As we wrote to each other through the
years even though I had language classes at school she taught me modern German
and I learned many words I would’ve never known had it not been for her
occasional lessons in her letter along with her news. She received technical
school training years before me in secretarial work. I went to Beauty College
after graduating from High School for manicuring training at the beginning of
1977. By April I had my diploma and license and was working already, to her amazement.
Later, I noticed that she sent letters by typing them at work!
We had so many common interests. We both
were intrigued by and loved animals. I remember receiving a sticker from Germany in one
letter which was emblazoned with Ein Herz fuer die Tiere and I knew that she noticed my interest. I collected
everything and still do. We exchanged post-cards, stamps, photographs, photos
of fashion and fashion models. Magazines were our mode of teaching each other
our native tongue. She sent me paperback novels in German which were incredibly
helpful for modern usage of German. This was after I told her about my love of
writing short stories.
March 25, 1977 marked a rite of passage
for Eva that I was never to approach myself, however. Perhaps I felt a little
left behind because she had gotten married and had never mentioned dating. We
seemed to share on so many other levels that I accepted it as a matter of
course and became pleasantly surprised that she had married at the age of
nineteen to Hans-Jurgen. She sent a photograph of them with both sets of
parents standing behind them on the church steps.
When I moved out to California three and half years later, I
found that writing to pen-pals had become almost a sideline to my new life of
autonomy. However, we did write but she was amazed that I had left home and
started a new life for myself in California.
My letters, which were sent clear up to the time of my going back home to Denver, were filled with
wonder about all my possibilities. As for herself, she worked for a bookshop
chain at that time and I think she thoroughly enjoyed it. She also wanted to
know all about my life in California.
After 1999 our communication switched over
to e-mails and we stayed connected our new way quite frequently. I started to
research castles on the internet by then so my interest in them increased and
we started sending photos electronically, back and forth. Some of them were
castles she had never seen because they were in Austria. From
her I learned about the Romantic Road in Germany which
stretches for many miles and is filled with lots of castles- the kind of which
people think are a fantasy but are completely authentic!
When I went on my grand tour of European castles
at the very end of August in summer of 2001 I made plans to meet up with her
and Hans-Jurgen in Rothenburg and I looked as forward to that meeting as I did
in seeing the castles. This wasn’t my first meeting with a pen-pal in Europe but this was definitely profound because by that
time I knew that Eva was struggling with a condition which was congenital. In Germany it is
referred to medically as CVID and is an autoimmune blood disorder- a gamma
globulin deficiency. Even though it can be genetically passed down it is very
rare and can show up at any time, internally. I remember at one point the
doctors wanted to remove her spleen.
When we met on Sunday morning (September 9th,
2001) in the town hall square
of Rothenburg, I actually
met her husband and new puppy, Sina, first and then Eva. We walked and talked
as we strolled through the amazing medieval streets of Rothenburg. This is a
walled town of Germany
which was preserved and never allowed to be modernized so when you walk through
its streets it is literally like stepping back into history. We stopped to eat
in a restaurant and talked some more about my tour. Hans Jurgen took a photo of
us together. It was almost surreal and I sensed that even Eva and Hans-Jurgen
felt that this was a rare moment in our lives. It was only two days later, when
I and my tour group arrived in Salzburg, Austria in the early evening. We all
turned on our T.V.s before we met at dinner in our hotel and saw the Twin Towers
of New York
obliterated in smoke and ash. We were all confused about what we’d seen and it was
all we talked about at dinner. Our tour guide found a newspaper with a huge
photo of the Twin
Towers half down and
another with Bin Laden’s face on the front page.
While I was alone in Munich
I took a day trip out by light rail to Nymphenburg Palace
on my own and had a blast spending the entire day exploring the vastness of
this veritable palace and the Versailles-like grounds on my own. I discovered a
building there which was made to look like a crumbling medieval church
(Magdaleninklause) and it looked so authentic it fooled me until I looked it up
on the internet. Munich’s
subway is fantastic- it’s clean and really fast, not too expensive and easy to
navigate. I never had to look at a map although they were everywhere. I had all
the photos from my trip processed there and had an album full by the time I got
home. My time in Munich and with my friends in Nuremberg is among my
fondest travel memories.
When I received the e-mail from Hans
Jurgen about Eva’s passing on the 28th of October last year- the
same day that an American tourist from Louisiana stopped a thief trying to
steal the Magna Carta at Salisbury Cathedral in Wiltshire, England- I was
devastated. To me her life was a testament to God’s good will toward all of us.
She had passed only two days before that day on the 26th which was a
little over a month past her birthday. I thought of the birthday card I had
sent her by regular mail and realized that it was possible that she never saw
it.
Eva's gravesite |
If you ask yourself these things each day
you’ll eventually see your answers start to change. Our mortal lives are finite
but eternity will go on. There is really a light at the end of the tunnel. The
tunnel is our life and our friends and family who go before us are at the end
of it- just waiting for us to arrive. They pray for us everyday and make
petitions to God on our behalf because they
invested themselves in us when they walked this world. These people are a
part of the light at the end of the world. I
am the light of the world…John 8:12
God save us all !
The Castle Lady
2 comments:
What a beautiful tribute to a dear and loving friend. You did a wonderful job presenting this. It's hard losing someone we love, so I'll be keeping you in my prayers...praying for continued strength to endure through the pain of this loss.
Wishing you a great week,, Evelyn!
Thanks for the good words. She was a very special friend and I'm going to miss her e-mails and cards. I'm so very glad I met her in person. I'll cherish that for the rest of my life. Her husband has been a bit quiet. I sent him copies of all the letters she sent me when we were much younger and I think he'll enjoy that. They married very young.
Hope you have a great week, too, Leona!
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