Ethnic
Relations on the Baltic Sea
Coast
Jude had lived in his little
Baltic Sea apartment (Ostsee Ferienwohnung) for longer than he
cared remember. He was born in a house close to where he
lived now, and had never ventured far from his home town,
much less the streets where he grew up. Now in his
seventies, Jude was happy to see out the rest of his life in
his little one bedroom home, with the birds nesting in the
tree outside his kitchen window his daily visitors. His
routine was punctuated by a monthly visit from his son, who
lived several hours away, but it was not something he looked
forward to, so he endured their autistic son and the
ministrations of his daughter in law, sighing with relief as
they left in their oversized SUV.
Of late, Jude had noticed the
old neighbourhood changing. Of course his home had been
demolished many years ago to build the new supermarket, but
closer to his apartment he had begun to see changes that he
wasn’t sure he liked. People had begun to move into the area,
and his morning walks to fetch the newspaper were increasingly
seeing him find new shops opening and old ones closing. The
last straw came when ‘his’ newsagency sold to one of the new
people. Foreign magazines and newspapers and foreign food
filtered in, and Jude had more and more trouble finding his
newspaper, which had been relegated to the bottom row of the
shelves. He could barely understand the new owner, and their
funny ways were confusing. He even considered forgoing his
morning walk, but wondered what he would do in its place.
Then he noticed the new owner attempting to talk to him. At
first, his language was halting, and he got a lot of the words
wrong. Jude laughed at him, but not in a nasty way, and the new
owner laughed with him. After a few weeks, they could hold a
conversation – albeit stunted and populated with laughs and
back-slapping. And Jude found he liked the new owner. He was
funny; his background was harsh – he truly loved his new
country and hoped to bring his sister and his wife soon, to
escape the brutalities of his old country.
Jude looked forward to his morning walks, and they began to
take longer and longer as his visits to the newsagency extended
to coffee and then morning tea, and finally lunch.
One day, Jude walked into the newsagency and found Tomas was
not there. In his place behind the register was a lady,
modestly dressed and who spoke better than Tomas did when he
first arrived. Jude, in a panic, asked the lady where Tomas
was.
In a voice that went straight to his heart, she told Jude that
Tomas had a week off, and was spending it in a Rügen hotel – his first time off in the
12 months he had been in his new country. She introduced
herself as his sister, Sofia. She arrived two days ago, and
was helping Tomas run his store. Sofia looked to be in her
late sixties, and Jude looked for a wedding ring. There
wasn’t even a mark where one might have been. Sofia’s eyes
twinkled, and Jude smiled.
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