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Chapter 22
Unconditional
Love
Coming back
from
Stuttgart was not easy for me. What would my parents say? After all, they
collected a whole year’s pay in advance and I had only worked six months.
In reality I didn’t care. I didn’t ask to be enslaved. It didn’t matter
what they did to me, I would not go back to the Schatz family.
“Good for
nothing!” Is what they called me when I returned home. I never actually
knew what the letter said and they didn’t ask me anything.
My mother
informed me I had to go to work somewhere else right away. My father would
find that work. Several days later I started working in an auto parts
factory. I worked on the piecework line. There were only a few women
working in that department and we were kept busy keeping the guy’s hands
away from us.
Every morning
at
5:30 the company bus made its rounds and picked up the workers. The bus
was usually full by the time it reached me. Seldom did I make it to the
back of the bus without being touched by one of those pigs. It was the
same nightmare everyday I went to work. I felt so helpless, especially
against their dirty remarks and filthy stares.
If I said
something to defend myself, I became the center of attention and they had
fun embarrassing me. Then I was given a lecture that men ran the world.
That man allowed women to work. Because of that, women were big headed and
believed they had a right to voice their opinions. The harassment
continued after we arrived at the factory. The foreman made sure he found
a reason to advise me, then I had to go with him to his office where he
intimidated and pawed me.
I noticed one
of the young men from another department watching me. One day he asked if
I would like to spend my lunchtime with him. I was glad to because I’d had
enough harassment throughout the day. After a few days I felt safe around
him and started to develop some confidence. It also took away some of the
fear of my having to go to work everyday. We started dating and after
several months he asked me to marry him.
I told him
about my life and my father, but he insisted on asking him for my hand. My
father embarrassed me by calling him a low class laborer right in front of
him and threw him out of the house. I was told never to see him again.
We continued
to see each other anyway, except on Sundays.
Whenever I
told him what was going on at home he said, “You have to get out of
there.”
“But how? I
asked.
“Do you know
how to make babies?”
“Why do you
ask me?”
He explained
if I got pregnant my father would have to let us get married. “This,” he
said, “Is the only way I know.”
“As long as
I’m not twenty-one I need my father’s permission for everything.”
My first
paycheck was nothing but a receipt with my mother’s signature on it. She
had picked up the paycheck in advance without telling me. This went on for
months. One day I fainted during lunch and was taken to the hospital. I
was suffering from malnutrition and consequently, was too weak for hard
work. As a result, I was fired.
My parents
were not intimidated at all. Two days later they enslaved me in a hotel
kitchen peeling potatoes and washing dishes. Again, my paycheck was
nothing more than a receipt.
One Sunday
afternoon my mother told me we were going to have a very important
visitor. She was speaking about a man who had been there before. I
wondered why all of a sudden he was so important. She had me get dressed
up, like a young lady. She even bought me lipstick. I knew then, why. I
was meant to be shown off.
After serving
coffee mother asked me, “Would you like to have a cup of coffee and a
piece of cake with us?”
I must have
worn a look of total surprise. I had never been allowed to have coffee at
home before. Nobody, except my father was authorized to have such a
luxury. Yet, my mother dominated the conversation by mentioning my skills
in business and all the many other qualifications I possessed, especially
how flexible I was.
She was
selling me like a piece of meat, like a slave. It was my father that
delivered the icing on the cake when he brought out his violin and I had
to sing. It was always the same song he used to impress people because I
had to hit high C many times and in two different octaves. That day I
prayed, Dear Lord, I hate my voice please take it from me.
I learned I
had to marry the man, and I wasn’t yet sixteen. My feelings were
indescribable at that moment, but I kept a smile on my face. Not this
time! I thought, you made a deal without me!
After he left
father said that the man had the money to associate with the right kind of
people and I would have a perfect place in society. My mother tried to
comfort me by saying, “I know he is sixty-five, but you won’t be married
too long. He has liver cancer and you will inherit everything when he
dies. If you are a good wife for a couple of months all of us will
benefit.”
That night, I
couldn’t sleep.
I lay awake
trying to decide what to do. To avoid marrying the man I would have to
leave the house forever.
I left the
house at 5 a.m. Monday morning while everyone slept. I hitchhiked to my
boyfriend’s house. When I got there his car was gone and I knew he had
already left for work. It wasn’t that much farther so I walked. I told the
guard at the gate to tell my boyfriend it was an emergency.
He came right
out. “I took the day off, what is going on?”
“I will tell
you when we are away from here,” I said.
He took me to
his parent’s house. It was the first time I had met them and they welcomed
me into their home. We sat in the kitchen and I told him what had happened
over the weekend.
“We have to
get married,” he said. “We’ll make sure your father has to say yes. The
only way is you have to get pregnant.” We spent the rest of the day making
plans for our future.
Late that
evening he asked me to come to his bed. When I hesitated for a moment he
asked, “Don’t you want a baby?”
I finally
realized what was happening. Yet, I refused to accept the fact that making
babies was the same act as what Lutz had done to me. It was about four in
the morning when he asked, “How come you are not a virgin anymore?”
I did not
know how to answer his question. He kept asking, “With whom did you have
sex before we met?”
I couldn’t
tell him that it was my half-brother. And when I did not answer he started
yelling and calling me names. “You lied to me; I thought you were
different than the other girls. I will never marry a slut like you.” As he
ran out of the house he yelled, “Go, I don’t want to see you anymore.”
I went numb.
I didn’t know what to do. I couldn’t go back home. I really felt like my
life wasn’t worth much. I left his house and walked through town.
I hitchhiked
back to Harburg and immediately went up to the castle. I sat there for
hours thinking about my life. I realized I was too young to do anything
except commit suicide. I had my little scissors in my handbag and tried to
open the vein on my left wrist. Even that didn’t work, the blood soon
stopped. I felt as if I couldn’t do anything right. A few more hours and I
decided to run away.
I hitchhiked
throughout Germany for a month until I met Barbara who invited me to live
with her. She helped me get a job as a waitress. I had worked a couple of
weeks and started losing weight. I weighed 79 pounds. I realized how sick
I really was and needed to see a doctor.
I didn’t know
any doctor and went to the police for help. After I told them my story
they transferred me to the police back in the town where my parents lived.
I had to repeat the story to them and to the Child Protection Department.
After a few hours of waiting a lady told me she couldn’t help me, that I
would have to go back home.
“Your parents
are already here to pick you up.” She said she talked to them and my
father told her I would always make up horrible stories to get attention.
“Is it true?” She asked.
“What do I
have to do so you will believe me? If you send me home I will run away
again, or find another way.”
The lady
seemed concerned enough to ask what I meant. I told her I was ready to
steal or even to kill my father. I would rather go to prison than to go
back home. That seemed to be enough for her. She promised I wouldn’t have
to go home.
The next day
I was taken to another town and put in a house where many young girls
lived. Most of them were pregnant. Two days later I was taken to the
hospital for surgery. When I returned one of the girls explained I had a
tubular pregnancy.
Four months
later I got a chance to enter tailor school, which would take three years.
It was not really what I wanted to do with my life, but it was three years
away from my family. So I took the test and qualified to get in. I was one
of fourteen apprentices who graduated as the best in that class. Every
year we had a test, and after my second year, my senior master said she
would recommend me for an earlier graduation.
In the
meantime the psoriasis became so extreme that I ended up in the hospital
for six weeks. First, I worried about how much time I would miss from
school, but the teacher said she had the confidence I would make it
anyway. When I did return the Chamber of Industry and Commerce informed
me, in a letter that I was allowed to enter the finals eight months early.
I graduated as the best in the practical part in a class of 140 girls.
Years later I realized that I
had the same rights as others. Slowly, I gained the knowledge I needed to
recognize what I had lived through was wrong. I unlearned the old patterns
and began a new way of life. I began to gain confidence to defend myself
against someone else’s aggressiveness.
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