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By Annie Garau
The couple are believed to have fallen into a crevice.
public domain Francine and Marcelin DuMoulin disappeared in 1942.
One day in 1942, Francine and Marcelin DuMoulin left their mountain home to milk their cows. Neither would ever see their home â or their seven children â again.
75 years later, authorities suspect two âperfectly preservedâ bodies uncovered on a melting Swiss ski resort likely belong to the long-missing couple.
âThe bodies were lying near each other,â the Les Diablerets resort director Bernhard Tschannen told Swiss media outlet Le Matin. âIt was a man and a woman wearing clothing dating from the period of World War II.â
Along with the remains, Tschannenâs employee found some backpacks, tin bowls, shoes and a glass bottle. It appears the couple had fallen into a crevice.
Though DNA tests have yet to be conducted, the discovery has given the coupleâs daughter âa deep sense of calm.â
Now 79, Marceline Udry-DuMoulin said that she had never stopped looking for Marcelin, 40, a shoemaker and Francine, 37, a teacher.
She and her siblings were divided up into different households after their parents disappeared. Over the decades, they lost touch.
Wikimedia Commons Les Diablerets, Switzerland
âAfter a while, we children were separated and placed in families,â Udry-DuMoulin said of her five brothers and sister. âWe all lived in the region, but became strangers.â
Though itâs an undoubtedly sad story, she wonât be wearing black to the upcoming funeral.
âI think that white would be more appropriate,â she told Le Matin. âIt represents hope, which I never lost.â
And while the thawing glacier offered hope to the DuMoulin family, it represents something entirely different to just about everyone else.
As global warming rapidly continues to melt glaciers, the mountains theyâve held together for centuries are starting to crumble.
Massive floodwaters, avalanches and rock slides have become regular occurrences for Swiss towns dotting the region â which has warmed significantly faster than most of the worldâs regions.
But silver lining: maybe weâll find some more bodies.