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Growing
Old is a Privilege Denied to Many, World War II Vet Says
By Rudi Williams
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON,
March 7, 2001 -- Donıt regret growing old, its a privilege
denied to many, reads a sign on the wall of 87-year-old Bertha Birdie
Gelfers small, tastefully decorated room here at the Soldiers
and Airmens Home.
The sign was framed and hung for her by her late boyfriend,
Frank Marcone, who died at age 79 on March 6, 2000, after a 10-month geriatric
fling with the bubbly, gray-haired former Army sergeant with 10-year-old
knees. The sign adorns the walls with Gelferıs paintings of a Mexican
wedding, flowers and a roadrunner and other paintings and ornaments.
Gelfer came here in May 18, 1999, from Lauderdale Lakes,
Fla., a few months after her husband, Robert Gelfer, died from the ramifications
of Alzheimerıs disease.
When I met Frank, I became alive again because
I had somebody with whom to exchange ideas and share music and go to the
wonderful sights around here, said Gelfer, who served nearly three
years as an Army stenographer during World War II. These were the
things I was unable to do for so many years because of Roberts Alzheimers
disease. I still love him deeply, but I couldnt exchange anything
with him except, maybe, Its a nice day or Lets
go to eat.
So, inside of me, I became kind of dead,
she said. When I met Frank, I suddenly bloomed. When my kids came
to visit me, they were thrilled. They said, Go for it, mom.
He really enriched my life. I became the old me. It was a wonderful experience
and that helped with getting comfortable here. Frank and I had wonderful
times together, but it only lasted for 10 months. Now heıs gone, too.
Gelfer called her life hard, but one filled with a bunch
of fond memories, like her stint in the Army.
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NAME:
Bertha "Birdie"
Gelfer
AGE: 87
DATE OF BIRTH: March 11, 1914 PLACE OF BIRTH: Brooklyn,
N.Y. MILITARY SERVICE: August 1943 - December 1946
RANK: Sergeant
MILITARY JOB: Stenographer AWARDS: American Service
Medal, World War II Victory Medal, Good Conduct Medal and the Womenıs
Army Auxiliary Corps Ribbon WORST MEMORY: "The worst thing
during my military service was when my baby brother was killed in
a plane crash. He was only 27."
BEST MEMORY: "I enjoyed all my service. The best thing was
going from base to base and meeting a lot of wonderful people. It
was wonderful finding out how warm people were to service people.
They respected people in uniform and gave you a wonderful feeling
of support. But that was wartime. I don't think they have the same
respect for service people today."
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She decided to join the Army in 1943 both for the work
and the adventure. She remembers dropping out of high school at 14 in
1928 after completing the ninth grade and, from there, being sent by her
mother to a business school to study shorthand and typing.
I got a job with a dentist, who also owned a newspaper,
she recalled. She said she lied about her age, adding two years and telling
him she was 16.
Then bad luck started setting in. The stock market crashed
in 1929 and, in 1931, the dentist sold his newspaper to a magazine businessman.
That left me jobless, Gelfer said.
A friend helped her get a job doing fingernails in a
barbershop. She later worked in a beauty shop until joining the Army in
1943.
I always liked things military and I was getting
older, wasnıt married. My brothers and sister were gone and all the household
responsibilities were on my shoulders. I said, This is no life.
I want to live a little, Gelfer said. I had to do something
for me.
At 28, she joined the Womens Army Auxiliary Corps.
Gelfer recalled being thrilled when she arrived for basic
training at Daytona Beach, Fla., under the backdrop of a gorgeous sunset.
But the thrill waned when most of the women fell ill from shrimp they
had eaten, and Gelfer spent most of the night tending to them.
That night there was no end to food poisoning sickness
and ambulances running all night long, she said. Fortunately,
I escaped getting sick because I was too busy taking care of the sick
people.
After basic training, the Brooklynite went to an Army
engineer installation, Camp Polk, La., now Fort Polk. Most of the women
were sleeping when the troop train pulled into the base. When they awoke,
there were little rolled up pieces of paper all over them. Men had written
notes and thrown them to the women through open windows.
Im Joe, 472, Sam, call
me please, 194, the notes read, she said. We were 300
women and about 3,000 men. Need I tell you more?
Latrine facilities were atop a steep hill, and the women
ended up digging dirt stairs into the hillside to get to them. Gelfer
remembered the curious wash basin they used, a funny-looking trough with
faucets. It was a urinal.
She moved to her next assignment in Los Angeles, where
she was given the choice of joining the new Womenıs Army Corps or be discharged.
She stayed in and was promoted to corporal after three months and to sergeant
in another three.
I lived with that sergeants
stripe for 27 months and couldnt get a raise because the job called
for a man. Thats the way it was then, she said.
Her next job was as a stenographer in an Army Air Corps
outfit at March Field in Riverside, Calif. From there, Gelfer was assigned
to the 4th Air Force at Tonopah, Nev. We lived way out in the desert,
she said. It was sandy and difficult.
She answered the phone one day while on duty in her company
area to learn her brother had been killed. A navigator trainer stationed
in Seattle, he and nine others died when their aircraft crashed into a
mountain. Her brother had taken the place of a guy who'd gotten sick.
He was 27 years old and his new wife had just
gone to live with him, Gelfer noted. The synagogue gave him
an apartment in exchange for cleaning the building. Thats where
he was going to live with her, but he never came back.
From Tonopah, Gelfer went to assignments in Santa Maria,
Calif., Washington, D.C., and Fort Dix, N.J., where she was discharged
and returned home to Brooklyn. She said it was raining heavily when, decked
out in her Army coat, she went to her old beauty shop to get a permanent.
She was drenched and her stockings were muddy. Later, she ambled into
the draft board office to register her discharge. To her surprise, an
old friend was there and offered her a job.
But I wasnt looking for a job because I
gave away my civilian clothes every time I went home on furlough,
she said. The next thing I knew, I was sitting in a big room with
a judge, who was president of the East New York Savings Bank, behind a
big desk.
The judge asked, Are you engaged, seeing any young
men, getting married? Her answer was no to all those
questions.
Of course, I didnt know Robert would walk
in a few months later, Gelfer said. Though she was wet, muddy and
wearing an Army coat, the judge hired her. That was in mid-December.
Robert walked in wearing his Army uniform in April to settle his mothers
estate.
Looking on her desk and seeing a ruptured duck,
an insignia worn above the right breast pocket on the uniform of World
War II servicemen and women, Robert, a sergeant, asked, Is that
your husbands?
No, its mine, Gelfer answered. He
was going back to Japan to stay with a family, but once he met me, he
decided not to return. We had about four dates, and his aunt gave me his
mothers engagement ring and diamond earrings.
How about getting married next Thursday,
he asked his willing girlfriend. Birdie said yes and began planning a
honeymoon while Robert went to Fort Dix to get his Army discharge.
We had a Jewish wedding in my living room,
Gelfer said. Wed known each other for only 22 days. I got
married at 32 and Robert was 32.
The newlyweds moved into his mothers empty apartment.
In those days, you couldnt get an apartment or a telephone,
Gelfer noted. The judge helped us get a telephone.
The couple would raise four children in that little apartment,
along with a Doberman and fishes.
We gave the big room to the children because I
had four within nine years, she said. Robert didnt get a well-paying
job until he was hired as an estimator for a long-distance moving company.
By then, though, the children were grown and had moved away.
After they retired, the couple moved to Lauderdale Lakes,
Fla., and bought a condo. Robert suffered from Alzheimer's 13 of the 22
years they lived in Florida.
We enjoyed our life until he was stricken,
she said. His memory left him. When your partner has Alzheimers,
you begin to lose a lot of you because you have nobody with whom to exchange
ideas, things youd always talk about or things you might notice.
He drove for awhile, with me navigating. Then
one day, he said, Why donıt you drive? I had a license Id
never used. Suddenly, I became the driver at 77 years old.
As if dealing with her husbands Alzheimers
wasnt enough, Gelfer had to have both of her knees replaced. I
was ready to go home from the hospital when I caught a serious infection,
she said. Today, I know the infection could have taken my life.
It took two months for doctors to cure her.
Gelfer said life was difficult for her having to deal
with her husbands Alzheimers and the death of both her sons,
one at 18 from brain cancer. Then, she had to care for her father after
her mothers death.
I wish I was 67 instead of 87 and living here,
Gelfer said. Then Id know I have a number of years to enjoy
my life, without any pressure. This place is absolutely, unbelievably
wonderful. When you live here, youre free to come and go. Go to
the gym in the middle of the day or during the night, because its
open. You feel very safe here.
She said she never felt safe in Florida because her
neighborhood changed on her. Here, Im safe at any hour of
the day or night, Gelfer said. And you have things to do --
ceramics, woodwork, lapidary -- you name it. All you have to do is to
keep your room and yourself clean and follow the rules. This is
my last address, Gelfer said emphatically.
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