Re: FW: [Cz-L] Silence is golden

From: <mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu>
Date: Sun, 18 Mar 2012 11:08:56 -0400
To: John <johnebos_at_bellsouth.net>
Reply-to: mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu

Hello John,

The name Trichter is very familiar to me.
I must have heard it in Czernowitz.
I will have to look through the Czernowitz address book to see whether
we had neighbors by that name and through my parents' photographs,
whether they had friends of that name.
Mimi
Quoting John <johnebos_at_bellsouth.net>:

> Hello all,
>
> I have been part of the silent majority for some time - ten years if not
> more. For me, participating is strange. My connection to Czernowitz is
> my maternal g-greatgrandfather, Elias Trichter who in 1891 at the age of
> 10 left Czernowitz for New York City along with his mother Scheindel and
> brother Jonas. They went in search of my gg-grandfather Schmuel Hirsch
> Trichter.
>
> Family lore, which I knew nothing of till I started the family research,
> had Schmuel scalped by indians in the US Midwest. Turns out he was a
> peddler who died during a sand storm near Salt Lake City, stripped of his
> flesh by coyotes. His identification was made by papers and clothing found
> on his body. This I found in a newspaper article from the Salt Lake
> Herald dated 1897. But I digress.
>
> There is no "recent" connection for me to Czernowitz. I have no memories
> of the city. The pictures and stories I read, though entertaining and
> enlightening, do not bring back memories. They do however help to see
> what life was like.
>
> I was born and raised in a suburb of Boston, Massachusetts and have since
> move to West Palm Beach, Florida. For me, my nostalgia is for my home,
> Boston. Nothing, in my mind, compares to it.
>
> Occasionally I will open an email from Hardy about a picture of
> Czernowtiz, such as Ringplatz (wherever that is) in snow and be reminded
> of Boston. This I guess is what most of you relate to. Memories of what
> was.
>
> In my research, I have come across Trichters from the US and Canada as
> well as Australia and Europe. This is reflective of the Czernowitz group.
> You are a diverse group of people who bring your different ideas and
> personalities of how things should be and how they used to be. Watching
> the progression of the Bukovina Cookbook was very interesting. Seeing how
> you handled the city's recognition of Traian Popovici was an eye opener.
> The website is amazing. Cleaning and maintaining the cemetery was a great
> undertaking. It is these which keep me here. It is this which keeps me
> connected to my past, however distant it may be.
>
> From the silent majority, thanks for being who you are,
>
> John Epstein
> Jupiter FL.
>
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Received on 2012-03-18 09:46:10

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