Yesterday I was at the pool at my senior splash class , to which I have only recently returned. An old woman came up to me and asked my name. I told her, and asked what her name was, she said, “Frieda”. That is a name that thirty years ago I would have found harsh, but today in the pool with her accent, it sounded gentle and fresh. I then asked her what her accent was. Although “Frieda” should have been a clue, she answered “German, East German.“ She lived very close to what was the Berlin Wall. We spoke for the next 30 minutes and she told me about her life. I asked her how she happen to come to the United States. After the war two sisters, friends of her mother’s living here in Washington sought out who was alive and who was dead from their old village. Later these same women wrote back to their living friend in what had now become the Russian section of Germany, saying they could immigrate one family. Unlike today, when one immigrated, one had to have a sponsor. The sponsor was responsible for the immigrant for a period of time, which included their behavior, housing, and job guarantee. . They offered this invitation to those who they found living from their village. Freida’s husband who had been in the American concentration camp, when he found that they would be living in the Russian sector, he said let’s go to America. No one else was taking the offer and he said, “Let us take it.” She said “no, no, no,” but he said , “we will sign up and it will take a long time to process, and then we can decide.” In three years their papers came. By this time the Russian sector was really poor. She was willing to come. They came here to the Skagit Valley to a dairy farm. He who had never seen a cow up close, became a milker. She was a seamstress. He later found work in his own profession. She told me that just as the war ended and there were a few days of confusion before the borders were set, she was able to walk from her town which was in the Russian Zone to her In-law’s home which was in the new American section. She said that she was very frightened. She said that the first words that were spoken to her were, “Hello, Baby”. There yesterday in the pool she covered her eyes, and was still laughing. Frieda turns 89 on October 16. I told her my birthday was on the 14th. She said. “We are both Libras, we are good people”.