Wanderlust led to Costa Mesa
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Sixty-nine-year-old Hanny Schroeder has lived in Costa Mesa since the
late ‘60s, after living in New York and San Francisco.
She was born in Germany and grew up there during World War II.
Because of her strict German upbringing, her mother would not let
Schroeder leave the country -- in fact, she went on a hunger strike
until she was allowed to go to the States, although her sister
secretly fed her the entire time.
The Daily Pilot’s Lindsay Sandham sat down with Schroeder to hear
her stories about growing up in the midst of a war and traveling
around the United States afterward.
How long have you lived in Costa Mesa?
Let’s see, I’ve been in this area probably since the ‘60s. My son
was born in ‘66, and that was in San Francisco, so ’68.
And you came from Germany?
Originally, yeah. I came to the States in ’55. I came into New
York and lived in New York for almost nine years before I moved to
San Francisco.
Was New York a little much for you?
No, it’s still my favorite city, but you need money to live in New
York. But it’s my favorite city because everything is there -- the
theaters, the museums, everything. You don’t need a car. But as far
as climate is concerned, this is the place.
Do you often go back to Germany to visit?
As a matter of fact, I haven’t been to Germany in 25 years, but
I’m going May 2 for the first time.
What prompted this trip?
Just to see family -- I have a sister and a brother still at home.
I haven’t met my grandnieces and nephews ... so I’m just flying over
for eight days, and it’s in Northern Germany. Not many Americans know
Northern Germany: It’s as flat as a pancake.... It’s that narrow part
of Germany on the Danish border.
I’m excited to see the family. Like my sisters there say, “Oh
you’re coming home!” And I say, “No, I’m coming to visit my family;
my home is now here.” I have my son here. This is home to me.
What made you want to come to the States in the first place?
What we call wanderlust. Before I came here, I was a year in
Sweden already. I wanted to see different countries and learn
different languages. When I first came, I came into the Bronx in New
York and we learned the Oxford English in school -- I had five years
of English before I came here. Well, I might as well have spoken
Russian because they couldn’t understand me. So I went to school in
the Bronx where I lived at the time.
What made you come to California?
I actually was going to visit a girlfriend who was from Latvia. We
met in New York and she moved to San Francisco, but when I came here,
she had moved to Florida. I was going to surprise her, you know, and
she had moved to Florida. So I stayed at the Y until I found a place,
you know, where I could rent a room.
You grew up in Germany during World War II. Do you remember the
war at all?
Oh yes. I was 9-years-old when the war was over. Every night when
the British bombers came, because our part of the country was
British-occupied, we had to take our bedding and everything and go
out into the country -- we lived in town -- and sleep in barns and so
on.
Were you always frightened?
No, you aren’t frightened. It’s part of your daily life. I can
tell you horror stories from [the] bombings, and you had to go and
help your neighbors and everything. I found an arm in a tree with the
wedding band still on it.
I don’t watch any war movies, like about the Holocaust. We didn’t
know. You have to understand: We lived in a dictatorship, so all you
hear is what you’re supposed to hear. The country is sealed off from
outside news. I learned when I came to New York and saw the first
movies, then I understood.
But your father was pretty high up in the German government?
Yes, my father. My mother, on the opposite, she smuggled Jews out
of the country, which my father never even knew -- they were divorced
in 1948, you know.
She then smuggled them out of the country, and the kids didn’t
know about I, but we weren’t allowed into our coal cellar.
Well later on, we found out that’s where the Jews were hidden, and
since we were so close to the Danish border, she smuggled them into
Denmark, and from there, they went up to Norway and so on. She did
that with selling alcohol on the black market -- that’s how she
financed it.
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