My
father, Harold G. Johnson, was attached to a battalion of combat
engineers with the Third Armored Division in northern Europe during
World War II. He drove a big, slow truck loaded with bridge-building
equipment to
wherever the German army could be found. At rivers and streams, he
and others would assemble this equipment while our tanks sat and
waited to get at the
highly agitated Germans on the other side. He came home from the war a very nervous man.
While bivouacked in Belgium for a sustained period
of time, he and his buddies befriended a local urchin named
Ludwig. Through the rubble and chaos of his village, Ludwig would
come every day, and the soldiers would reward him with chocolate and other
treats. In return, he served them as a touchstone of humanity and
normalcy that my father, for one, never forgot.
When I was a small boy, he called me "Ludwig." When
my little brother was born, Daddy called him "Ludwig." It was his
diminutive for anything dear and vulnerable. At the time he died, in 1992,
he had an old, gray cat he'd raised from a foundling. The
cat's name was Ludwig. |