Hansi left us very suddenly, the first of our eight siblings to go beyond the veil.
“Where is he now? What is he seeing?” I wonder.
My grandchildren have heard many stories about him, and whenever we go to visit them their favorite bedtime stories have been the Hansi stories. “Oma, tell us another Hansi story,” they beg. When I tell them I have no more, they want the old ones retold.
“Tell us about the time Hansi laughed because the moon was naked, or the time he wanted fried eggs at a funeral, or the time he saw old Tuk Tuk. Tell us again!” So I tell them again.
On our most recent visit I told them that Hansi had died and their eyes got big and sad. But I said that the stories I tell will keep him alive in their hearts and minds because they will always remember him.
So I tell them the stories again. And I'm thinking, "Now that Hansi is gone, I need to write these stories down."
Hansi's story begins like this:
When Hansi was born our mother was going through a hard time. Most likely she had post traumatic stress syndrome, although at the time there were no words to express what she was experiencing. Many other women had lost husbands and children -- her family was intact. But she had lived through four years of refugee existence, fleeing Ukraine with a toddler and an infant and birthing two more children en route -- one while her husband was gone (conscripted into the German army just months before the war ended) and the other just after they arrived in Paraguay. Now the family lived a hand-to-mouth existence in the Paraguayan Chaco and she found herself pregnant again.
A fifth child. It was too much . . . .
Doesn’t she look happy and so proud of her healthy baby?
That was our Hansi. Always deriving something positive from a difficult situation.

Always, always I felt loved. No matter what was going on - and there was always something going on - I felt love. I felt it from my parents, I felt it from my siblings and I felt it from the only Oma I ever knew. I always felt loved and you just can’t ask for more than that. Except maybe just a few more Hansi stories...
ReplyDeleteI am so glad he lives on in Hansi Stories,as a great lover of telling and hearing stories, Dad would've found no greater joy than that. ❤
ReplyDeleteOne often doesn’t realize how much love one has for something or someone until the thing or the person you love is no longer there.
ReplyDeleteI will write down the stories I have told the grandchildren!
Stacey, he will keep on living in our hearts forever!
ReplyDeleteYou are honoring the past and blessing the future as you tell your stories. Your grands obviously enjoy the Hansi stories and also the tale of a dragon, judging from your first photo. As Psalm 45:1 mentions: ". . . [your] tongue is the pen of a ready writer."
ReplyDeleteThe grands love all kinds of stories. They especially love an old German children's story called Max und Moritz by Wilhelm Busch, about two little mischief makers that finally get baked into pretzels!
DeleteHa!
DeleteHansi was not only your little brother, he was a Godsend. He had a slanted vantage point many children have, but his was special. Or perhaps YOU were special in that you could see the Godsend in all children when you watched him and listened to him. I am so glad you are writing down your stories about him. Now he lives on in your family and in all others you touch with your writing. I think Hansi is smiling.
ReplyDeleteOh, I love your last sentence, Shirley!
ReplyDeleteStories are memories... a beautiful way of remembering! I always felt loved and I know our Hansi did too��
ReplyDeleteRudy Wiebe’s book “Where the Truth Lies” is a great one about story telling. We should do it for book club sometime.
ReplyDeleteLove the Hansi stories!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dora.
ReplyDelete