Tante Gertraut – May 20, 1918-August 25, 2013
Andreas and I had been dating for a few
months when Tante Gertraut and I met for the first time in the autumn of 1975. His mother Ruth had died ten years earlier, and TG (as we called her) had been a second mother
to him. She had also been a mother to him when he was only two years old, and recovering
from an enlarged heart. It was thought that the mountain air would help, and it may have been that which saved his life. Because of the aftermath of WWII, his parents had been unable to join him for six months or so, and he had stayed with TG when she worked as a cook at Hirschegg, a
ski resort in the
Austrian Alps.
As we chatted over schnitzel and salad on the first day that we met, she
told me that there were many kinds of Mennonites. There were the Russian
Mennonites, and there were the German Mennonites. There were the ones who made
this kind of soup and the ones who made that kind of soup. Her kind, she
assured me, was the very best kind of Mennonite: The Dancing Mennonites. As Andreas and I were driving home, I asked
him about this. Apparently, I had misheard. It was: Danzig Mennonites. From Danzig. Not dancing.
Years later, I popped into her home on
34th Ave. in Vancouver, unannounced, and found her seated at her
kitchen table with several of her neighbours, recent immigrants from India. This
was not unusual. On this day, she had a set of writing exercise books out on
the table, the kind where each page was dedicated to a single letter. You
probably remember those kinds of scribblers: three lines, with the middle line
dotted to make it easier to distinguish an upper case letter from a lower case
letter. Her neighbours may not have been literate in English, but TG was determined
that they would pass their citizenship exams. They were halfway through the
letter O.
At the memorial ceremony, Kuldip, who had
known TG ever since she was a child, said that Tante Gertraut was the most important person in her life.
This doesn’t surprise me. There are many who feel that way. In the year that TG lived with us after her hip
fractures, we had dinner most Wednesdays with a friend and her nephew, Sean, who she and her husband were fostering. Sean had not had an easy life up till then. After TG met him for
the first time, she summed him up in seven words: He’s a good boy. Hungry for love. Every time Sean
visited, he went right up to her and took her hand in his, before greeting anyone else.
The bond between the two of them was as visible as light.
As it turned out, although she may not have
been a dancing Mennonite, she was
something of a black sheep Mennonite,
and no longer attended regular church services. This didn’t mean that
she wasn’t spiritual. When Andreas & I were caring for her in the year that
she lived with us, we took turns sleeping on a pallet on the floor beside her
bed. Often in the darkest part of the night, she would be anxious and fretful.
Often, she would recite the 23rd psalm. She recited it in German,
which I cannot do, but I do know the words well in English:
Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil, for You are with me; Your rod and
Your staff, they comfort me.
During the year that she
lived with us, I had the privilege of getting to know – much better than before
– Ushi, Trudi, and Karin, her nieces and friends. They came and stayed with us
for days and weeks in order to give us a break. So did our daughter, Sabrina,
who lived in Victoria at the time. So did Andreas’ sisters. Our daughter Vanessa
still lived with us then, and she too was part of the ongoing care. So were our
friends. Andreas and I could not have done it without them.
I often think of the trek
that Gertraut and her family took near the end of the war, with dozens of
others from their farm. I heard more stories about it at the memorial. The
menfolk in the family had all been away, and the women had been running the
farm. They had been forced to suddenly pack up, and to leave everything behind,
except for what could fit into a few wagons and wheelbarrows. They marched for
days in the snow, foraging for food, keeping only one day ahead of the
advancing Russian troops. Tante Gertraut packed a pistol. She and Tante Hannah
cooked by the side of the road, cooking enough to take care of all the
children, the elderly members of the family, and the women who were pregnant.
It was winter, often as cold as twenty below. It took sixty-seven days to reach
safety, and by then the first blossoms were out.
When Sabrina turned 16, it
turned out that she had the same shoe size as Tante Gertraut, and Gertraut gave
her the very same boots that she had worn on that trek. These are the boots of
courage and tenacity. SO much had happened in her life. Her father had died when she was five years old, and two
years later her mother had remarried. In one fell swoop, she had gone from
being an only child to having eight new, totally rambunctious, brothers and sisters. She then had married just
before the war, at age twenty, and within the year her husband was declared
missing at the Russian front. It would take a decade until his death would be officially
confirmed by the Red Cross. She came to Canada, to join her sisters and brothers, and pretty much functioned as indentured help on
their farms in the Fraser Valley. That was the way it was done back then. It wasn't what you might call an easy life.
After my mother died in
1984, our daughters adopted her as their new grandmother. No one could have
done it better. She taught them how to fold straw and make Xmas stars. How to carve butter into roses. How to decorate a salad with dancing radishes. They loved and adored her, and she loved and adored them right back.
Tante Gertraut, rest in
peace.
There will be a celebration
of life at our house October 12th. If you wish to join us, please
let me know. If you would like to donate in her memory, may I suggest a
donation to a care home in your own community. She received exquisite care at
Totem Lodge in Sechelt for last ten years of her life. No one could have done
better.
Thanks to cousin John for the flowers. The pink tablecloth was a gift from TG to him and his wife at the time of their wedding. The urn was handcrafted by Andreas, made out of local woods. |
PS. As I mentioned, she was renowned for her cooking. One of her recipes, for Tee Gebaek aka Linzer Cookies, is published in Mennonite Girls Can Cook.
What a beautiful tribute Sharon. I remember her loving your butter burgers and blatantly cheating at that board game...was it Ludo? Too funny and so fabulous. Thanks for this lovely post.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful post, Sharon. It just rings out with history, feeling, pragmatism, love. You have a wonderful family and I so love having you and Andreas - and your extended family and friends - in our lives even in the small way in which our lives overlap. The pictures in this piece are a treasure!
ReplyDeleteThis is the first time I've read your blog Sharon. Just loved it! I've always been intrigued by Andreas' mother, having never met her. But I heard so much about her. No one ever said a negative word, not even the super critical Schroeders! About the "dancing" Mennonites. That is a play on words we are all familiar with over here. The more conservative Mennonites have somewhat enviously labeled them as that!
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