Endstation Kiwittsmoor
Image licensed to commons.wikimedia.org
My recent contacts with the scion of the once mighty South Seas Island traders Breckwoldt & Co. reminded me again not only of my time in the islands but also of my time spent in Hamburg in the cold winder of 1967/68.
Near my office on Neuer Jungfernstieg
I had returned to the old country when the Deutsch-Südamerikanische Bank promised me employment in their head office in Hamburg and an eventual transfer to one of their many branches in South America. And so I started with the Banco Germánico de la América del Sud, as I preferred to call them to practice my recently acquired basic Spanish.
I was assigned to their "Hauptbuchhaltung" which was full of German-speaking Argentines who had fled their bankrupt (and corrupt) country and were more keen on practising their German on me than letting me practise my Spanish on them. I began to have my first small regrets.
I had taken a furnished room "auf Untermiete" with a family in out-of-town Kiwittsmoor. The room was supposed to have "Zentralheizung" but only ever heated the "Zentrale" of the house, leaving me to shiver under a thin blanket during those long cold nights of the German winter.
My room was so tiny that I had to store the sea chest, which I had brought back with me from Australia, in the basement, necessitating many trips up and down the stairs. Gradually, letters from friends left behind in Australia began to arrive. Addressed in hastily scribbled English to "Mr. Peter Goerman", they aroused a sudden deference in my landlady who voiced her surprise that someone so young was already a "Dr." I could correct her mistake before she could increase my rent.
I boarded the train to the city when the sky was still pitchblack in the morning and returned when the sky had turned pitchblack again in the evening. Of course, I travelled during peak-hours which meant it was standing room only for what seemed like an eternity but what GOOGLE Map tells me was a 'mere' forty minutes to and from the Binnenalster.
In my short lunchbreaks the sky would turn itself into a foggy grey, and it was during one of those lunchbreaks as I descended the bank's marble steps to get some frosty fresh air when two directors bailed me up.
Wasn't I an employee of their bank? Yes, I was! Well, then it was not for me to descend those marble steps but to use a humble sidedoor around the corner. Well, that was enough for this not-so-obsequious employee of theirs: I walked up those marble stairs and tendered my resignation.
Two more bank jobs, one in my hometown Braunschweig and the other in Frankfurt, which was conveniently close to its international airport, and before another German winter could catch me with my pants down in another unheated rented room, I was on my way to South Africa and, six months later, back to Australia. No more Endstation Kiwittsmoor!
Googlemap Riverbend