Broken Glass Behind the China Cabinet
By Pamela Kaye
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About this ebook
Pamela Kayes mother, Anneliese, was seventeen years old when she left Germany, the Fatherland, the only place she had ever known, in 1956. She was anxious for the chance to reinvent herself in the United States after World War II had devastated her country. In this memoir, she tells of her journey to America and how she discovered the truth about her Russian-Jewish heritage.
Broken Glass behind the China Cabinet narrates how she began her new life in the United States as a paid servant for a family in Kansas City, Missouri; how she struggled as a young immigrant girl to find her place in this new world; and how she became a citizen in 1961. She shares the story of the people who impacted her journey and how she accidentally discovered the real story about who she is.
Based on the diary of Anneliese, Broken Glass behind the China Cabinet shares a story of perseverance and communicates how one womans look into the past impacted her future.
Pamela Kaye
Pamela Kaye has two children and currently lives in California.
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Broken Glass Behind the China Cabinet - Pamela Kaye
Copyright © 2012 Pamela Kaye
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
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Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
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ISBN: 978-1-4582-0543-8 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4582-0542-1 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2012914051
Abbott Press rev. date: 08/03/2012
Contents
Fallout
The departure
The indoctrination
Visitation Church
The Cross
Two Ladies
First impression
First flight
Spring of 1960
The search
Guam
Italy- April 1967 to April 1970
Vienna, Austria, July 22, 1967
Israel, December 22, 1967
The cat was now out of the bag
The judgment
The Sunday school teacher
1988
It was now January 2001
The Second half of a hole
The decision
Multiple Melanoma
Potassium chloride
I dedicate this book to my children Douglas and Michelle, Hebrew names Dovid and Mishka. It is through them and the help of documenting a painful past with the passing of my father and mother that has lead me to desire to help others. I pray this book will lead others to live a blessed life with the pride of knowing, and traveling in the righteous path.
I also wish to make a dedication to my Cousins, Franklin Samules for reconnecting my beloved father just years prior to his death. It was in your letter that gave father his light.
Also,
Judy Katz and Audrey Katz, with your letters filled with love and reconnection gave me a family.
mothers%20passport.jpgFallout
The whole family, all five of us, stood assembled at the railway platform. The smell of that day was filed with a cold ere of anticipation. Breath can be seen upon all of our faces, with each chilling intake. The train could only come from one direction and always punctual as common as German manor. It was a wet-cold morning, a bite was to the air, the dew was still to be seen on the rails.
I buttoned my coat and rewrapped my scarf. Mother lent me her best hand gloves for the occasion. We were 30 minutes early. Punctual, as good Germans are. Mother looked fatigued. Her face was a stone with the dark shadows that came with pacing about the night. Was she now questioning her decision to send me at the young age of 17? I wondered what her 42-year-old thoughts had been at the time. Was there something she wanted to now tell me? Did she have a secret she now hoped to share?
She had tears running down her face. This was something unusual to her calm reserved disposition that I had known. This made me feel uncomfortable and tense. She took me into her arms; I stiffen in her embrace, only now wishing for the train to arrive. My mother never had shown much tenderness before, especially during the war years.
Now, all of a sudden, I was going to leave the Fatherland. The only place I had ever known. This thought was incomprehensible to my grandparents. I then believed my parents were only seeking to free themselves from the chains of responsibility. I had told my neighbors, teachers, and classmates that I choose to go on my own to the States, this lie was easier to tell than the stone truth. To my surprise, none had envy for me. They were happy with their simple lives in Germany, even after the war had been lost. It was their homeland the only place they had ever known. I left the familiar to venture into the unknown, a dark strange place.
In a way I was angry with them. This I would have toiled with over the coming years of my life. Wrestling with the truth verses lies. I expected a different response. I thought then I would be able to live my own desires, finally, and not do what was expected or told, but what I wanted. This would now become my chance for a fresh start. I could reinvent myself. I thought I could be anything and anyone. A new start I could make for myself without carrying the heavy burdens of others.
My 13-year-old sister Margret seemed to be still sleepy. She was the most beautiful of us two girls. She was desired by all and wanted by many. She had skills that naturally came with beauty and charm. Something I had so obviously been lacking. We all had to get up that day at 5am. She without a doubt was looking forward to have her own bedroom. Our home had become a bit cramped due to the lack of housing after WWII. Our family was ordered to take in refugees as well as other homes in Germany. We converted the top floor of our home to an apartment for the new family. There never was much privacy in our three-bedroom home. And now even less would be so. My leaving would surely have been an improvement.
My 11-year-old brother Kris was excited about me traveling so far away to America. He handed me his only pencil sharpener, a silver steel sharpener, knowing how much I love writing. It did not weigh much and would come in handy. This became my cherished companion throughout the years to come.
I was scheduled to fly TWA (Trans World Airlines), and needed to watch my luggage allowance. I carried a dark brown overnight leather suitcase that smelled of moth balls, and a small handbag.
This had been all my life’s possessions. In the last moment, before leaving for the railway, I sneaked a Sunday missal into my bag. It was in gold leaf, black leather bound and smelled like an old worn leather chair. This was an item I purchased from my small allowance. I had been eleven at the time and filled with such promise. The book was of a special significance to me. I walked to church every morning for then six years. This had been my only companion for I had few friends. My parents wanted to keep to themselves.
Mom reminded earlier I would not need my prayer book in America. She desperately wanted me to get out of my parochial environment and expose me to a bigger world. I would soon forget any notion of wanting to become a nun. My mother and father had been displeased with the decision of following a Religious path.
During the war years mother contracted Typhus while pregnant with my brother Kris. Dad was gone at the time and she was not able to care for my sister Margret and myself while still carrying a child. She thought at the time to place us in a Catholic run orphanage.
This is where I grew and yearned for the devotion towards the religious path. I became close to my teachers, Catholic nuns, and siblings, the Totens. Funny, learning in English, Tote in German means dead, so they were caretakers for the dead, a fitting name for these two ladies. Caring for all the lost soles. They made sure your life in the hear after would be good. I loved these sisters. They inspired me to lead a religious life. They taught me how to be a good Catholic.
Since dad had been gone for some time during the war years, upon his return the gossip would be known that Kris was the offspring of Herr Mannoff.
Herr Mannoff had been a family friend of Mothers. They had known each other from school. The Mannoffs then lived just down the road from our home on Elisabeth Strasse. Herr Mannoff had been an SA officer during the war and was not able to find employment after the occupation.
Dad upon his return after the war was walking up the path to our home on Parterweg. Margret, Kris, and myself were in the front of the home playing as children of our age at the time did. Kris, the infant sleeping in the stroller. Dad peered asking whom it was? I responded, this is our brother Kris.
My memories are faint now, yet I clearly remember dad entering the house yelling.
This yelling was heard from down the street. Dad from that moment on slept downstairs instead of with mother. He never would again return to Mutties bed. This subject became forbidden to discuss. We never dared to approach the subject.
Dad and Kris had a volatile relationship. Dad would beat Kris often to his way of thinking. This was as constant as our clocks were in the home. Never would he ever be close to him as a father and son should be.
The departure
Dad advised me that cold day on the platform to keep in mind whose child I was, so that I could always come back home. I wondered whether love, like beauty, was in the eye of the beholder. There always was a cold reserve to my father. His feelings were never freely expressed.
The%20departure%20mother.JPGI promised to write every week, and then boarded the arriving train. Papa traveled with me by train to Frankfurt International Airport. As the train pulled out, the skies open to a downpour of rain. Not unusual weather for the first day of April. I studied each drop as it fell from the cool train window.
We did not talk much at first. Dad and I sat silent, deep in our own thoughts. I was thinking how little I actually knew of my own country as we traveled through portions of castled Westphalia. During our school vacations, I bicycled through the Netherlands, Belgium, France, and the South of England. I acquainted myself well with the different customs and languages. I assumed that I would always be able to discover other parts of Germany.
It was this open ended thought which now allowed me to leave.
It had been then a little over two years since mother discovered a newspaper item, which stated all of this. The article read, The highest ransom ever extracted in a kidnapping case $600,000. Obtained by Carl Austin Hall and Mrs. Bonny Brown Heady for the release of Robert C. Greenlease, Jr. age 6, whom was kidnapped on September 28, 1953, only to be found dead nine days later.
Mother had dispatched a letter of condolence to the Greenlease family. She included a photo of the family and inquired if they knew any friends that needed to sponsor their eldest daughter, me, to work for a year in America.
They answered the letter to mothers surprise indicating the Hampton family who resided in Kansas City, Missouri would be seeking help for a year’s time.
The motion of the clock was now set.
I was not going to live with distant relatives on a farm. This had been discussed earlier. I was going to work for a family