes such a difference to have words like that in the memory!

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  3. Nobody is superior, nobody is inferior, but nobody is equal either. People are simply unique, incomparable. You are you, I am I. Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh Indian guru—
    I am crying. I am so sad for everyone and everything and for that hideous machine some delight in call WAR!
    I have so much I want to write—about how beautifully you write, how amazing your life is, what experiences you had and for the gift you are giving each one of us…this story.
    I also thank the heavens for your friendship!
    Love you!

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda, thank you more than I can say for your wonderful words of loving encouragement… as you would know, words like yours are precious, and I love feeling so appreciated !!!!
      Letter on the skids dear friend, much love XXXX

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  4. I don’t really feel qualified in any way to comment on this incredible piece. It is just unimaginable. All of it. And yet you describe it all so well so that I might get a small glimpse of another world. I have no doubt there are things almost as horrific happening in the world now and it makes me wonder how we can become so morally corrupt. I too love the Indian quotation. We need to hear from you Valerie, lest we forget. x

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    • Ardys thank you for your thoughtful comment, which it would be easy to write an essay around !… I wrote to a friend yesterday that I sometimes feel that hope is as much a crutch as fundamental religion, and yet in the end, it is hope that keeps us going through all the things that happen in our world – and maybe prayer – and again, I cling to the studies which seem to prove that those who are prayed for in hospital improve faster than others even when they don’t know they’re being prayed for…
      Thank you so much for your lovely encouragement for me in writing this series

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  5. Thank you for this, Valerie. I’ll have to go back and read what you wrote prior to this, as I’ve missed too many of the posts. That’s also a wonderful quote that you included, one that’s so very true.

    In January, I heard from someone I hadn’t heard from in much too long and that person had some wonderful news. Just wanted you to know how happy it made me.

    janet

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  6. Angela

    Thankyou thankyou Valerie for this incredible account….I’ve been following since you began a few weeks ago & each time I’m utterly riveted & can’t wait for the next one. So interesting to hear about those years after the war…we tend only to focus on the relief everyone must have felt when it was over at last, not realising all the mass of humanity that was left devastated, not even counting the physical damage to Britain & Europe. And then there’s one little girl who’s world has also been turned upside down & struggling to understand that as well as the devastation & horror around her.
    My heart goes out to the child that was you and to the lost & bewildered children all around you.
    Angela

    Liked by 1 person

    • Dear Angela, I can’t tell you what pleasure your wonderful comment gave me… it’s wonderful to know that you have the response and thoughts you describe, and it gives me such encouragement.
      What perceptive thoughts about the chaos and misery after the war, which so many people forget or are unaware of… and it is SO heart warming to know that after all these years, someone cares about that struggling child, and so many others, thank you, dear friend.

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  7. Kuntz, the big taciturn batman, suddenly disappeared in a rush of joy, when he had word that his wife who he had thought was dead, had surfaced in Berlin.
    What a lovely joyous moment, amongst all the sorrow. Even at a distance of years and as a complete stranger, it lifts the spirits.

    Your tenth birthday sounds wonderful, for your father as well as you. There’s joy in giving as well as receiving, after a period of deprivation.

    I can’t quite process your post-war historical account. (You’re wonderfully well-informed, though. Very shame-making for those of us who slept and skived through school history lessons.) All the suffering and in-fighting is… indigestible to the mind. One feels almost as helpless as the personnel who were actually trying to deal with it.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Dear Alex, what a wonderful comment – on so many levels – including your appreciation of Kuntz’s joy, and the unexpected treat of my father being so involved in my birthday…
      The history of those times is hard and heart-breaking and often much worse than I could describe… my step- uncle for example,being the officer in charge of a large group of Russian POW;s who were being returned to the Soviet authorities, and as the British drove their trucks away from the Austrian border, my uncle heard the shooting beginning….
      Man’s inhumanity to man still manifests in millions of ways not least in Syria, Myanmar, Muslim treatment of women etc etc

      Liked by 1 person

      • P.S. have you tried frozen blocks of ginger in curry? Available in lots of supermarkets and Asian greengrocers now, and they’re fantastic. It’s such a faff peeling and grating fresh ginger! Also great for making super-strong ginger tea, very good for colds and flu.

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      • Thank you for this Alex… we live in the back of beyond, and have to make the most of what’s available… sounds a wonderful idea… I have to admit that I’ve given in over ginger, and make do with the jars of prepared chopped ginger these days… I use the ginger marmalade trick not as a substitute for ginger, but as a quick way of sweetening or taking the edge off the sharpness in these hastily prepared curries….

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      • The marmalade sounds like a uniquely delicious ingredient! …although I fear that it would never last long enough to make it into a curry in my house. Like with cashews, I would have scoffed them, and ginger marmalade (tried it, loved it) long before the moment they were due to be added in a recipe.

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  8. Liz

    Thank you for taking the trouble to add the fascinating historical information to your ever-engaging biography. Are there particular books/sources you would recommend for people like me who do not know nearly enough about these post-war events and would like to put that right?

    Liked by 1 person

    • Dear Liz, thank you for your thoughtful comment as ever. I’ve been thinking about your request for information about post war histories and realise that it’s hard to find them… I have built up a picture from various sources, which include books like Anthony Beevor and Artemis Cooper’s book on Paris after the war, Artemis Cooper’s book on ‘Cairo during the War,’ and a good book by William I HItchcock called ‘Liberation,’ which dispels the myth of happy dancing crowds throwing flowers, and drinking wine, and discusses the destruction of Europe, including the wanton rape and pillage of East Germany by the Red Army… terrible times… biographies of people like dancer Lydia Lopokova – married to economist Maynard Keynes gave me information, memories of people I’ve known like the Austrian in the Russian Zone who starved to because the Russians took all the food and crops to Russia, as also a novel called Death in Danzig… can’t tell you the author as I’ve given the book to a friend, Apart from that, Google often filled in gaps or dates… though here one has to be discriminating about sources… I was puzzled by a very sympathetic assessment of Belsen, in which Kramer and the sadistic guards were explained as good people overwhelmed by numbers until I looked at the name of the writer and saw it was a German name.. Mostly I’ve learned from scraps of information gathered from here and there, as you will have gathered from this pitiful list !!!

      Liked by 1 person

      • Liz

        Thank you so much for taking this trouble to write such a comprehensive and helpful reply Valerie – the complete opposite of ‘pitiful’! You are so right about needing to be careful with sources – I find with any history book/website etc that it is essential to understand the perspective and background of the writer. I have managed to reserve a library copy of Death in Danzig, which looks fascinating. And I completely see what you mean about piecing together a set of information from multiple sources – I will start to pay more attention to the wider ways in which reading can help build knowledge. 🙂

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  9. Dearest Valerie,

    Busy-ness and a writer’s conference has kept me from reading your wonderful post until now.
    You paint such vivid pictures of the people you met in your youth. I can’t classify this week’s installment as entertaining, but definitely informative. As you know this is history that’s near and not so dear to me. It doesn’t surprise me that Herr and Frau Mullen claimed they didn’t know about the trains and camps. It must’ve been a terrifying time.
    Winter is up and down here. One day our temps are springlike and the next it can be frigid. Where we are we’ve managed to dodge the snow bullet for the most part while 100 miles or less from us are getting two to four inches.

    Thank you as always for being so generous with your stories. Love to you and himself. I miss the chats but understand.

    Shalom and hugs,

    Rochelle

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    • PS I see there was supposed to be an image. It’s not showing up.

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    • Good morning Rochelle,
      Lovely to hear from you and thank you for all you say…re your observations about Herr and Frau Muller, I said in an earlier comment that
      I’ve often wondered if I would have had the guts to speak up if I had children who might suffer… but have also been cheered to learn of Wermacht officers who refused to carry out orders for atrocities, and who were safely transferred with no penalties… and of the village in Holland and one in France where the villagers took in a family of Jews each and fed and hid and supported them throughout the war…(I wrote a blog about them some time ago) sometimes the human spirit rises above evil and shines a light in dark places…
      We are trying to do all sorts of things to this place, and dodging rain and wind ad the tail end of a cyclone which holds us up and makes it more complicated… won’t explain -would take too long… however he sends his love of course…!!
      Love, Valerie

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  10. The situation was horrific Valerie and you bring it to life in such a vivid way with the details of the memories, such as the sour apples dipped in sugar and the depiction of what must have been a tense friendship – the history you provide is interesting but your memories bring it to life.

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  11. Thank you Andrea, I love your observations… and it’s so good to know that these memories seem as vivid to others as they are in my memory

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  12. Brilliant as ever, Valerie – I want to savour all this in a book during my reading time. Also love the research angle, very interesting and increasing the wanting to reflect. Just wonderful.

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