After two years, the arbore genealogic model was complete. One hundred thirty-two leaves, six generations, twelve migrations, three wars, one revolution. Ana framed it and gave it to Sofia on her 91st birthday.
She wrote his name in the smallest leaf, near the trunk — because he held the tree together when it could have fallen. arbore genealogic model de completat
I notice you've written a mixed-language request: "arbore genealogic model de completat" (Romanian for "genealogical tree model to complete") followed by "write a detailed story" in English. After two years, the arbore genealogic model was complete
Ana dug deeper. She found a testimony in the Holocaust Museum in Bucharest: Mihai Popescu, arrested December 12, 1941, sent to Vapniarka camp in Transnistria. Of the 1,548 prisoners, only 180 survived. His name appeared on a list of the dead: March 3, 1942, typhus. She wrote his name in the smallest leaf,
“Now I know where I’m going,” Sofia said, “because I see where I’ve been.”
In the dusty attic of her grandmother's house in the Carpathian village of Breb, Ana found a rolled sheet of parchment. It was an arbore genealogic model de completat — a genealogical tree model to be completed. The parchment showed a massive oak with empty oval leaves, each waiting for a name, a date, a place. Only the lowest roots bore handwriting: Marin Ionescu, 1873–1941, carpenter and Elena Ionescu, 1878–1952, weaver .