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Conversations with the Elders, No. 16
Therese GROSS HERMAN (born 1915)
by Sister Alice Ann Pfeifer, C.S.A.
with Sister Mary Elise Leiker, C.S.A.
© Copyright 1997, Congregation of the Sisters of St. Agnes, Fond du Lac,
Wisconsin and FEEFHS, all rights reserved
First posted: 14 May 1997
In 1941, life was so hard in the little Crimean village of Rosenthal that, for Therese (Gross)
Herman,
news of her deportation to Kazakstan actually came as a relief.
Roots in Romania and the Caucasus
Therese was born on March 3, 1915, in the Crimean town of Simferopol. She was the fifth
of 13
children in the family of Lawrence Gross (1877-1947) and his wife Philippina (1885-1977).
All
together, the Grosses raised eight daughters and five sons.
Therese's parents had made a number of moves before finally locating in the Catholic village
of
Rosental [13 miles east of Simferopol] for the majority of Therese's growing-up years.
Therese's
father had been born in 1877 in Romania, in what was then a part of the Russian Empire.
His
parents were Daniel and Therese Gross. Therese's mother had been born in 1885 in the
Caucasus.
Her parents were Matthias and Clara POSCH.
Lawrence Gross and Philippina Posch had married before World War I. While he was still a
young
husband and father, however, Lawrence was called to serve in the army of the Russian
Empire.
When he returned to his family after fulfilling his military duty, he decided on a move to the
Crimea.
Today Therese remembers her Gross grandparents better than her Posch grandparents
because the
Grosses had lived in Rosental when she was a girl. The Posches, however, had remained in
the
Caucasus. She remembers Grandfather Gross as an avid reader and a smart dresser.
Grandmother
Gross was a talented seamstress and a fashionable dresser, too, she loved to wear elegant
hats with
big feathers in them. Grandfather and Grandmother Gross had raised six children all
together, three
sons and three daughters. All three of the girls had elected to become nuns when they
became of
age. Therese remembers that her father often had remarked, "I have three good sisters.
They are in
the cloister."
Therese's Posch grandparents were too poor to be smart dressers. Her grandfather was a
small,
sickly man who often could not work. For reasons that Therese did not explain, he also was
often in
jail. Grandfather Posch was a quiet man, the opposite of Grandmother Posch, who was
lively and
energetic. She worked as a house servant to the wealthy. She had a very kind and generous
disposition, but in her circumstances she also had learned to be thrifty. "She never threw
away
anything," Therese remarks today. Occasionally, her grandmother - but never her
grandfather - came
to visit Therese's family in the Crimea.
A Good Catholic Family in a Nice Small Town
When Therese's family first moved to Rosental, it was a small Catholic town with only one
street.
The living quarters of the Gross family, which by this time included six children, was one
big room.
On one side of the room was a large bed for three of the children, and on the other side was
another
large bed for the other three. At first the family lived in great poverty, but Therese's father
worked
hard and eventually was able to afford better things for those in his care. On his carefully
managed
shoemaker's earnings, he was able to build a new house from bricks made of straw and lime.
He
obtained land and planted fruit trees on it. He bought a cow and a horse, and he began
raising bees
for honey.
Therese enjoyed a normal childhood for that time and place, one which included four years
of
elementary education. All of the subjects were taught in the German language by two
teachers whom
Therese remembers as Mr. KONRAD and Mr. WECHSEL. Mr. Wechsel was especially
popular
among the children because of his talent in music. Therese chuckles as she remembers one
of her
classmates named Agatha KLEIN. Jokes were always made about big Therese Gross and
little
Agatha Klein - gross meaning big in German and klein meaning
small.
Therese's upbringing from her parents was strict. The qualities of piety and industry, which
were so
much a part of her father's life, Mr. Gross expected to see in the lives of his children as
well.
Therese remembers that both of her parents were quick to answer the call to worship
whenever the
village church bells rang. At the services, her father would sing "Grosser Gott"
with such
gusto that her mother would tease him afterwards. "We always hear you over everybody
else!" On
all of the big Catholic feastdays, the family prayed the rosary together in their home. One
time when
Therese laughed in church, her father disciplined her severely. He did not want any of his
children
to grow up taking religion lightly or being disrespectful to God.
Therese's father was equally adamant in teaching his children the value of hard work.
Sometimes in
the evening when the family gathered in the living room and busied themselves with various
tasks, he
would order a daughter who had just finished knitting an article to take it apart and do it
over again.
While this kind of instruction might seem harsh by today's standards in later life Therese felt
enormous gratitude for this training. She believes that as an adult she would have starved to
death if,
as a child, she had not learned her father's lessons about patience and hard work.
The Beginning of Rosental's Reign of Terror
Therese remembers that the Catholic church in Rosenthal was big and beautiful for a village
its size.
This made all the more tragic its closing when the forces of atheistic communism arrived
with a
vengeance in the early 1930s. Parishioners themselves were forced to do the dirty work of
destroying
all the sacred art on the walls inside the church. Therese poignantly recalls a beautiful scene
of
Christmas in Bethlehem being scraped off the wall like so much worthless old wallpaper.
Then the
church pews were removed and replaced with tables and chairs so that the building could be
used as a
social club.
Actions taken against the worshippers, however, were even worse than what was done to
their
beloved house of worship. First the old priest was arrested, then the young priest. The
parishioners'
initial response was to continue gathering for prayer, as they begged God for the safety and
well-being of their jailed priests. Next to be arrested was a woman who was the parish
bellringer.
Therese also recalls harsh treatment of two friends of the priests - Johannes KELSCH,
husband of her
sister Rosalia, and Johannes' mother, Katerina.
Before religious persecution had begun, the priests had boarded with Katerina Kelsch and she
had
been their cook. After it had begun, her son Johannes had taken the priests' religious books
into his
own home for safekeeping. Communist authorities soon arrested Johannes and interrogated
him about
the books, then demanded that he sign a confession saying that they were his books. The
communists
threatened to place his hand on a red-hot iron if he did not confess. After conceding to their
demands, he was taken away to be shot.
A true reign of terror had erupted upon the people of Rosental. Spies and informants were
everywhere. Accusations, false and true, filled the air, and people disappeared in the night.
One
evening while the husband of one of Therese's sisters was drinking with some friends, he
picked up a
stone and said, "This is for Stalin." Soon after that, he was jailed and never heard from
again. In
1937, during the night of May 1, 23 men were taken from their homes and placed before a
firing
squad - among them, Therese's grandfather. Therese says that she will never forget the
morning
when her mother broke the news of Grandfather Gross's arrest.
Most feared of all were members of the Komsomol, the Young Communist League. Some
members
of the Komsomol were overzealous believers in their cause, capable of great cruelty, but
others had
joined the Komsomol mainly in self-defense. In the latter group was a young man named
Anton
Herman, son of Michael Herman, Jr. After his father was executed on October 8, 1938,
Anton felt
sure that a similar fate awaited him if he did not "join the cause." So he became part of the
Komsomol, in time actually doing much good from within the organization. After reaching a
position
of responsibility, he became one of the kinder, fairer local officials, more eager to see to the
equal
distribution of work and of rewards than were certain other officials.
In the meantime, however, Therese had some nasty encounters with the worst of them. One
experience in particular, when she was 18 years old, cured her of any remaining youthful
naivete that
she might have had toward local leaders in the new era of communist domination.
Wolves in the Woods
When the incident happened, Therese was working in a brigade of six teenaged girls whose
daily task
was milking cows. One day a communist supervisor dropped by the place where the girls
were
tending cattle and said to them, "Go home and put on some nice clothes. We'll drive to the
village to
see a movie." For the girls, the prospect of riding in his car was as exciting as the thought
of seeing
the movie. Eagerly they ran home to dress in their Sunday best. ("Home" was actually a
large
unheated room that the girls shared as members of a work brigade.)
When the girls returned to the appointed place, they happily piled into the supervisor's car.
Their
high spirits soon came crashing down, however, when they saw that they were heading not
for the
cinema or even for the village, but for the dense woods in the countryside. Eventually the
car
squeeled to a halt under some trees, where two other men were awaiting the girls' arrival.
The men
had a big feast spread out on newspapers, and they were drunk from the wine and the vodka
they had
already guzzled. One of them was holding a gun in his hands. As the girls noted the men's
drunken
condition and a nearby jug full of bullet holes, terror gripped their hearts.
"Get out of the car!" the driver ordered. As the girls huddled together on the ground near
the food
and beverages, "Drink!" the two inebriated men commanded. With trembling hands, the
girls began
sampling the lemonade, carefully avoiding the alcoholic drinks. Then the driver returned to
his car
and sped away.
A girl named Maria caught the eye of one of the drunks, and he ordered her to come to him.
When
she did, he began fondling her. Convinced that it was time to take action, another girl called
out to
the remaining five, "Run!" as she sprung from the ground and darted into the woods. Only
one other
girl responded and followed her, but both runners did safely escape. Then the second man
chose a
girl to begin fondling. That left Therese and one other girl to watch in fear as the two
drunks
continued molesting the two girls whom they had chosen.
Soon the driver returned with his car and called for the two men and the four girls to join
him for a
joyride. Once inside the vehicle, the girls screamed in terror as the car leaped wildly
forward. As
the passengers rocked about inside the racing car, one of the drunks then turned his attention
to
Therese. Like a wolf, he began biting her all over her face and arms, leaving painful purple
bruises
and scarlet teethmarks.
Meanwhile, the man with the gun was firing shots through an open car window as the girls
continued
filling the air with their screams. Eventually the speeding car passed through a Tartar town.
The
townspeople heard all the noise, and local communist officials ordered the car to a halt.
Right on the
spot, they arrested the men who were terrorizing the girls. Then the men were jailed and the
girls
were safely escorted home.
Her eyes full of tears as she recalls this incident, Therese concludes, "I don't know why they
acted
like that. They were all married men with beautiful wives."
From the Work Brigade to the Married Life
Sometime later, along with two other brigades of young women, Therese's brigade was put
to work
on a road-building project. Their task was to build a second street for Rosenthal. Her crew
labored
from dawn to dusk everyday, then slept at night in that same big unheated room where
Therese
continued to live as she grew into womanhood. She will never forget all the heavy lifting
and hauling
of bags that she and the others did under the harsh eyes of stern supervisors - lazy and
dishonest
German men who had joined the commuists during the time of forced collectivization. When
these
supervisors weren't driving the road-builders to work harder and faster, they were drinking
and
womanizing - as they were doing the day they had lured Therese and her five young
companions into
the woods.
Later, after sinking to new depths of vice, one of the supervisors kidnapped a young woman
of the
village and kept her as his mistress in an illegally obtained apartment. When Therese
directly
confronted him about his cruelty toward the girl and his dishonesty toward the system, he
threatened
to have her put in prison. But he never carried out his threat. Therese says, because his
accusations
against her would have brought into the open his own corruption. And the corruption could
not have
been tolerated.
In 1937, when she was 22 years old, Therese Gross agreed to marry Anton Herman. (This
is the
same Anton Herman previously mentioned - the young man who joined the Komsomol to
protect
himself after his father had been shot.) The couple was dirt poor when they first married
and could
afford to live in only one small room with a narrow aisle beween two beds. Money was
scarce, and
baby clothes were made from Therese's own cast-off clothes. The first baby came in 1938,
a healthy
son named Aginus. Then a daughter named Rosa followed. Although Therese held a
full-time job,
she refused to have little Rosa cared for in a children's home. Instead, she wrapped up the
baby well
and took Rosa with her to work every day.
One Sunday the baby fell ill with a fever. Therese's eyes moisten with tears as she recalls
what
happened next. "There's a saying, you know, that if a child gets sick on a Sunday, it will
not
recover." Rosa never did.
One summer day in 1941, about two months after war had broken out with Germany,
Therese's
husband told her that he had heard that all German Russians were soon to be deported from
the area.
"You have a week to get ready," Anton secretly confided to his wife. The Hermans owned
two pigs,
some chickens, and a cow. Therese decided not to do any butchering but simply to set the
animals
free. She put some clothes and fried meat into a sack for her husband to carry, and she held
their
little son in her arms as a truck pulled up in front of their house one August day. Man,
wife, and
child simply walked out of the house, closed the door behind them, and joined three other
families in
the back of the truck.
First the exiles were taken to a large cattle barn, where they spread blankets on the ground,
built
fires, and spent the night. Then they were put on a train to an unknown destination.
Although
occasional stops were made during the week-long trip, Therese never responded to the
invitation to
leave the train for air and exercise. She was afraid of being left behind if she did.
Somewhere in the Caucasus the train stopped and deposited its passengers. The exiled
families then
were dispersed to live among families residing in the area. The exiles remained in the
Caucasus for a
month, helping with the field work, then were brought together again for a trip by cattle car
to
Asiatic Russia. By October of 1941 the Hermans were boarding with a family in the Kazak
village of
Byeli.
A Mother's Sorrows
In 1942 Anton was ordered to Chelyabinsk to serve as a slave laborer in the Soviet
trudarmiya. He
left behind a young son and a wife in the advanced stages of another pregnancy. That April,
in a
cold and underequipped hospital in Kazakstan, Therese was surprised to find herself the
mother of
twin boys. She named them Michael and Lawrence after their two grandfathers. The doctor
who
delivered them, however, was concerned about their weak condition and immediately asked
Therese if
she could baptize them. Therese said yes and hoped for the best.
In Chelyabinsk, Anton was happy to receive the news that he was the father of twins. In a
prompt
reply to Therese's letter, he urged her to take good care of the boys so that they would grow
up
strong and healthy. In Kazakstan, however, food was scarce. After two months, Therese's
starved
body no longer was able to produce enough milk to keep the babies well-fed. Therese
returned to the
compassionate doctor who had delivered the twins and asked for advice. The doctor said,
"Bring
them to the children's home, and you can stay there, too. We will give you work." Eager
to save
the lives of her little boys, Therese did so.
The home was so poorly equipped that Therese did not even have the rags for scrubbing the
floors, so
she cleaned them with a knife. Despite the best efforts of everyone working in the home,
however,
baby Lawrence died a month later. Soon after that, baby Michael developed a big blue
swelling on
his stomach, and he also died. Therese was heartbroken.
At least one comfort was that she still had her firstborn child, Aginus, who now was four
years
old.
Therese returned to Byeli to work in the fields and to live with her sister Amalia. When
Amalia also
received orders for the trudarmiya, Therese moved to another town, Pokrova,
where
another sister lived. Rosalia, the mother of three children, was a hard worker but was
house-bound
because of lameness. Thus a natural division of labor occurred between the two sisters;
Therese
handled all the outdoor work while Rosalia did the indoor work.
They lived in an apartment owned by an elderly couple who had agreed to share their living
space
with the women and children. The old people were very kind and agreeable, but after three
years,
Rosalia and Therese decided that they and their active, growing children had strained the
generous old
couple's patience long enough. So with the help of some German friends, the two sisters
built
themselves a dugout. Later a local supervisor took pity on them and found them an
apartment in
which to live.
In 1946, after the end of the war, Anton received permission to visit his wife and son in
Kazakstan.
When Anton returned to Chelyabinsk, Therese again was pregnant. She was still expected to
work,
however, and so she spent every day of her pregnancy caring for cattle and keeping the cattle
barns
clean. On March 25, 1947, Therese gave birth to another baby girl. Noting that it was the
feast of
the Annunciation, she named this baby Maria.
Six months after Maria's birth, Anton again received permission to leave his work camp in
Chelyabinsk for a quick visit with his wife and family. This time the couple had a serious
talk about
trying to live together again as a family - but where? Therese did not want to remain in
Pokrovka for
many reasons, one of which was the village's big drinking problem. The following year,
Anton
obtained the necessary government papers for Therese and the two children to move to
Chelyabinsk.
Back to the Future
In Chelyabinsk, the Hermans again started life together in one small room, but this time they
shared
it with their growing son and their baby daughter. After her big move from Kazakstan to the
Urals,
Therese still sometimes went hungry, and her work hours remained long and hard. But one
bright
spot in her life became her membership in Chelyabinsk's Catholic parish.
Therese remembers well the little house on Domenniya Street and how it looked in 1983,
when it was
first bought for conversion into a prayer house. The original structure of four rooms had
interior
walls that all needed to be torn down to create one large assembly room. Then builders had
to
receive the necessary government permission to add a room for use as a sacristy.
Leo Schmidt (born in 1909 but now living in Germany) was the supervisor of the building
project; he
also did much of the necessary electrical work. Anton Meyer (born in 1913 and also now in
Germany) labored every day, from dawn to dusk, making the wooden benches and doing all
of the
necessary carpentry work. Every day, too, Kamalach Klement traveled from a place near
Korkina to
help turn the humble little house into a house for God. One time when Therese remarked on
how
hard the long daily trip probably was for him, Kamalach's eyes sparkled as he replied, "Oh,
but this
makes our life golden."
Therese remembers, too, how hard all the women of the parish worked - Helena Krug, Leo
SCHMIDT's wife Amelia, Anton MEYER's wife Rose, and others. She remembers how the
people
saved their rubles for the church's upkeep after the remodeling had been finished. Every
adult
member of the parish pledged a ruble a month. "In those days a ruble bought something,
Therese
explains. "A ruble bought five loaves of bread!" (Today, by contrast, it takes 2,500 of
those same
rubles to buy just one loaf of bread.)
Fourteen years later, Therese remains a faithful weekly visitor to the Lord's house on
Dommeniya
Street. For a resident of the city's distant northwest side, this is no mean accomplishment.
Doubtless
from another world her father is watching and smiling as she makes her way to the crowded
little
church each Sunday - especially on the days when everyone is singing "Grosser
Gott."
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