German Veteran Returns Stolen Ham
By FREDERIC VEILLE
Associated Press Writer
TILLY-LA-CAMPAGNE, France (AP) Some wrongs burn in the memory for years
until they are finally put right.
Hans Kupperfahrenberg traveled from Germany to a tiny Normandy village
just to return a ham like the one he stole from a French farmer during
World War II.
Making good on a 54-year-old promise, the 75-year-old German war veteran
apologized Monday night to Louise Marie, now 87, saying he was starving
when he stole her ham in the summer of 1944.
In a ceremony at the town hall of Tilly-la-Campagne, population 70,
Kupperfahrenberg delivered two hams - one German, one French - to make
amends for his wartime theft.
``It was war. We were retreating and we hadn't eaten for several days,''
Kupperfahrenberg recalled. ``It was wrong to eat your ham, but in the
situation, I felt no remorse. My hunger was too great, and the hope of
finding food too slim.''
It was July 1944, only a month after Allied troops landed on the beaches
of Normandy.
Kupperfahrenberg said Marie had given him and other soldiers from the 21st
armored division some eggs for an omelette. While he was cooking them in
the fireplace, a ham hidden high in the chimney crashed down into the pan.
``We had stashed it there so no one would steal it,'' Marie said.
Kupperfahrenberg said he'd always promised himself he would one day make
up for robbing the generous Frenchwoman.
He returned to Tilly for the first time last summer, but wasn't able to
locate Marie's farmhouse. Instead, he presented a ham to the residents of
an old age home.
Marie read about him in the local paper and contacted officials who
tracked him down at his home in Essen, Germany.