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Kosovo Refugees, Memories of 1945by Traute Klein, biogardener
February 5, 1945. The earliest date in my life which remains fixed in my memory. We had been under continuous heavy bombing for the last 24 hours. An incendiary bomb had hit the corner of our apartment building, only a few meters from where we were huddled in the basement. It had not ignited. The contents of the bomb had spilled over the road. Yellow powder covered the cobblestones. What a pretty color! All of us children had to investigate the feel and smell of this novelty.
My mother was alone with three children aged 1, 3, and 9 and no transportation except a little handcart which she would not be able to pull alone. During the late afternoon my father appeared. Everyone got clothed in several layers of our Sunday best. The two little ones were packed into the cart, and away we went. Where to? Nobody knew. Nobody asked. Nobody cared. Let's just get out of here! The Russians are coming! How did my father get here when we needed him desperately? He was supposed to be supervising a prisoner of war camp several hours away by train, and the trains were not running. I had visited him there during the previous month by train and cross-country skis. All by myself. Those prisoners showed me so much love. They took turns holding me on their lap. They had not seen a real live child in months. They cooked donuts for me. I had never even seen a donut. Never having eaten anything deepfried before, I promptly got sick. Some of the soldiers were able to translate for the others and I heard stories of their families, of their own little girls in other countries, speaking other languages. They also told me that this was the first camp in which they were treated humanely. My father was good to them. One of the soldiers was working on a pair of hand-made leather boots. My father had very small feet and those would be the only boots he would ever own which actually fit him.
How did my father manage to get home at a time when East Prussia had no functional communication or transportation system? I have no idea. No one ever asked him. My father was wearing his brand new custom-made boots, a labor of love from a grateful prisoner. How can a child keep on walking day after day, hour after hour with only the food which other fleeing refugies were willing to share? No baby survived the ordeal, because mothers soon ran out of breast milk. To my knowledge, my 15-month-old sister is the youngest survivor from those days. Our goal became the Baltic sea port of Danzig (Gdanzk). We hoped to be able to catch a train to the west from there. Unfortunately, the Russian army had cut off the western land access. Only the sea route was left. We could have tried to get on one of the overloaded boats to the west, but we were not prepared to leave our father behind. That was our salvation. We later heard that every one of those refugee-laden boats was torpedoed. So we waited. The Russians came. March 10, 1945. Within minutes, one soldier spied my father's boots. He motioned for them to be handed over to him. My father put on the soldier's Russian boots which were in worse shape than mine. They had no soles at all. He soon got his own boots back. He got them back several more times in the months that followed. They did not fit any except the small feet for which they were made.
I spent my 10th birthday on that field. No birthday cake. No candles. No food. No shelter. Just snow to combat the thirst. And my father and mother and the two little ones safely beside me. I was grateful. Many children had lost their families. Many of them never found them again. Kosovo. Memories of 1945. My husband teases me about my short size. I just smile knowingly. God knew what he was doing when he created me shorter than most people my age. He was preparing my protection for 1945.
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