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"Grainer" and the same happened with the Croats and Serbs; it appeared that only the, Czechs and Poles were "always conscious of their nationality (and) never hesitated about saying who they were (p. 320). It is the other nationalities of what is today Yugoslavia who receive the longest and perhaps harshest treatment in Adamic's text, while the Slovenes are hailed as the "most cultured and civilized of Bohunks", next to the Czechs (the Slovene American critics of The Bohunks seem to have missed this). It is the final description of the "Croat or Slovene" colony near Los Angeles, where the author lived for a time in the twenties, that has caused the greatest confusion among Adamic's opponents and first critics. The scene thus deserves to bi quoted in full: There lived the "Austrians" or "Bohunks", In low, unpainted shacks or bleak-lookin- g apartment houses along unpaved streets that swarmed with unclean children in torn garments. Nowadays the Bohunks still live, preferably, at the end ot the (street-car- ) line — in the Balkans, as they call the Yugoslav colony in the California town where I lived; but now their houses are painted, their streets paved, and their children are neater, for Prosperity has blessed them, too. But they are still Bohunks. On Saturday nights and Sunday afternoons they get together, and, apart from the prim and proper Nordics and the "better element" generally, they sing, play their stringed instruments and accordions, dring, fight, shout and roar to their heart's content" (p. 321). As we can see, Adamic's intention here was not, as some of his critics would have it, to portray his Bohunks as unclean or as drunkards, but rather, among other things, to goodnatu- - redly and amusingly present the change in their living standard for the better. The third part moves to a presentation of the general condition of most of the Bohunks, from their arrival in America, for "two, three years, four at the most", to that tragic point when they became "caught in America",' and a return to the old country became a "hopeless dream". This transient condition of the Bohunk is realistically portrayed and points to a great number of related themes. For instance, Adamic stresses that, "in their inmost thoughts, the majority of them who came here as adults, no matter how long ago, are still more in the old country than in America..." (p. 322). Further, Adamic points out that among the Slavic groups in America, in his opinion, the Slovenes are the most favourably inclined toward assimilation, although Bohunks on the whole had little interest in American society or politics, even after they gave up the idea of returning home. After Adamic mentions a short list of three successful Slav scientists (Hrdlicka, Tesla and Pupin) in America, he offers the conclusion that, "as politicians the Slavs are usually not very adroit; the Slav is too sentimental, naive and honest a soul for such things, even after he has gone through the mill here" (p. 322). In the fourth and last part Adamic returns to his interpretation of the human condition of the Bohunks in their first years in America and focuses on their social and cultural life. Adamic stresses their initial social possitlon, as "with few exceptions, low-pai- d manual labourers, performing the most dangerous and dirty tasks", (p. 323. .Then, following a long realistic, often amusing expose of the Bohunk saloon at the height of immigration, the author turns to the Catholic Church, which he considers in the post-saloo- n era as "the most successful public enterprise in every Slovene, Slovak or Croat community in America", and adds, "as in the old country", (p. 323). But Adamic's energy is devoted mainly to his characterization of what he considers the three groups of Bohunks. First of all, he finds In most Bohunk settlement a split into two antagonistic camps; "the church members and the unbelievers, mainly Socialists. The unbelievers, on course, are in a minority and largely Ineffective... The alien Catholic parishes, with their parochial schools, are strongholds of medievalism", (p. 323). For the others, he j continues: There is a third group or, rather, mob - perhaps stronger numerically than the other two put together, but unorga-nized. It is made up of lost, loose souls, not exactly infidel, but keeping out of the church: yokels inflated with the conceit born of the American idea of equality, distrustful of everything but the most obvious fakes; an uneducated lot in whom ignorance and prejudice create a formidable combination (p. 323). Today it is interesting to note that, while the first and second groups from Adamic's Bohunks have publicly stated something against his categorization, the third has remained silent to this day. In relation to culture, Adamic appraises the Bohunk newspapers and magazines, declaring them, with only one or two exceptions, "all very dull" and afraid to print a line that might "disturb any reader's prejudices", or "put a strain upon the brains of their readers". The Bohunk editors, he continues, betray little knowledge of American literature or politics, and are intellectually "only slightly above their readers". At this point Adamic exhausts his theme and calls his picture "bleak". But he adds that he looks for a silver lining. Indeed, as If he were attempting to undermine the darker aspects of his portrait of his fellow immigrants, Adamic climaxes his narrative with that often-quote- d passage about the suffering multitudes of American immigrants "who did not belong", and whom Adamic later was to refer to as "dung". He writes: America lured over by the million; she needed their hands even more than they needed her dollars, and made use of them. In her mines and mills she killed them by the hundreds, crushed their bodies, robbed them of their best human qualities, made them into machines, into slaves. Although of the lowest strata of society in the countries from which they came, they brought with them not only strong backs, but also much spiritual energy. But America wanted only their brawn... America got the best of them. (P. 324) These memorable lines clearly reveal Adamic's profound and sincere admiration for his Bohunks, not to mention his emotional attachment to them, and his realization of the full extent and implication of their spiritual collapse in America. And his final portrait of the Slovene singers on St. Clair Ave in Cleveland, which was then predominantly Slovene, must be read in the same light: "They had, apparently, had a few drinks, and felt sentimental. They sang well, but I wished they would stop and go on. The song would sound beautiful back in some quiet village in Slovenia, but here in Cleveland, In America, no. ..Where the hell did they think were anyhow? Back in the old country?" (p. 324). Indeed, this literary sketch is a tragic one. The Bohunks did not contain any particularly new discoveries about the life of our or other Slavic immigrants in the United States. All of its themes published in the American Mercur, without exception, had been in one way or another already used in Slovene American literature, with the same or at least similar conclusions. A numer of titles from writings of authors such as Etbln Kristan, Ivan Molek, Ivan Jontez, Joze Zavertnik, Frank Zaitz, Frank Cesen, Louis Beniger, Andrej Kobal, Anton Slabe, and others, testify to this. Molek's novel Zajedalci (The Parasites), published in 1920, alone treats a large number of themes contained in Adamic's publication on the Bohunks. It is evident that Adamic gathered material for his composition also from other Slovene American writings of his time and added his personal observations about life in the Bohunk settlements. What Is new is only that he collected and analysed all of these themes within the framework of a single publication, and that he expressed some of the aspects of the immigrant's life and difficulties much more provocatively than those before him. Finally, it appeared in English, which occurred fo the first time in the history of Slovenes in America. It is here that we
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, May 05, 1982 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1982-03-10 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | nanod2000144 |
Description
Title | 000131 |
OCR text | "Grainer" and the same happened with the Croats and Serbs; it appeared that only the, Czechs and Poles were "always conscious of their nationality (and) never hesitated about saying who they were (p. 320). It is the other nationalities of what is today Yugoslavia who receive the longest and perhaps harshest treatment in Adamic's text, while the Slovenes are hailed as the "most cultured and civilized of Bohunks", next to the Czechs (the Slovene American critics of The Bohunks seem to have missed this). It is the final description of the "Croat or Slovene" colony near Los Angeles, where the author lived for a time in the twenties, that has caused the greatest confusion among Adamic's opponents and first critics. The scene thus deserves to bi quoted in full: There lived the "Austrians" or "Bohunks", In low, unpainted shacks or bleak-lookin- g apartment houses along unpaved streets that swarmed with unclean children in torn garments. Nowadays the Bohunks still live, preferably, at the end ot the (street-car- ) line — in the Balkans, as they call the Yugoslav colony in the California town where I lived; but now their houses are painted, their streets paved, and their children are neater, for Prosperity has blessed them, too. But they are still Bohunks. On Saturday nights and Sunday afternoons they get together, and, apart from the prim and proper Nordics and the "better element" generally, they sing, play their stringed instruments and accordions, dring, fight, shout and roar to their heart's content" (p. 321). As we can see, Adamic's intention here was not, as some of his critics would have it, to portray his Bohunks as unclean or as drunkards, but rather, among other things, to goodnatu- - redly and amusingly present the change in their living standard for the better. The third part moves to a presentation of the general condition of most of the Bohunks, from their arrival in America, for "two, three years, four at the most", to that tragic point when they became "caught in America",' and a return to the old country became a "hopeless dream". This transient condition of the Bohunk is realistically portrayed and points to a great number of related themes. For instance, Adamic stresses that, "in their inmost thoughts, the majority of them who came here as adults, no matter how long ago, are still more in the old country than in America..." (p. 322). Further, Adamic points out that among the Slavic groups in America, in his opinion, the Slovenes are the most favourably inclined toward assimilation, although Bohunks on the whole had little interest in American society or politics, even after they gave up the idea of returning home. After Adamic mentions a short list of three successful Slav scientists (Hrdlicka, Tesla and Pupin) in America, he offers the conclusion that, "as politicians the Slavs are usually not very adroit; the Slav is too sentimental, naive and honest a soul for such things, even after he has gone through the mill here" (p. 322). In the fourth and last part Adamic returns to his interpretation of the human condition of the Bohunks in their first years in America and focuses on their social and cultural life. Adamic stresses their initial social possitlon, as "with few exceptions, low-pai- d manual labourers, performing the most dangerous and dirty tasks", (p. 323. .Then, following a long realistic, often amusing expose of the Bohunk saloon at the height of immigration, the author turns to the Catholic Church, which he considers in the post-saloo- n era as "the most successful public enterprise in every Slovene, Slovak or Croat community in America", and adds, "as in the old country", (p. 323). But Adamic's energy is devoted mainly to his characterization of what he considers the three groups of Bohunks. First of all, he finds In most Bohunk settlement a split into two antagonistic camps; "the church members and the unbelievers, mainly Socialists. The unbelievers, on course, are in a minority and largely Ineffective... The alien Catholic parishes, with their parochial schools, are strongholds of medievalism", (p. 323). For the others, he j continues: There is a third group or, rather, mob - perhaps stronger numerically than the other two put together, but unorga-nized. It is made up of lost, loose souls, not exactly infidel, but keeping out of the church: yokels inflated with the conceit born of the American idea of equality, distrustful of everything but the most obvious fakes; an uneducated lot in whom ignorance and prejudice create a formidable combination (p. 323). Today it is interesting to note that, while the first and second groups from Adamic's Bohunks have publicly stated something against his categorization, the third has remained silent to this day. In relation to culture, Adamic appraises the Bohunk newspapers and magazines, declaring them, with only one or two exceptions, "all very dull" and afraid to print a line that might "disturb any reader's prejudices", or "put a strain upon the brains of their readers". The Bohunk editors, he continues, betray little knowledge of American literature or politics, and are intellectually "only slightly above their readers". At this point Adamic exhausts his theme and calls his picture "bleak". But he adds that he looks for a silver lining. Indeed, as If he were attempting to undermine the darker aspects of his portrait of his fellow immigrants, Adamic climaxes his narrative with that often-quote- d passage about the suffering multitudes of American immigrants "who did not belong", and whom Adamic later was to refer to as "dung". He writes: America lured over by the million; she needed their hands even more than they needed her dollars, and made use of them. In her mines and mills she killed them by the hundreds, crushed their bodies, robbed them of their best human qualities, made them into machines, into slaves. Although of the lowest strata of society in the countries from which they came, they brought with them not only strong backs, but also much spiritual energy. But America wanted only their brawn... America got the best of them. (P. 324) These memorable lines clearly reveal Adamic's profound and sincere admiration for his Bohunks, not to mention his emotional attachment to them, and his realization of the full extent and implication of their spiritual collapse in America. And his final portrait of the Slovene singers on St. Clair Ave in Cleveland, which was then predominantly Slovene, must be read in the same light: "They had, apparently, had a few drinks, and felt sentimental. They sang well, but I wished they would stop and go on. The song would sound beautiful back in some quiet village in Slovenia, but here in Cleveland, In America, no. ..Where the hell did they think were anyhow? Back in the old country?" (p. 324). Indeed, this literary sketch is a tragic one. The Bohunks did not contain any particularly new discoveries about the life of our or other Slavic immigrants in the United States. All of its themes published in the American Mercur, without exception, had been in one way or another already used in Slovene American literature, with the same or at least similar conclusions. A numer of titles from writings of authors such as Etbln Kristan, Ivan Molek, Ivan Jontez, Joze Zavertnik, Frank Zaitz, Frank Cesen, Louis Beniger, Andrej Kobal, Anton Slabe, and others, testify to this. Molek's novel Zajedalci (The Parasites), published in 1920, alone treats a large number of themes contained in Adamic's publication on the Bohunks. It is evident that Adamic gathered material for his composition also from other Slovene American writings of his time and added his personal observations about life in the Bohunk settlements. What Is new is only that he collected and analysed all of these themes within the framework of a single publication, and that he expressed some of the aspects of the immigrant's life and difficulties much more provocatively than those before him. Finally, it appeared in English, which occurred fo the first time in the history of Slovenes in America. It is here that we |
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