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WHAT A TRULY INSPRING STORY Winnipeg Free Press > Arts & Life > Life & Style > Home and Family > The good shepherd Home and Family Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION The good shepherd When a crash killed his brother and sister-in-law, Jakob Dik knew exactly what to do about their 11 orphaned children By: Bill Redekop Posted: 03/15/2014 1:00 AM | Comments: 1 t Tweet 12 f Post 380 r Reddit 0 s ShareThis 395 p Print e E–mail Phil Hossack / Winnipeg Free Press Its hard to get the whole family together for a portrait. Here are 13 of the 17 members. BACK ROW, L-R: Anika, 13, Lisa, 8, Hannah, 14, Jakob, Johannes, 17, David, 22, Daniel, 19. FRONT ROW, L-R: Sam, 17, Nathan, 7, Lina, Nelly, 5, Helen, 10, and Jonathan, 11. Enlarge Image Phil Hossack / Winnipeg Free Press Its hard to get the whole family together for a portrait. Here are 13 of the 17 members. BACK ROW, L-R: Anika, 13, Lisa, 8, Hannah, 14, Jakob, Johannes, 17, David, 22, Daniel, 19. FRONT ROW, L-R: Sam, 17, Nathan, 7, Lina, Nelly, 5, Helen, 10, and Jonathan, 11. (PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS) Photo Store Lina Dik finds a rare moment to herself at the expanded familys long dining table. She didnt think her English was good enough for an interview. Enlarge Image Lina Dik finds a rare moment to herself at the expanded familys long dining table. She didnt think her English was good enough for an interview. (PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS) Photo Store When his brother and sister-in-law died in a car crash, Jakob Dik couldnt bear to see their children split apart. He and his wife adopted all 11. Enlarge Image When his brother and sister-in-law died in a car crash, Jakob Dik couldnt bear to see their children split apart. He and his wife adopted all 11. (PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS) Photo Store The Dik family bible (in German) lays open on their living room table with a bookmark quoting Psalms. Jakob Dik reads from the bible daily. Enlarge Image The Dik family bible (in German) lays open on their living room table with a bookmark quoting Psalms. Jakob Dik reads from the bible daily. (PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS) Photo Store KLEEFELD -- Jakob Dik doesnt know how people got his name or found his phone number. But very soon after his brother and sister-in-law were killed in a highway collision, orphaning their 11 children, Jakob started to get phone calls. People called from across Canada. Calls came from as far away as Toronto and Vancouver from people wanting to adopt. The callers typically offered to take one or two of the children, who ranged in age from 18 months to 16 years. They were six boys, five girls. All blond. Jakob recalled one phone call in particular. The man let it be known he was wealthy. He had a big house, a boat, a large library, and he could afford to have the child tutored at home. Did he have a Bible? Jakob asked. Jakobs reading glasses rest atop a Bible opened on the coffee table in the living room. He reads the Bible to the children at night, he explained, then plays his seven-string guitar. Sometimes called a Russian guitar, the seventh string adds a bass element, a sort of gravitas. Jakob learned to play it while growing up in the Ural Mountains. No, the caller said, he did not have a Bible. Having a big library and no Bible seemed incongruous to Jakob. His deceased brother, David, would want his children raised in a home that had a Bible. It quickly became clear to Jakob he had a new role in life. The children werent going anywhere. He couldnt bear to see them split apart. He and Lina, who already had four children of their own, would adopt them all. *** Jakob and Lina were raised in Central Russia, in one of a string of small towns where people still spoke low German rather than Russian. Jakobs last name, Dik, is a newer Russian spelling of Dyck, a familiar Mennonite name in Manitoba. Dyck is the old-style German spelling, he said. The couple is not Mennonite. They moved to Germany in 1989, after Jakob completed his mandatory service in the Russian army. They lived in Bielefeld, a city about half the size of Winnipeg in northeast Germany near its border with the Netherlands. But city life wasnt for them. In 2005, they moved to just outside Kleefeld in southeastern Manitoba, where David had settled 18 months earlier. They wanted to return to a lifestyle theyd left behind in Russia, where they owned small acreages and kept chickens and a cow. Its hard for Jakob to recall that night of Jan. 23, 2010. Police knocked on the door and shooed away the children, telling them they wanted to speak to their father alone. David and his wife, Elizabeth, the officers told Jakob, had gone out shopping and were travelling on Highway 52 when their Honda Civic began to fishtail on the slippery highway. It collided with a Chevrolet Trailblazer. They were both killed. At first they told me and I tried to blame my poor English that I didnt understand, Jakob recalled. I tried to blame my English because I didnt want to believe it was true. The officers had come for Jakob because they wanted someone the children of the deceased knew to break the news to them. It was perhaps the hardest thing Jakob has had to do. He rode in the back seat of the police cruiser to their house. It was never too much shock but so much responsibility now, he said. The only thing, on the way there, I was praying all the time that I could do it right for the kids. *** For the interview with the Free Press, which took place in the Dik house, Jakob felt more comfortable speaking in German and having his answers translated by his eldest son, David, 22. Lina would occasionally zip by and smile shyly. She didnt think her English was good enough to join the interview. The children didnt go into hysterics when Jakob told them the news, but tears flowed freely. From the oldest to the youngest, they cried. The smaller kids, they cried because the bigger kids were crying, but they didnt actually follow what happened, said Jakob, who, along with his wife, was 42 at the time. He had never seen children so lost. They were walking around like sheep without a shepherd. They didnt know where to go or what to do. Jakob took the boys home and another brother took the girls. The children slept on old mattresses in the living room and hallway. *** It became obvious what the couple had to do. Jakob had other brothers and a sister here, but they already had large families. As for Lina, she had always wanted more children. The smaller kids said, Uncle Jakob and Aunt Lina will be our parents now, Jakob recalled. It was what he and Lina were thinking. Not only could they keep the children together as one big family, but they could keep them near their cousins, aunts and uncles. The first months were very hard times. Jakob would walk down the hall at night and hear one of the children crying in bed. The children struggled in school. Jakob got calls regularly. The children would say they were sick and wanted to go home because they couldnt concentrate on school. So Jakob would drive out and pick them up and take them to Tim Hortons for a talk. They asked the question, Where are my parents now? In the evening, he would try to explain what had happened through Bible readings. Were human, and everyone has to die, is part of what he told them. My dad really tried to talk to the bigger kids, that they should look forward, not back, said eldest son, David. Meanwhile, Jakob had to square the situation with his own children. He told us on the first day; he took me and my brothers aside, he said From now on I will let you stay, but I will take more care of these kids than you, because they need parents, recalled David. It was hard for us. We understand it, but we need parents, too. At the time, Jakob was working as an electrical apprentice for Arly Barkman. He has seen some of what the family has gone through. For Lina, its a handful and its tiring and its taxing, and its hard on her, Barkman said. They have such good intentions for these children, but its a big load and my heart goes out to them. Barkman used one example to explain the kind of person Jakob is. Tradespeople will injure themselves from time to time, like smashing a finger, and then cuss a blue streak. Not Jakob. Jake, when he does something to himself that really hurts, hell say, Thats hard to get used to. He always said that. Jakob left Barkmans employ two years ago and now builds houses with his eldest son, but he and Barkman remain friends. When he visits their household, Barkman says, Its a large family, but the kids are well-behaved. Its not like a zoo. In the first months after the deadly crash, Jakob and Linas days ended at midnight or 1 a.m. and they would be up again at 5 a.m. He would park his truck on the side of the road and try to nap. Their situation touched many peoples hearts. Their church, the Evangelical Christ Church in Mitchell, where the main language during services is German, helped set up a trust. Many people from their church and elsewhere donated money. People from church brought baking and other foods. Vans loaded with food would turn up at their door. Two families still bring food to their house four years later. Those families said God told them to do this and they want to keep going, said Jakob. Jakob said one of the reasons he agreed to be interviewed is because he has so many people to thank. I would love to say to the whole world: Thank you! I have no idea where all the money came from, said Jakob. They had no room for 14 children in their house (the couples eldest daughter had already moved out). The children were virtually sleeping in cupboards. But not for long. Several contractors offered their services and refused to take payment. A man who grew up across the street from Jakobs family in Russia but who did not want his name mentioned, built an addition onto the house. My dad wanted to help, but he said No, you be a dad; Ill do this, said David. Rudolf Fefler did the framing for a second floor. Andreas Rahn (currently in Bolivia volunteering to help build a hospital) did the plumbing, including enlarging the septic field. Together, they converted the previous 1,400 square feet into a 4,400-square-foot home with three bathrooms. There are five bedrooms upstairs alone, branching off a narrow hallway. Rahn did not know Jakob and Lina before the tragedy, but they have since become friends. We are menschen. We have to help each other, he said, sprinkling some German in with his English. Jake and Lina are heroic. Its not easy. I think they dont have enough money, but he has to work hard. As for the donations to the trust, Jakob wants people to know deacons at his church decided how the money was spent. Its used up now. I didnt want people to think I used the money on myself, he said. Neither has Jakob spent the insurance money. It belongs to the kids, he said. A trustee has been put in charge and will pay out the money when each child turns 18. In the Dik household, theres not much money left over for the kids beyond the basics. They use a wood stove to reduce heating bills. The home has one computer, used only for educational purposes. However, the family lives on 10 acres, much of it forested, where the children can play. They also have three horses. Last year, the family used some insurance money to take the younger children to Banff. They went in three vans. *** They are one family today: Jakob, 20, Daniel, 19, David, 19, Angelica, 17, Sam, 17, Johannes, 16, Hanna, 14, Anika, 13, Jonathan, 12, Helen, 10, Lisa, 8, Nathan, 7 and Nelly, 5. Lena, the oldest daughter, is married and moved out, as is oldest son David. We try not to split our family, said Jakob. Old family photos from before have been taken down and just photos of the new expanded family are out now. My dads point is always that when he dies, we will always stick together as a family, said David. The family is run like a platoon. After school, the children check a chart to see what their chores are that day. My job today is cleaning the two living rooms, said Angelica. The oldest kids rotate jobs and the youngest are on hand to support them. Every seven days, the kids get a free day. Theres an entry room that is specifically devoted to taking off shoes and coats. It was built with that in mind by volunteers and includes a walk-in closet for shoes alone. You cant afford to be looking for a matching shoe among 60 others. In the morning, everyone has a place setting where they make their own lunch. The girls help their mom make dinner. They eat at a six-metre table the Diks brought with them from Germany. It was intended for when their children had grandchildren. Now, theyll probably need three of the tables when that day arrives. To go to church on Sundays, it takes three vehicles. They have other chores. On their 10 acres they keep three horses, two sheep, some laying hens and a couple of dogs. Feeding the animals has largely become Jonathans job. Lisa, in Grade 3, is the top student in the family. Angelica is the artist. Jakob told the children they could call him and Lina their aunt and uncle, or mother and father -- whichever felt most natural. I said, Im your uncle but youre free to call me that word, he recalled. The youngest were the first to start calling them Mom and Dad. It slowly worked its way up to the older kids. Now they all do. It was very moving for the couple. I really respected it because they accepted us as Mom and Dad, and I tried even harder to be a dad for them, Jakob said. They have no regrets about their decision. Now, Im actually really happy, Jakob said. David said theres another favourite saying of his fathers he hears when theyre working together. Hell always say theres something we have to do, and Ill say its impossible. Hell say, Impossible? Impossible is impossible. [email protected] Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition March 15, 2014 D8
Posted on: Sat, 15 Mar 2014 19:37:51 +0000

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