His heart was beating fast but his mind was sharp and alert as he lay in some brush with his face so close
to the ground he could smell the earth. He was responsible for ensuring that
his regiment wasn’t walking into an ambush.
Fritz was 21 years old and
called to duty only eight months prior. He now found himself marching on Russia
alongside his comrades. He was a scout; but first and foremost, he was a son, a
brother, a friend, and a fiancé.
Back home, he had promised
his girlfriend that he would come back no matter what.
Wedding plans had been in
the works when the war broke out.
He had been laying in the
bushes for quite some time and was sure that there were no Russian soldiers
awaiting them. He stood up to give the signal to move forward when suddenly the
sound of a shot traveled true the air. Fritz was hit; the bullet traveling
through his heart. His friend, who had witnessed it, later told the family that
he was dead before his body even hit the ground.
Fritz couldn’t keep his
promise; he never made it home alive; he never made it home at all. His family
was left with nothing more than knowing that he hadn’t suffered.
Fritz was my uncle. My dad
didn’t talk about him much, as it was too painful for him.
Fritz was yet another
young man dead, fighting someone else war. It wasn’t his war; he didn’t want to
be there; he was ordered to fight.
I was born 20 years after
his death, and I never knew much about him except that he was funny and a very
good carpenter. My dad passed away 11 years ago, and now there is nobody alive
that knew Fritz. On Remembrance Day, I like to include my uncle Fritz, even
though he was marching for Germany.
I like to remember him not
so much as a soldier, but like the 21-year-old carpenter whose only goal was to
go home from a war he didn’t ever want to be part of.
November 11 is a sad time
a year for me. My heart goes out to all of the men and women who lost their
lives or lost their loved ones.
We should think about
them, and their scarifies, and do what we can to prevent it from ever happening
again.
As for me I will Remember
my Uncle Fritz and all the other soldiers who were robbed of the lives they
could have had.
Isolde Ryan has been a visual artist and writer all her life. She is a contributing
author in both The Chicken Soup for the Soul: The Spirit of Canada (2017),
and We are the Wordsmiths, (2017). Through the South
Simcoe Arts Council, Isolde won First Place in the Battle of the Brushes in
2017 and 2015; and in 2010, won the Peoples’ Choice Award.
Though Isolde put her creative side on hold to raise her family and
breed prize-winning Dobermans, she has produced many original pieces for art
lovers around the world. She frequently writes short stories, and is now
working on her first novel. This story was previously published in Focus
50+. Follow Isolde on Twitter @isoldesryan, and visit her blog here.
See Brian Henry’s schedule here, including writing workshops,
weekly writing classes, and weekend retreats in Algonquin Park, Bolton, Barrie,
Brampton, Burlington, Caledon, Collingwood, Georgetown, Georgina, Guelph,
Hamilton, Jackson’s Point, Kingston, Kitchener-Waterloo, London, Midland,
Mississauga, Oakville, Ottawa, Peterborough, St. Catharines, Saint John, NB,
Sudbury, Toronto, Windsor, Woodstock, Halton, Muskoka, Peel, Simcoe, York
Region, the GTA, Ontario and beyond.
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