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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 29, 2017)
International Page 10 Street Roots • Dec. 29, 2017-Jan. 4, 2018 A tree cavity in the Groom Oak has served as a letter box more than 100 years. Below, the steps leading to the ancient oak, where more than 1,000 letters are delivered each year. P H O T O S B Y PETER W E R N E R Looking for love in 2018? Write to the tree Ancient oak in a German forest serves as a post office fo r love letters B Y G EO R G M E G G E R S meters above the forest floor. It is an ancient, beautiful tree, but what really makes it special is a little hole left by a ometimes reality is as unbelievable as fallen branch. This small cavity serves as a fiction. Sometimes, there are lucky letter box. This is where letters that are coincidences in life that could not be mailed to the “Groom Oak” end up. The written in a work of fiction because nobody tree has been called this since the daughter would believe them. Peter and Marita Pump’s marriage is based on such a chain of of a Dodau forester married a chocolate producer from Leipzig under the oak in lucky coincidences. “There is no question; a 1891. Before that, the couple had hidden H ia h ftr hairier m u IV s t la h rita n w . b nrl n b n n H in +hi<s ” rtj-year-oYQ C O N T R I B U T IN G W R IT E R S »¿ mat l o v e l e t t e r s l o r e s a d n o t l i e r lx i l l i e small cavity left behind by the fallen branch. Dating websites advertise on TV, on the Since then, people who are looking for a internet, and on big billboards, saying they will find the right partner for everybody. ' partner or friends send letters addressed to the oak. Algorithms and personality tests are said to Around 1,000 letters are mailed to the show who will fit together with whom and Groom Oak each year, and they are they supposedly calculate the best choice of partner. Without any kind delivered by a postman of calculations involved, who places them into the Peter and Marita Pump hole in the trunk. Those met each other in 1958. interested can visit the " T h e G ro o m O a k Is How well they would oak, climb a ladder to the « m e h m o r e r o m a n t ic eventually fit together cavity and take out the t i t a n th e In te r n e t» " was difficult to guess letters. Anybody is allowed then and, viewed from to open and read them, today’s perspective, nigh ~ KARL HEIWZ MARTENS since “the privacy of FORM ER P O S TM A N on impossible. This is letters has been cancelled because a lucky for the oak,” as Karl coincidence played the Heinz Martens explained. main role in bringing The 72-year-old delivered them together. It took the form of a sheet of letters to the Groom Oak until 1994 and calls his deliveries to the oak paper in a tree. The couple is married to this day. the “highlight of his job” as a postman. For The tree that brought them together is an years, Martens climbed a ladder and placed letters into the cavity - and explained to oak that is about 500 years old. It is situated visitors what made the tree so special. in the Dodau Forest close to Eutin, the The tree, which has its own address, has district capital of the northern German state of Schleswig-Holstein. The even received international attention: TV circumference of the oak’s trunk is five crews from Japan, Denmark, Norway, the then German Democratic Republic and meters and the top of the tree reaches 25 P H O T O B Y PETER W E R N E R Western Germany have interviewed Martens. Mail often arrives there from far across the globe. “After the Goethe Institute mentioned the Groom Oak in their text books, many letters came from China and from the U.S.,” Martens said. Martens can report of successes: he knows several couples who met each other thanks to the oak. One of these couples was Peter and Marita Pump. In 1958, Pump found a sheet of paper with her address in the cavity in the tree and the next day he wrote to an “Honoured Miss Marita.” Peter Pump had been stationed in Pion as a young soldier and while he was taking driving lessons, he got to know the region. The driving instructor showed the young soldiers something special: an oak with its own address. Pump put his hand inside the cavity and felt several letters. He chose one that only held a name and an address and decided to write a letter. Why exactly did he choose this name, this address? The now 76-year-old shrugged: “Just for fun, as a joke,” he laughed. When Marita received his letter, she was very surprised. The sheet of paper with her address had been deposited in the oak by colleagues - without her knowing about it. “I used to be rather timid,” she said. “They wanted to help me get a boyfriend.” Even they couldn’t have anticipated how successful their actions would be.” “I would be delighted if we could enter into a friendly word war with each other,” Peter Pump wrote, somewhat formally, in his first letter. At first, Marita did not even want to answer the letter but her mother thought it was witty. “It is her fault that I wrote to him.” Marita points out. At that time, chance had not yet been outsmarted by a lg o rith m s - in order that the pair could find each other, support from friends and family was needed. The couple wrote to each other for a whole year before Peter built up the courage to go and visit Marita. He had a friend who accompanied him and Marita had a female friend at her side. “They were there for support.” Peter laughs. After a short time, Peter Pump was travelling from Pion to Marita’s place in Haffkrug every other weekend. “By bus, this used to be lik e a j o u r n e y a c r o s s h a lf t h e globe,’7 Peter sighs, as he looks back on their courtship. In 1960, they got engaged and in 1961, the two were married. Today, the Pumps have two children and seven grandchildren. In 2011, they celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. How can a marriage, one based on so many coincidences, work out, launched from a sheet of paper with only a name and an address? “Our characters are different,” Marita said. “But communication is key. We have always talked about everything together.” -------- — - u u l ucLween ti it just felt right. “Many times, we did not have much,” said Peter. “At least on the material side.” For Marita, their meeting was fate: “It was just meant to be that w< find each other. We had little and were rewarded for our modesty,” she says. The couple weathered their economically difficult times together. “That created a stronger bond,” Marita said. “We always iscussed together-’ how we would take th next hurdle,” Peter added. ., 3 few years after their marriage that Marita first visited the place where their relationship began. She was See GROOM OAK, page 11