WW1 vet here fought for Germany By Harry Levins - 11/11/06 WW1 German vet in the US story... On this Veterans Day, consider that rarest of veterans, Walter Heiman of University City. First, he?s 105 years old and a World War I veteran. Second, in WWI, he wore the field-gray uniform of the German army. Heiman is Jewish. He fled from Nazi Germany in 1938. "All I had when I left was $25 and a pregnant wife," he says. From 1938-41, Heiman lived a hardscrabble life in Chicago. He moved to St. Louis in 1941. Starting from scratch, he built a career as a purveyor of electrical supplies. In the ?50s, he moved to Olivette, where he and his wife, Trude, reared two children. Shortly after Trude Heiman died in 1994, Walter Heiman moved to University City, to The Gatesworth, the complex for the elderly. There, he says, he?s the sole WWI vet, from either side. Heiman was born on March 12, 1901, in Essen, Germany. He was 13 when Germany marched off to war. As soon as Heiman finished high school in March 1918, he enlisted, a 17-year-old private. He wanted to fly, as an observer in the back seat of a warplane. The army sent him off for training to an air base in Hanover. But Heiman?s flight career never got off the ground. He says, "My training hadn?t finished when revolution broke out on Nov. 9. Then the Kaiser fled, and everybody was on his own, and I went home." As the German war effort collapsed, so did support for Kaiser Wilhelm?s regime. A revolutionary republic was proclaimed on Nov. 9, 1918. The Kaiser fled to the Netherlands on Nov. 10. On Nov. 11 " 88 years ago today" an armistice ended the war. By then, Heiman was back home in Essen. Soon, the French army occupied the city. Heiman wanted to go to college. But even before the Nazis rose to power, anti-Semitism pervaded Germany. "They had a law that only one member of a Jewish family could be in college," Heiman says, "and my brother Kurt was already there." Like Walter Heiman, Kurt Heiman had served in the German army. Unlike the younger Walter, Kurt Heiman saw combat and was wounded, in the Battle of the Somme in 1916. He never fully recovered from his wounds and died in 1920. By then, Walter Heiman was an apprentice in the grain distribution business. In 1926, he started his own grain business in Essen. He got married on the last day of 1935. Three years later, he made up his mind to leave Nazi Germany. Thanks to relatives in Chicago, he had a place to go. The Nazis seized all of Heiman?s assets. He said farewell to his parents, his in-laws and his older sister, Lily. He would never see them again. They all perished in the Holocaust. In Chicago, Heiman learned English, thanks to night school and a small radio. He wanted to become a U.S. citizen. "But that was delayed until 1945," he says. He adds with a sardonic smile, "I was considered an enemy alien." His son John was born shortly after the couple arrived in the United States. A daughter, Shirley, followed. Today, both live in Creve Coeur. Shirley Heiman is on hand to help her father cope with an interview. "He?s hard of hearing," she says, "but he?s really quite sharp." Indeed, with only momentary pauses, Heiman can retrieve long-ago names, dates and places. But one memory he skirts is his service as a German soldier. "Anything that had to do with the army, I want to forget," he says. "I have very bad memories."