I could think of no better way to cap this extraordinary journey than to spend a few days in Brussels, Belgium, with my dear friend from years ago Sabine and her partner and my new friend Carsten. As you are aware, this trip has been about recollections and remembrance, about sharing with family and welcoming new friends, about honoring an era and the actions undertaken by those defending the freedoms of all of us. You have read of the bomber in which Uncle Manford and his crew mates died after colliding with a German fighter (I erred in an earlier blog – the German plane was a fighter jet, not a bomber). Neither pilot intended for that tragic moment to transcend to what culminated in this day of reflection and remembrance. The German pilot and crew had their families, their loved ones. But as I noted, this blog is dedicated to my relationships with Sabine and Carsten, and for good reason.
By September 2011, my dear friends will relocate from Brussels, where they work for the European Commission, a branch of the European Union, to Washington, DC, where Carsten has accepted a position with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). I am ecstatic for them to be in the States, and I cannot wait to visit them in DC and for them to visit Springfield and Wisconsin, allowing me to extend to them the hospitality, kindness and consideration they have shared with me. They have opened their home, shared with me the wonderful characteristics of this beautiful international city, and welcomed me as a friend. Sabine and I shared Belgium frites (YUM!) and a delightful, plain Belgium waffle (these need no toppings… oh my). They introduced me to chocolate fondant (this region knows how to serve its chocolate—the chocolate fondant here and the brownies in France... oohhh la la!). We will travel to Antwerp today and shop for chocolates and waffles for me to bring back to the States. Thank you, Sabine, and thank you, Carsten. You both have welcomed me as if I am family. To Sabine, my dear friend for years, I wish you all the hopes and desires you deserve. To Carsten, my new friend, I wish you a delightful voyage and success in your new position with the IMF, and I wish for both of you all the opportunities and hope the States have to offer. Welcome.
And to that fateful collision over the Normandie region of France in July 1944, as a result of wings clipping and worlds colliding, many nations and people celebrate freedoms and remembrances. Perhaps because of that particular moment, I am able to have such strong friendships with Sabine and Carsten (and Matthias and Dani), born and raised in Germany of German families simply trying to provide for their own children their own version of what we call the American Dream—a life of love, forgiveness, trust, value, opportunity, and hope for safer lives and freedoms for all of us.


