SIDEBAR #54 - Travis Alexander forum

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  • #461
I sent this to Zuri last night and don't know if she got it. All our love and jingles for our Zuri


[video=youtu;l_9pVRZ0QKw]http://youtu.be/l_9pVRZ0QKw[/video]
 
  • #462
I sent this to Zuri last night and don't know if she got it. All our love and jingles for our Zuri


[video=youtu;l_9pVRZ0QKw]http://youtu.be/l_9pVRZ0QKw[/video]

Her room in hospital ...lacking good wifi.

Just now forwarded your message with YouTube link by text, and she is saying now received . She is not connecting to internet at hospital fyi . So no emails or pm through Websleuths fyi .

I'm trying my best to forward each and every note to her individually. ( each one I thank the post when I do ... I don't think I have missed any.)

(zuri )

Using talk to text with lots of grammar errors !
 
  • #463
Just FYI, here is what Zuri was referring to when she was asking for jingles for her horse:

Jingling came from the Chronicle of the Horse bulletin board, back in its early days, when many very good writers participated. Here’s how an old moderator defined the term:

“Curb chains: This bit of BB lore arose out of the infamous Question For Merry thread. The California clique decided (tongue in cheek) to form a cult, and decided to beg for money at the airport. But rather than banging tambourines, Merry suggested rattling curb chains. These days, curb chains are collectively jangled whenever a BBer needs good luck. Make sure to keep one handy! And be sure to request curb jingles from fellow BBers whenever you need them.”
Long ago when the board began, a poster named Coreene had a lovely warmblood gelding she rescued from an auction I believe in California. While Willem was branded, and I think they found out he was imported from Germany, but not much more was known about his background. I believe the story was that he had hoof problems from severe over use and improper care, and was quite lame. His subsequent life was chronicled on the board – treatments, care, daily love and much more. “Willem” became famous because he “spoke” in a lovely German accent. Coreene’s “Willem” posts became absolute classics and we couldn’t wait for new ones. Sadly, Willem had to be put to sleep and his “last” post is linked below. (Oh and by the way, tissue alert.)

Here’s a classic about Willem: http://www.chronofhorse.com/forum/showthread.php?381026-Christmas-Words-of-Equine-Wisdom-From-Willem-once-upon-a-time&highlight=Willem+Christmas

And when Willem had to leave, Coreene posted this from him: Jingling came from the Chronicle of the Horse bulletin board, back in its early days, when many very good writers participated. Here’s how an old moderator defined the term:

“Curb chains: This bit of BB lore arose out of the infamous Question For Merry thread. The California clique decided (tongue in cheek) to form a cult, and decided to beg for money at the airport. But rather than banging tambourines, Merry suggested rattling curb chains. These days, curb chains are collectively jangled whenever a BBer needs good luck. Make sure to keep one handy! And be sure to request curb jingles from fellow BBers whenever you need them.”
Long ago when the board began, a poster named Coreene had a lovely warmblood gelding she rescued from an auction I believe in California. While Willem was branded, and I think they found out he was imported from Germany, but not much more was known about his background. I believe the story was that he had hoof problems from severe over use and improper care, and was quite lame. His subsequent life was chronicled on the board – treatments, care, daily love and much more. “Willem” became famous because he “spoke” in a lovely German accent. Coreene’s “Willem” posts became absolute classics and we couldn’t wait for new ones. Sadly, Willem had to be put to sleep and his “last” post is linked below. (Oh and by the way, tissue alert.)

Here’s a classic about Willem: http://www.chronofhorse.com/forum/showthread.php?381026-Christmas-Words-of-Equine-Wisdom-From-Willem-once-upon-a-time&highlight=Willem+Christmas

And when Willem had to leave, Coreene posted this from him: http://www.chronofhorse.com/forum/showthread.php?24375-WILLEM-hallo-von-der-Rainbow-Bridge!

So you see, jingling has a way of drawing all of the horse world together, and began at the Chronicle of the Horse bulletin board. While I know many condemn the board for its sometimes rampant opinions on various issues in the horse world, it is the gems of Willem and the phenomenon of jingling that make me LOFF it and enjoy friendships with fellow board members. That, my friends, is what the horse world is all about. May you also be covered in apfel schpit!

So you see, jingling has a way of drawing all of the horse world together, and began at the Chronicle of the Horse bulletin board. While I know many condemn the board for its sometimes rampant opinions on various issues in the horse world, it is the gems of Willem and the phenomenon of jingling that make me LOFF it and enjoy friendships with fellow board members. That, my friends, is what the horse world is all about. May you also be covered in apfel schpit!
 
  • #464
Jingles to our Zuri :loveyou::wave:
 
  • #465
Hope this works...

Squeak's LOVE doll and overload of cuteness

[video]http://i723.photobucket.com/albums/ww237/coffeejunkie01/20150915_202537_zps0siyuyir.mp4][IMG[/video]

[video]http://i723.photobucket.com/albums/ww237/coffeejunkie01/20150915_202926_zpsrayoc4qc.mp4][IMG[/video]

[video]http://i723.photobucket.com/albums/ww237/coffeejunkie01/coffeejunkie/20150915_203926_zpsv6fp4xgh.mp4][IMG[/video]
 
  • #466
Her room in hospital ...lacking good wifi.

Just now forwarded your message with YouTube link by text, and she is saying now received . She is not connecting to internet at hospital fyi . So no emails or pm through Websleuths fyi .

I'm trying my best to forward each and every note to her individually. ( each one I thank the post when I do ... I don't think I have missed any.)

(zuri )

Using talk to text with lots of grammar errors !

No WIFI!?!?!?!?! Poor gal must be going nuts, what can you actually DO in a hospital bed but sleep, stare out the window, or watch TV?
Hope her DH brought in a laptop for her so she can watch some decent DVD's or a Kindle. Heck, maybe look at a few x-rays from other patients? They put them on DVD's now, lol!

Here's something that'll give her the giggles:

[video=youtube;qM9YWm6T_hc]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qM9YWm6T_hc[/video]
 
  • #467
Zuri

Jingles!!
 

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  • #468
and Zuri
 

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  • #469
Stuck on Youtube..........

[video=youtube;H0T3Ju3BACw]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0T3Ju3BACw[/video]

Just love the energy!
 
  • #470
and since so many said yes, you wanted to hear more - okay than! :D I took this interview Octber, 2010 after my Mamma turned 90 years old. All the kids were there to help her celebrate in Riga. In the story, Tete is my Father, that's what we called him in Latvian. :) Here's the beginning of my Mamma's story. I shall blank out their names and others, if necessary!

Written on October 15, 2010


I was told this following story from my mother, Mirdza G, after her 90th birthday, while I was visiting with her from September 15th to October 13th, 2010 in Riga, Latvia.

I’ve titled this story “ESCAPE”, because that is what it seems my Mother (Mamma) and Father (Tete) (Romuls G) did when they first escaped from Latvia because of Stalin’s greed for more countries to put under his communist rule. And it happened again in 1951, when Stalin’s request of Sweden for HIS citizens back and since my parents had 4 children at that time, and had NO desire whatsoever to return to Latvia under Stalin’s rule, they again fled (escaped) to the U.S. of A.!!


and than comes the post I did above where it starts The summer of 1940... and it continues...

And then 1941, Soviet occupation gave way to Nazi occupation, which also imposed a violent rule on Latvian citizens. Following its failure on the Eastern front (into Moscow and St. Petersburg), Nazi Germany, gravely in breach of International law, started to draft Latvian citizens into its armed forces, just as it was previously done by the Soviet Union in 1940. Unfortunately, on June 6, 1943, my father’s only brother, Vidvuds G was one of those “drafted” into the German Army Latvian S.S. Legion. My uncle, Vidvuds was last “seen” January 16, 1945 still with the German Army 15th Grenadier Regiment “Kurland”. He was probably killed in action, as my father never heard from him again. Those who resisted this illegal Nazi political move were either sentenced to death or sent to concentration camps. The young Latvian men of that time, if they were to save their lives and retain a glimmer of hope of regaining independence for their country, had no choice but to fight one enemy of Latvia in the uniform of another. Their only hope on the battlefield was that there would be a recurrence of the history of WWI, when two superpowers battled each other until Latvia was able to win its own statehood in 1918. Miserably, the hopes that Latvia put on the West – as Latvia had also done in 1919, did not materialize. Thanks FDR! (I believe that is why my father registered as a Republican when he gained U.S. citizenship in 1959!)

In 1944, Colonel Kurelis led an unsuccessful attempt to resist the Nazi forces on Latvian soil. As the Latvian Legions against the Soviet occupation that had restored peace to Western Europe in 1945, resistance swept away Nazi German rule continued throughout Latvia.

In July of 1944 the Russians cut through Lithuania and reached the Baltic Sea, cutting any access to Germany by road. Latvia was surrounded and isolated. The Russians coming from the east, north and south - the Germans retreating to the Baltic Sea, along with people from the surrounding regions following the Germans to escape the vicious Soviet Russians. This also cut the military supply lines and the road to Germany was closed for all. The Soviet Russians then moving via Jelgava broke through the German lines near Tukums and reached the Baltic Sea. The combined Latvian and German forces were able to push the Soviet Russian forces back from the Baltic near Tukums. This gap in the front between the Baltic Sea was maintained until after the Soviet Russians occupied Riga on the 23rd of October and a new front line was established - opening the way into Kurzeme.

Escape in the last train going west to the Baltic coast, as the Soviet Russians were overwhelming the Nazi troops…


and than comes the other part above ^^ where it starts with Than, in July of 1944,..

I shall continue more tomorrow! Must find something to eat for dinner!

Later folks! :seeya:
 
  • #471
1964 - Charles Finley, who owns the Kansas City Athletics baseball team, pays The Beatles $150,000 to play a show at his Municipal Stadium. The Beatles add their version of "Kansas City" to the setlist, marking their only American performance of the song.


[video=youtu;14ijT4RVERY]http://youtu.be/14ijT4RVERY[/video]
 
  • #472
Okay - to keep you intrigued :lol: I'll post a bit more of Mamma's story:

The fishermen were there already and told the locals that the boat had gotten lost at sea. But when they were rescued and came on shore, the fishermen wanted their money - so Anna Silis gave her gold watch and Mamma her gold ring. Mamma later saw a woman around the camp wearing her ring!! But didn’t want to cause any trouble and left it alone.

Mamma couldn’t remember how many people exactly were on the boat. (The Swedes say 20 people were on the boat). She remembers these people: (They were all Latvians on the boat.)

3 - Silis family, Alfreds, Anna, and their younger son Uldis
3 - Mamma, Tete and our older sister Inta.
1 - Nulands - a single man.
4 - Flamis family - husband, wife and 2 small children--Mr. Flamis worked in the clock shop in Augenskalna market after Latvia’s second freedom in 1991. Mamma actually ran into him when she first started shopping at the market after she had moved back to Latvia in 2002. His wife had another baby (girl) in Sweden, but he divorced her and went to Canada, returning after Independence.
1 - a single young man; he went around telling everyone at the D.P. (Displaced People’s) camp that they should go back to Latvia when Stalin asked for his citizens back! No one wanted to go with him - he did go back. Will never know whether he was sent to Siberia…
1 – Ziguards Martinsons - a Latvian army guy, whom Tete knew; was carrying a pistol; he’s the one that saw the ship and shot his pistol into the air, but nothing happened. He jumped on the boat at the last minute in Sikrags.
1 - Velta Breikopf - a young, single lady, from Sikrags - spoke the dialect “Liv”, lived in the region and communicated with the fishermen about the boat. (Liv is a different Latvian dialect, very hard to understand). She bunked in the same barracks section with Nulands, Tete and Mamma. Velta went to Canada; Mamma saw something about her in the Latvian paper, but never wrote; and then Velta moved to Australia and heard nothing more about her.
2 - Eglitis - wife and husband - eventually went to Canada, then to Australia. Wrote to each other while they lived in Canada and lost track of them when they moved to Australia.

That’s sixteen people, but Mamma believes there were 3 or 4 more people, but can’t remember. She said I should have asked YEARS before and she would have remembered ALL their names!! After all she is 90!!

Unfortunately, my older sister Inta dies approximately 2 hours before they reach shore…. Had they not gotten off course, had they gotten there earlier… maybe… she would have been saved… Doesn’t remember much about the burial, but does remember her shoes were completed soaked with the soles and leather falling apart. So she received new shoes for the funeral. On October 26th was the burial - (Took awhile getting this date - I don’t believe she wanted to remember or not talk about it, but she finally did recall the date and seemed okay about talking about her.) Inta died on the crossing from pneumonia and is buried on Visby, Gotland in a special memorial site with others who perished during this time.

The inscription translated by Google - Swedish to English, well you decide! Here’s Google’s translation:

On October 26, 1944 buried a Latvian refugee child: Inta G, daughter of Romuls G,
Inta was born 6 April 1944. Died October 24 at Faro lighthouse.
On tombstone is the following texts:
In the times of war
They looked for the Gotland shore
for the storm in his homeland
And the rest are in peace
1944

Here’s what it says in Swedish, sorry no Swedish typewriter, so no dots over the o’s and the rest of those thingys!

Den 26 Oktober 1944 begravdes ett lettiskt flykting barn: Inta G, dotter till Romuls G, Inta foddes 6 april 1944. Dog den 24 Oktober vid Faro fyr.
Pa gravstenen finns foljande test:
Iodesmattad ofredstid
De sokte la vid Gotlands strand
For stormen i sitt fosterland
Och vila har i fried
1944

Why this panicked flight from the Soviet Red Army’s advance in all the eastern European Countries? Why did millions of people abandon everything they had to flee their native Countries on very short notice? One must be acquainted with a bit of European and Latvian History in order to understand the near automatic Latvian people’s response to the Soviet Army’s second invasion of Latvia near the end of World War II. The recollection of the most recent Soviet invasion of WWII in the “Terrible Year” of 1940-1941 was fresh in every Latvian’s memory.

June 14th (a solemn day for all Latvians everywhere!)
June 14, 1941, marks the Baltic’s’ equivalent to Adolf Hitler’s Holocaust – Josef Stalin’s deportation of Latvians, Lithuanians, Estonians and others to Siberian prisons and labor camps. This story of exploitation, starvation, terror and death of hundreds of thousands is largely untold. Stalin’s purges on that single night was an effective tool to terrify the citizens of the Soviet Union, especially those in occupied territories. One best behave! Any misstep could result in a penalty, often an official 25-year sentence to be served in a labor camp in Siberia. The reality of this sentence, however, was that it was often a death sentence in disguise. People were packed in like sardines in a can. The only relief came after someone’s death because the corpse was thrown out by the railroad tracks. The journey to Trim in Siberia was one of thousands of miles and many months. Upon arrival, a new hell awaited the deportees: forced labor for a single portion of dry bread. The story of community and survival is horrific and told in graphic detail. Some were asked to be a snitch with respect to the community. Some refused, but certainly others agreed. There lies the beauty of Stalin’s campaign of terror: always a snitch – somewhere, anywhere!

Our forefathers had lived in the area for countless generations and had managed to maintain their culture despite various earlier attempts by neighboring powers to subdue them. Most of the Soviet’s European neighbors had learned to be very afraid of the callous brutality of the totalitarian communist regime during the first decades of the 20th century. When it became obvious that the Soviet Army invasion could not be stopped, many did not hesitate to save themselves and their families into exile in order to continue life and the political fight for their homeland’s freedom from afar.

Sweden was definitely not expecting SO many people escaping and coming to their shores! They had to build ‘emergency’ barracks for the coming winter of 1944. Mamma remembers they were wood barracks - 6 beds in each separate little room, with a corridor down the middle. They received donated clothes, as theirs were all water logged. From Swedish Red Cross records that I have found later they were at one time at the Baltic camp Säfsjöström on November 14, 1944.

Living in Sweden - on Gotland in the wooden barracks - later the Swedes would send everyone to the mainland. They move from the coast to inland of Gotland. She says they were in quite a few different D.P. (Displaced Persons) camps. She couldn’t remember how many camps - maybe three or four. One of these camps in November of 1944 was the Baltic camp called Säfsjöström. People without children lived in bad conditions; from 1944 to 1945 went from one camp to another - now she remembers as many as 4 or 5 different camps. The Silis family stayed in an old palace and the Swedes built the barracks for the single families. When Tete and Berzins were on “Fire Duty” - putting wood on to fuel heat for the cold nights - they would always forget! They were always busy playing cards and everyone froze on those nights! So people knew to try and get extra blankets when their “fire duty” was due!

In 1945, Tete gets a job in Gislov. With two other Latvian Vet students and three Estonians cleaning stables and milking cows. Silis and Tete left this job, to cut wood; then to a peat moss job - only prison workers did this work, but the pay was good! Raking up peat moss, Tete wrote to some younger Latvian guys at the D.P. camps and told them of the ‘good’ paying job! Mamma was working at a rubber factory, making tennis shoes, and putting the glue on, with six other Latvian ladies. They could only do 30-40 shoes, but their quota should have been 130 shoes.


next comes - she remembers her 25th birthday...
 
  • #473
and since so many said yes, you wanted to hear more - okay than! :D I took this interview Octber, 2010 after my Mamma turned 90 years old. All the kids were there to help her celebrate in Riga. In the story, Tete is my Father, that's what we called him in Latvian. :) Here's the beginning of my Mamma's story. I shall blank out their names and others, if necessary!

Written on October 15, 2010

Later folks! :seeya:


(nipped for space)


GigiG said a few post back about hearing personal histories and where we came from, and if it's not offending may I ask what is the ethnicity of that part of Europe? Where did their parents come from? I'm thinking people migrating outward from Mesopotamia, the cradle of civilization, and bloodlines.
 
  • #474
I'm just home from seeing the doctor about my arm. The bone is still broken and am in the beginning stages of osteoporosis, YIKES! Am being referred to an orthopedist and physical therapy. The rotator cuff is probably damaged also but she couldn't read the xrays. I go to a church where physicians volunteer so none of this now will cost me anything. She could hear the bone popping and mentioned surgery might not happen, so we'll see how it goes. And, yes, it still hurts very much so.
 
  • #475
Okay - to keep you intrigued :lol: I'll post a bit more of Mamma's story:

The fishermen were there already and told the locals that the boat had gotten lost at sea. But when they were rescued and came on shore, the fishermen wanted their money - so Anna Silis gave her gold watch and Mamma her gold ring. Mamma later saw a woman around the camp wearing her ring!! But didn’t want to cause any trouble and left it alone.

Mamma couldn’t remember how many people exactly were on the boat. (The Swedes say 20 people were on the boat). She remembers these people: (They were all Latvians on the boat.)

3 - Silis family, Alfreds, Anna, and their younger son Uldis
3 - Mamma, Tete and our older sister Inta.
1 - Nulands - a single man.
4 - Flamis family - husband, wife and 2 small children--Mr. Flamis worked in the clock shop in Augenskalna market after Latvia’s second freedom in 1991. Mamma actually ran into him when she first started shopping at the market after she had moved back to Latvia in 2002. His wife had another baby (girl) in Sweden, but he divorced her and went to Canada, returning after Independence.
1 - a single young man; he went around telling everyone at the D.P. (Displaced People’s) camp that they should go back to Latvia when Stalin asked for his citizens back! No one wanted to go with him - he did go back. Will never know whether he was sent to Siberia…
1 – Ziguards Martinsons - a Latvian army guy, whom Tete knew; was carrying a pistol; he’s the one that saw the ship and shot his pistol into the air, but nothing happened. He jumped on the boat at the last minute in Sikrags.
1 - Velta Breikopf - a young, single lady, from Sikrags - spoke the dialect “Liv”, lived in the region and communicated with the fishermen about the boat. (Liv is a different Latvian dialect, very hard to understand). She bunked in the same barracks section with Nulands, Tete and Mamma. Velta went to Canada; Mamma saw something about her in the Latvian paper, but never wrote; and then Velta moved to Australia and heard nothing more about her.
2 - Eglitis - wife and husband - eventually went to Canada, then to Australia. Wrote to each other while they lived in Canada and lost track of them when they moved to Australia.

That’s sixteen people, but Mamma believes there were 3 or 4 more people, but can’t remember. She said I should have asked YEARS before and she would have remembered ALL their names!! After all she is 90!!

Unfortunately, my older sister Inta dies approximately 2 hours before they reach shore…. Had they not gotten off course, had they gotten there earlier… maybe… she would have been saved… Doesn’t remember much about the burial, but does remember her shoes were completed soaked with the soles and leather falling apart. So she received new shoes for the funeral. On October 26th was the burial - (Took awhile getting this date - I don’t believe she wanted to remember or not talk about it, but she finally did recall the date and seemed okay about talking about her.) Inta died on the crossing from pneumonia and is buried on Visby, Gotland in a special memorial site with others who perished during this time.

The inscription translated by Google - Swedish to English, well you decide! Here’s Google’s translation:

On October 26, 1944 buried a Latvian refugee child: Inta G, daughter of Romuls G,
Inta was born 6 April 1944. Died October 24 at Faro lighthouse.
On tombstone is the following texts:
In the times of war
They looked for the Gotland shore
for the storm in his homeland
And the rest are in peace
1944

Here’s what it says in Swedish, sorry no Swedish typewriter, so no dots over the o’s and the rest of those thingys!

Den 26 Oktober 1944 begravdes ett lettiskt flykting barn: Inta G, dotter till Romuls G, Inta foddes 6 april 1944. Dog den 24 Oktober vid Faro fyr.
Pa gravstenen finns foljande test:
Iodesmattad ofredstid
De sokte la vid Gotlands strand
For stormen i sitt fosterland
Och vila har i fried
1944

Why this panicked flight from the Soviet Red Army’s advance in all the eastern European Countries? Why did millions of people abandon everything they had to flee their native Countries on very short notice? One must be acquainted with a bit of European and Latvian History in order to understand the near automatic Latvian people’s response to the Soviet Army’s second invasion of Latvia near the end of World War II. The recollection of the most recent Soviet invasion of WWII in the “Terrible Year” of 1940-1941 was fresh in every Latvian’s memory.

June 14th (a solemn day for all Latvians everywhere!)
June 14, 1941, marks the Baltic’s’ equivalent to Adolf Hitler’s Holocaust – Josef Stalin’s deportation of Latvians, Lithuanians, Estonians and others to Siberian prisons and labor camps. This story of exploitation, starvation, terror and death of hundreds of thousands is largely untold. Stalin’s purges on that single night was an effective tool to terrify the citizens of the Soviet Union, especially those in occupied territories. One best behave! Any misstep could result in a penalty, often an official 25-year sentence to be served in a labor camp in Siberia. The reality of this sentence, however, was that it was often a death sentence in disguise. People were packed in like sardines in a can. The only relief came after someone’s death because the corpse was thrown out by the railroad tracks. The journey to Trim in Siberia was one of thousands of miles and many months. Upon arrival, a new hell awaited the deportees: forced labor for a single portion of dry bread. The story of community and survival is horrific and told in graphic detail. Some were asked to be a snitch with respect to the community. Some refused, but certainly others agreed. There lies the beauty of Stalin’s campaign of terror: always a snitch – somewhere, anywhere!

Our forefathers had lived in the area for countless generations and had managed to maintain their culture despite various earlier attempts by neighboring powers to subdue them. Most of the Soviet’s European neighbors had learned to be very afraid of the callous brutality of the totalitarian communist regime during the first decades of the 20th century. When it became obvious that the Soviet Army invasion could not be stopped, many did not hesitate to save themselves and their families into exile in order to continue life and the political fight for their homeland’s freedom from afar.

Sweden was definitely not expecting SO many people escaping and coming to their shores! They had to build ‘emergency’ barracks for the coming winter of 1944. Mamma remembers they were wood barracks - 6 beds in each separate little room, with a corridor down the middle. They received donated clothes, as theirs were all water logged. From Swedish Red Cross records that I have found later they were at one time at the Baltic camp Säfsjöström on November 14, 1944.

Living in Sweden - on Gotland in the wooden barracks - later the Swedes would send everyone to the mainland. They move from the coast to inland of Gotland. She says they were in quite a few different D.P. (Displaced Persons) camps. She couldn’t remember how many camps - maybe three or four. One of these camps in November of 1944 was the Baltic camp called Säfsjöström. People without children lived in bad conditions; from 1944 to 1945 went from one camp to another - now she remembers as many as 4 or 5 different camps. The Silis family stayed in an old palace and the Swedes built the barracks for the single families. When Tete and Berzins were on “Fire Duty” - putting wood on to fuel heat for the cold nights - they would always forget! They were always busy playing cards and everyone froze on those nights! So people knew to try and get extra blankets when their “fire duty” was due!

In 1945, Tete gets a job in Gislov. With two other Latvian Vet students and three Estonians cleaning stables and milking cows. Silis and Tete left this job, to cut wood; then to a peat moss job - only prison workers did this work, but the pay was good! Raking up peat moss, Tete wrote to some younger Latvian guys at the D.P. camps and told them of the ‘good’ paying job! Mamma was working at a rubber factory, making tennis shoes, and putting the glue on, with six other Latvian ladies. They could only do 30-40 shoes, but their quota should have been 130 shoes.


next comes - she remembers her 25th birthday...

I feel every emotion, I close my eyes and smell the peat moss, feel the freezing cold, the fear your loved one had, the pain they endured. Thank you Niner for the trip back to 1945. While you continue would you mind if I look for videos, so we can see the places they traveled?
 
  • #476
Niner, you have a remarkably amazing history written down, that will last for many generations to come. I commend you for having such details to share. What a struggle your family went through. Thank you so much for sharing with us, too. :hug:

I sent this to Zuri last night and don't know if she got it. All our love and jingles for our Zuri

Perfect! (Poor Zuri will be hearing jingles in her sleep soon. :giggle: ) Jingling all the way from Michigan, Zuri!


I had a long slow day with our final yard sale today. Over three days we made a nice profit, and I got a lot of hidden clutter removed. Feels good, but I am more tired than tired ... drained. zzzzzz
 
  • #477
I'm just home from seeing the doctor about my arm. The bone is still broken and am in the beginning stages of osteoporosis, YIKES! Am being referred to an orthopedist and physical therapy. The rotator cuff is probably damaged also but she couldn't read the xrays. I go to a church where physicians volunteer so none of this now will cost me anything. She could hear the bone popping and mentioned surgery might not happen, so we'll see how it goes. And, yes, it still hurts very much so.

Oh no, Daisymae! I don't know if "no surgery" is a good or bad thing. What is the prognosis that you will heal decently? I am sooo sorry you have to endure the painfulness. I hope something is giving you a bit of relief during your days and nights.
 
  • #478
I'm just home from seeing the doctor about my arm. The bone is still broken and am in the beginning stages of osteoporosis, YIKES! Am being referred to an orthopedist and physical therapy. The rotator cuff is probably damaged also but she couldn't read the xrays. I go to a church where physicians volunteer so none of this now will cost me anything. She could hear the bone popping and mentioned surgery might not happen, so we'll see how it goes. And, yes, it still hurts very much so.

OH my goodness daisymae, This has been a long painful summer for you hasn't it? Our dentist goes to Mexico and Latin America each year helps others. I have great admiration for those in the medical profession that give of their time and love for their fellowman. Now get this done before you join us on our trip. We've been delayed with our Zuri needing jingles, and when she rejoins us (with dhmd on call) we'll be by to pick you up.
 
  • #479
and since so many said yes, you wanted to hear more - okay than! :D I took this interview Octber, 2010 after my Mamma turned 90 years old. All the kids were there to help her celebrate in Riga. In the story, Tete is my Father, that's what we called him in Latvian. :) Here's the beginning of my Mamma's story. I shall blank out their names and others, if necessary!

Written on October 15, 2010


I was told this following story from my mother, Mirdza G, after her 90th birthday, while I was visiting with her from September 15th to October 13th, 2010 in Riga, Latvia.

I’ve titled this story “ESCAPE”, because that is what it seems my Mother (Mamma) and Father (Tete) (Romuls G) did when they first escaped from Latvia because of Stalin’s greed for more countries to put under his communist rule. And it happened again in 1951, when Stalin’s request of Sweden for HIS citizens back and since my parents had 4 children at that time, and had NO desire whatsoever to return to Latvia under Stalin’s rule, they again fled (escaped) to the U.S. of A.!!


and than comes the post I did above where it starts The summer of 1940... and it continues...

And then 1941, Soviet occupation gave way to Nazi occupation, which also imposed a violent rule on Latvian citizens. Following its failure on the Eastern front (into Moscow and St. Petersburg), Nazi Germany, gravely in breach of International law, started to draft Latvian citizens into its armed forces, just as it was previously done by the Soviet Union in 1940. Unfortunately, on June 6, 1943, my father’s only brother, Vidvuds G was one of those “drafted” into the German Army Latvian S.S. Legion. My uncle, Vidvuds was last “seen” January 16, 1945 still with the German Army 15th Grenadier Regiment “Kurland”. He was probably killed in action, as my father never heard from him again. Those who resisted this illegal Nazi political move were either sentenced to death or sent to concentration camps. The young Latvian men of that time, if they were to save their lives and retain a glimmer of hope of regaining independence for their country, had no choice but to fight one enemy of Latvia in the uniform of another. Their only hope on the battlefield was that there would be a recurrence of the history of WWI, when two superpowers battled each other until Latvia was able to win its own statehood in 1918. Miserably, the hopes that Latvia put on the West – as Latvia had also done in 1919, did not materialize. Thanks FDR! (I believe that is why my father registered as a Republican when he gained U.S. citizenship in 1959!)

In 1944, Colonel Kurelis led an unsuccessful attempt to resist the Nazi forces on Latvian soil. As the Latvian Legions against the Soviet occupation that had restored peace to Western Europe in 1945, resistance swept away Nazi German rule continued throughout Latvia.

In July of 1944 the Russians cut through Lithuania and reached the Baltic Sea, cutting any access to Germany by road. Latvia was surrounded and isolated. The Russians coming from the east, north and south - the Germans retreating to the Baltic Sea, along with people from the surrounding regions following the Germans to escape the vicious Soviet Russians. This also cut the military supply lines and the road to Germany was closed for all. The Soviet Russians then moving via Jelgava broke through the German lines near Tukums and reached the Baltic Sea. The combined Latvian and German forces were able to push the Soviet Russian forces back from the Baltic near Tukums. This gap in the front between the Baltic Sea was maintained until after the Soviet Russians occupied Riga on the 23rd of October and a new front line was established - opening the way into Kurzeme.

Escape in the last train going west to the Baltic coast, as the Soviet Russians were overwhelming the Nazi troops…


and than comes the other part above ^^ where it starts with Than, in July of 1944,..

I shall continue more tomorrow! Must find something to eat for dinner!

Later folks! :seeya:

This is riveting stuff, Niner. I have to say that I have so much respect for your family and what they went through. Please continue!
 
  • #480
This is riveting stuff, Niner. I have to say that I have so much respect for your family and what they went through. Please continue!

Please do !

Using talk to text with lots of grammar errors !
 
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