Love Letters from WWII

As yesterday's post struck a cord for many of you, I thought I would repost a post of mine from 2009.

 

WWII Letters

 

The other day at the brocante I found a stack of letters written during WWII between a husband and his wife. At first I was drawn to them because of how they were worn, and stacked in perfect order. You might say the "art factor" attracted me. The antique dealer seeing that I didn't get the letters real significance told me they were a collection of love letters written during WWII. I had to buy them.

 

 

 

IMG_9584

 

I asked him how much he wanted for them.

He wanted half of France, or close to it, he wanted more than I wanted to pay that much is true.

I told him that I did not read French very well and that I wanted them because they looked artful, a conversational piece, a 'real' coffee table book. He shook his head, "You don't understand their worth."

"I'll give you five euro." I might as well have stabbed him in the heart, he looked so shocked. Then I mentioned that my son liked history and he would read them to me, and I batted my eyes and said, "Pretty please with sugar on it." (or at least that is what I thought I was saying in French.)

Flirting works. Sorry, but it does at the French brocante. I got the letters for five euros.

Postmark WWII

 

Later at the brocante, my friend Nathalie waited for me in the car as I went around gathering the things I bought, she started to read the letters. When I came back she had tears in her eyes, "These letters are incredible, they are full of emotion."

At that point I felt terrible that I had bartered for history with flirtation.

When I got home I put the letters on the kitchen table.

 

 

WWII letters home

 

The next day after breakfast, French Husband and Sacha carefully opened them. The letters had a hypnotic power, they read in complete silence. Every now and then they would look up at each other share a line or two then bury their heads back into a time long ago.

 

 

Reading history

 

Annie, has shared her stories of WWII with me. When she talks about her past her eyes glaze over and I see her go back to when she was a young girl by her parent's side.

One of the things Annie has shared is that when the Americans arrived they had "chewing gum" and "chocolate." The American soldiers gave it to the children whenever they entered a town.

Later the troop heard that Annie's mother had the best homemade soup, soup made with vegetables from her garden! They traded chewing gum and chocolate for bowls of soup.

Most of Annie's stories are not as dark as the ones written in the letters.

The letters are written are from Lyon, and the surrounding area.

 

 

 

WWII letter France

 

The letters always started with, "My big love". Rarely do they mention any names, instead they refer to people they know as "The one who worked at the bakery" or "The one who use to live underneath us." They never say the enemies name, for fear that the letters might be opened and used against them, or worse destroyed.

Reading WWII letters

The letters talk about how the enemy gathered the children, using them as human shields as they maneuvered from town to town. How farms where gutted then burned to the ground. "The Wife" mentions how she felt safer in the city that was being bombed every day than in the country.

 

Butter

 

Later she talks about a butter factory that was raided and the butter burned, "Just to belittle, to taunt us in the face of slow starvation."

She goes on to mention a small village of thirty-five residents, where she had thought to live safely, though over half were murdered in one day. "Whenever we hear a gunshot, we know someone is dying. Many are dying."

 

 

French WWII letters

 

 

They write, in details, often coded, evident of fear, out of anguish and love for one another.

Sacha and French Husband read ever so slowly a few letters, often stopping… casting a distant look out the window, in deep thought, then continuing without a word.

 

WWII letter

 

The handwriting is exceptionally small. French Husband told me that is because paper was scarce, and to post a letter during that time one was expensive… in more ways than one.

 

 

Small paper letters

Often the letters were written on mix match pieces of scrap paper. Their need to "talk" to one another, to share what they were witnessing, to be present to each other through the details of how they were surviving. They found paper and a mail carrier, out of their healing balm for one another.

I kept thinking how much they loved each other: Image walking to the post office, or a drop off zone to mail a letter in a battle zone? That is commitment.

"I do not know if I could have done that…." I said to the men in my life engrossed with reading. Nonetheless, French Husband looked up at me with sad eyes.

"Love motivates, but gee so does fear!" I said in defense.

Xoxo in french

 

XOXO in French "Gros Bisous".

Sacha pointed to the curled back envelope, "Look Mom." he said. He knows I love random, unplanned, spirit of love moving in the unconscious hand of time, sort of thing.

 

It will take awhile before all the letters are read. 

War letters home

 

Books to read about WWII:

All that Light You Cannot See by Anthony Doerr

The Nightengale by Kristin Hannah

Sarah's Keys by Tatiana de Rosnay

The Lost Letters by Jillian Cantor

Please tell me of others that you know…

 

 

 

 

 



Comments

18 responses to “Love Letters from WWII”

  1. Berlin Diary by CBS (radio) news correspondent William Shirer, who was posted there by his network. Great book about the run-up and first year of WW II.
    After the War, Shirer wrote his masterpiece The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, which I bought after it came out in paperback as a birthday gift for my dad, who read the whole thing a few pages per day.

  2. Ahhhh, how I would love reading these. I do love books written during that period, but at the moment I can’t think of the names of them. I have read The Nightengale.

  3. City of Thieves, by David Benioff, revolves around the siege of Leningrad, and the finding of a dozen eggs.
    I have worked for bookstores, and my favorite books were the ones that contained written inscriptions and comments in the body of the book, sometimes photos, and then construct my own stories around them. What a treasure you have! k

  4. I love that you have the ability to share such meaningful parts of your life. It is a joy to read. Although I do have tears in my eyes too. What a treasure, these letters.

  5. How wonderful are all of your postings.
    I enjoy them all so much.
    More than words, letters mingle souls.
    Much love
    Jeanne

  6. This post was the first post of yours I ever read, so now I know how long I’ve been reading your blog. I found it riveting then, and I do now.

  7. My mom left us a box of my dad’s WWII letters but my dad couldn’t carry her letters to him during the war, so we are left with a one-sided love affair and war account through his letters. My sister has written a historical fiction using his letters called “Love Letters Home” https://www.amazon.com/Love-Letters-Home-Time-1942-1945-ebook/dp/B078R8PH27 . (It’s her 1st book and self-published.)

  8. Re the first year of WW II: The US didn’t enter it until 27 months after Germany invaded Poland, so Shirer was able to remain in Germany reporting for a while before the situation became so dire that he needed to leave.
    The book was published several months before the Japanese attacked the US at Pearl Harbor. In the book’s appendix, Shirer listed a number of predictions for what he believed would occur in the War. The only major one he got wrong was a forecast that Germany would be the nation prompting the US to enter the War.

  9. Have you considered transcribing the letters and publishing them as a book, perhaps bilingually French-English (since you and the kids could translate them)? You might need copyright clearance from the authors’ estates (since the writers are probably no longer alive).

  10. Marilyn M

    Beautiful discoveries very!! Can you tell from the letters if these two people survived the war?

  11. What an amazing brocante find, such depth of history! My Dad was with the Royal Canadian Air Force during the war years and was kept safe by the French Resistance (at great risk) after his plane went down one night over France. The relationships with these brave people continued for the rest of his life. He taught his 6 children to be forever grateful for freedom. We in turn are forever thankful to La Belle France for sheltering our Dad from the enemy 74 years ago.
    Thank-you Corey for this beautiful blog and your knack for connecting people the world over.
    One book (and now film) that I’ve enjoyed is Suite Francais.

  12. Yesterday was wonderful, but TODAY!!! I have always been drawn to this time in history. Thank you!!!

  13. Lilac girls by Martha Kelly
    The Bakers Secret by Stephen Kiernan
    Girl in the blue coat by Monica Hesse
    All great historical fiction books about WWII

  14. Bonnie Schulte

    All But My Life by Gerda Weissman Klein… True story
    Clara’s War by Clara Kramer…true story
    My Mother’s Secret by J.L. Witterick…true story
    The Secret Holocaust Diaries,by Nonna Bannister…true story
    The Lavender Garden by Lucinda Riley
    The Lost Wife by Alyson Richman
    The Garden of Letters by Alyson Richman
    All the Light we cannot See by Anthony Doerr (you already have this)
    The Plum Tree by Ellen Marie Wiseman
    The Book Thief by, Markus Zusak
    Sarah’s Keys by Tatianade Rosnay (you already have this)

  15. Bonnie Schulte

    Oh, a note, you can see, I too want to read every book I can find and keep in my own library, about peoples life in Germany during WW2. I also have the movie “The Pianist” and “The Hiding of Anne Frank” if you are interested in movies. They really can bring a few tears..and I enjoyed them both VERY much..Watched the Pianist three times….it was that good… Bonnie

  16. beautiful posts as always. this of course brought many memories of my family
    in Spain. Many have no real idea of the horrible life of this country and what WORLD WAR TWO brought to the many families that hid in the Spanish alps. I am sure many of the French hid in their part of the alps. The idea of Germans hunting down these families hiding deep with in those very high range of mountains
    The difficulties of the very freezing temps and not being able to warm themselves or even cook over a fire. There could be no smoke, it would give them away. Eating mountain cats raw, or perhaps a rabbit to keep somehow alive. What war brings to any country could never be forgotten. Another thing, the Spanish influenza, did not start in Spain. Most of Europe was involved with this long before any war. As history relates, the first Europeans that step foot in the eastern part of the USA brought this with them. And so spreading this to other humans living at the time.

  17. Arnelle Louise

    Thank you Corey for reprinting this post….words can keep us alive with just a hint of hope and love.
    2 books to add-
    The Paris Architect by Charles Belfoure
    Five Quarters of the Orange by Joanne Harris

  18. Bonnie Schulte

    Found another book for you. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

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