Heraldnet.com
SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 2008 8:05 am
ADVERTISEMENT

LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
Jerry Cornfield
Rossi reaching out for Obama crowd
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Everett kite shop closing after 16 years
Latest gallery

Photos from the Lincoln Aug. 08
August 29. 2008 (40 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Friday
Cyclist injured after being hit by semi
Monroe teen critically hurt after falling off m...
Local supporters are captivated by Obama's speech
Thursday


PETA activist creates her own circus on Everett...
Obama nomination an 'event of a lifetime' for many
Stranded teen hikers rescued from peak east of ...
Wednesday


Excitement for 2010 Olympics builds on both sid...
Sale of bills mocking Obama cut off at GOP fair...
WASL: Most incoming juniors pass reading, writi...
Tuesday


2-year sentence in Ecstasy drug death
Heroin took life of bright teen from Mukilteo
24 centenarians set a record for the ages
Monday


Boeing Machinists stand firm
Local delegates ready to make history at Denver...
Shorter WASL exams ahead for students in most g...
Sunday


The Tulalips' rapid rise took a lot more than luck
Rain cancels Four Tops, Temptations concert at ...
Edmonds man dies in one-car accident near Marth...
Saturday


Steer clear, police say
Leaks in Gold Bar's finances exposed in audit
Cesarean section rates climbing in Washington s...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Local News   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Darren Breen / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
Victory Grund (right) and her French half-sister Andree Hemmerle hold hands at Milltown Nails and Skincare in Edmonds on Wednesday. Born in France, Hemmerle spent years searching for her family in the United States.
(click to enlarge)
Gerald Ball served with the U.S. Army in Europe during World War II.
Photo courtesy of family  (click to enlarge)
Genevieve Ball Erickson (left) greets Andree Hemmerle, the child fathered by her late husband while he served in World War II.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Sunday, June 15, 2008

'It's not cinema; it's realite'

A French woman connects with her American sisters after six decades

Before Andree Hemmerle returns home to France on June 23, she'll visit the grave of her father -- a father she never met.

Gerald Byron Ball is buried at Willamette National Cemetery in Portland, Ore.

An Army veteran who served in World War II, Ball was 54 when he died in 1966, leaving his wife, Genevieve, and their four children.

Hemmerle is the child he didn't know. Her story is like something out of an old movie, a saga of love and war. It's also a story of forgiveness, acceptance and the meaning of kinship.

"It's not cinema; it's realite (reality)," Hemmerle said Wednesday in the blend of French and English that she's been speaking since her arrival June 1 at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.

At 62, Hemmerle carries the sorrow of never having known her father's love. It's a burden now lightened by great joy. Hemmerle will go home basking in the warm embrace of a family she never knew she had.

With her husband, Hubert Hemmerle, helping translate, Andree Hemmerle and two of her half-sisters explained the past and reveled in their new family at the Edmonds home of Jeri Cusimano.

Cusimano, 60, and her sister Victory Grund, 65, of Whidbey Island, have taken turns hosting Hemmerle and her husband. The French couple will soon travel to Vancouver, Wash., to stay with another half-sister, 61-year-old Carol Anderson. Hemmerle's half-brother, John Ball, 58, also lives in Vancouver.

So does Genevieve Ball Erickson. She was Gerald Ball's young wife and already a mother when he went off to war. Now, she is 86. Andree Hemmerle affectionately calls her "Mother Jean."

"My mother wants her to know she was loved, and that she is sorry she didn't bring her into our lives," Grund said.

Imagine, though, what it was like for Genevieve Ball. It was 1947, two years after the end of World War II. In the mail, she found a letter to her husband from France. Inside was a picture of a little girl, a child with a remarkable resemblance to her own daughter, Victory -- the women still look alike today.

It wasn't until a dozen years ago, at the family's cabin in Oregon, that their mother told Grund and her siblings about their father receiving the letter, and about the strong possibility that they had a half-sister in France. Cusimano called it her mother's "mortal moment." She wanted her children to know the truth, and that they had her blessing to search for a lost sister.

"My mother has had her ups and downs of emotions, and guilt that he passed away without knowing her," Cusimano said.

If the daughters know what words passed between their parents regarding a relationship in France, they didn't share them. In short, Genevieve prevented Gerald Ball from contacting the woman he knew during the war. As far as his children know, he never did.

Imagine, too, their father's pain. "In the back of his mind, I'm sure he was always, always thinking of that little girl in France," Cusimano said.

When their mother finally told them about the letter, she remembered the French woman's name incorrectly. "In her memory, it was Bertha Jolet, from Strasbourg."

With that name being all they had, the American siblings hired someone in Europe to launch a search. For a decade, they searched unsuccessfully.

The maiden name of Hemmerle's mother was actually Bertha Goeller. Today, she is 84. She married several years after Andree's birth and went on to have other children. Hemmerle declined to share her mother's married name. "Andree has a tremendous amount of respect for her mother," Grund said.

Hemmerle did share that early in life, she was called only "Girl." She wasn't given a proper name until her mother married and had other children, and she said she was treated as a "black sheep," she said. "At the time, there was shame to have a daughter without a husband," Hemmerle said.

She did know her father's name. When Hemmerle's daughter, Christina, had a son, she named the baby Gerald Ball. When Hemmerle's grandson was born, her mother showed her what she'd kept locked away for decades -- photographs of the American soldier, who served with the Army's 649th Engineer Battalion.

Stymied by searching for the wrong name, the American family at last decided that their half-sister might be looking for them. On the ancestry.com Web site, they put up their family tree, including their father's name.

The breakthrough came in April. With the help of Mary-Ann Vandaveer, who has an international searching service, and a flurry of e-mail, they began an online conversation with Hemmerle that quickly progressed from exchanging pictures to making travel plans.

From tears at their airport meeting, the sisters now laugh while trying to decide who looks most like Andree. They've walked the beach on Whidbey, met with a French club on the island, and been treated to the Hemmerles' exquisite French cooking.

"From the first e-mails coming to us, she has never found so much love," said Hubert Hemmerle, Andree's husband.

"The past is past. It's a story of tremendous good from something very difficult," Grund said. Hemmerle used her best English to agree: "This is a story about now."

Even so, none of them forgets the man no longer there.

"I feel our father's presence," Grund said.



Columnist Julie Muhlstein: 425-339-3460 or muhlstein@heraldnet.com.




1. Machinists pore over Boeing's 'final offer'
2. Monroe teen critically hurt after falling off moving SUV
3. Everett kite shop closing after 16 years
4. 'I thought I was dead,' teen rescued from Three Fingers Mountain says
5. Cyclist injured after being hit by semi
6. Machinists union rejects Boeing's final contract offer
7. UPDATE: Machinists leaders reject Boeing contract
8. Game over for some Seahawks
9. More schools in state added to No Child Left Behind watch list
10. Poll: Will the Machinists get enough votes to strike the Boeing Co.?
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
E-W's Heard steps back into spotlight
Local theatre ready for its close up
Keeping an eye on the road
Fall into the performing arts
PCC introduces earth friendly features at Edmonds store
Cedar Valley faces sanctions over WASL scores
Breathing room
Shoreline WASL scores show less improvement since 2006
Mill Creek man robs Rite Aid pharmacy, demands cash and drugs
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes


ADVERTISEMENT