A reunion down memory lane
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A close-knit family, the Helfrichs -- all 31 one of them -- have
always tried to gather for Thanksgiving and other holidays.
But this year, James and Kathryn Helfrich have invited their six
children with spouses and 17 grandchildren on a trip down memory lane.
More than 30 years after the couple packed up the kids and left America
to live in Feldafing, Germany, the family will return to the Bavarian
village this Friday for a weeklong reunion. Two of the couple’s sisters
are also coming along.
“Feldafing was for us a defining experience in a very, very real way,”
said James Helfrich. An engineer, the 69-year-old moved his family to
Germany in 1964 to set up the European branch of a Newport Beach-based
company.
“We made two very important decisions,” said Helfrich, switching from
his native English to German.
Decision No. 1 was to settle in the tiny village, a few miles south of
Starnberg, southern Germany’s somewhat sleepier version of Newport Beach
-- on Lake Starnberg. Here, the family rented a mansion overlooking the
lake that belonged to the Hapsburg family, Austria’s imperial dynasty.
The other decision, Helfrich said, was to sent their kids to German
schools.
“They left school in [America] Friday evening,” he said. “And they
went to German schools Monday morning. They quickly picked up the
language.”
The Helfrichs stuck out a little compared to their neighbors. “No one
else had six children and no one else drove a Volkswagen van,” said
Kathryn, 68, with a laugh.
But their open-door policy, which included offering cookies and
lemonade to village kids and inviting them to play in their 2.5-acre
garden, quickly made them part of Feldafing’s social life.
“Kathryn became the mayor,” James Helfrich said jokingly.
While the children learned German in no time, their parents struggled
somewhat.
Kathryn’s parents immigrated to America from the Netherlands and since
she was already fluent in Dutch, she found it easier to adapt. While he
still speaks flawless German decades after returning to the U.S., James
remembers his first shaky attempts to grasp the language.
Asking a friend for the German word for “residence permit,” the answer
seemed almost impossible to pronounce.
“o7 Aufenthaltsf7 -- what?” he asked the friend in disbelief. But
after chanting o7 Aufenthaltsgenehmigungf7 over and over again, he
managed to obtain the document.
“I think I even sang it to the person at the immigration office,” he
said.
Some of the couple’s children found it more difficult to readjust when
the family returned to America in 1968.
‘o7 ‘Kein Deutsch, kein Deutschf7 -- no German, no German,”
6-year-old Peter would tell his parents as he tried to relearn his native
language and get along with his American classmates.
During a conversation at his parents’ Newport North home Monday,
Peter, now 37, remembered it being a quick transition.
“Apart from playing soccer, I was quickly a pretty normal kid,” he
said.
Peter, who is taking his wife, Linda, and his three children to
Germany, said he was “all piped up” about visiting his early childhood
home.
Like many of his siblings, he’ll use the trip as a launching point to
visit other European countries. The family gathering in Feldafing also
will celebrate the Helfrichs’ 45th wedding anniversary.
Getting ready to head back to work, Peter, who no longer speaks
German, surprised his parents with a familiar phrase.
“o7 Auf Wiedersehenf7 !” he said to them, smiling. “I’m practicing.”
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