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'i .;: " t. I )! I II ' ,( W ill s4 I "J ч 1-6- NASE NOVINE, June 24, 1981 S RETIRED AMERICAN CONGRESSMAN HON. JOHN A. BLATNIK'S REMINISCENCES OF LOUIS ADAMIC (Nastavak sa st. 15) no xerox copiers. " He would type a letter not to anyone in particular and then forward it to a friend, usually to John Rogel in Cleveland. His daughter is now a professor at Ohio State University. He and John became very close friends. Louis Adamic and I had many friends in Cleveland. He spent much time there. Rogel went back to Yugo-slavia and passed away a few years ago. He would send eight letters in carbon copies of the same letter to us and write about his thinking and his travels. I have the misfortune of not being able to locate those letters in my moving back and forth from Washington to Minnesota I think that Rogel's daughter, the professor Ruth has some of them, maybe most od them. We can find out when we see her at the Adamic symposium on the 28th of Mayt 1981 at the University of Min-nesota. You will be participants with me at this occasion. Adamic was a great influence in getting us to understand America itself. He was proud to be an American and served in World War I in the army. He was proud of the mosaic of nationalities that made America a great pluralistic society — how the different and diverse cultures were woven into a mosaic thread of a common purpose of democracy. It was a fertile ground to plant the seeds which made this democracy flourish and became a beacon or a shining light through-out the world. He was really an inspirational man. Nick, you helped me very much on the cultural matters now. I had learned quite a bit when I was over in Yugoslavia dur_ ing World War II and then many trips after the War. I learned about the history, about the great writers; about their great literary people; they love poetry and music. I noticed that the Slovenes, I only mention Slovene because Louis was a Slovene, never had a general in all of their history. NICHOLAS KOSANOVICH: The literature of the Slovenian people interests me because at a mature age, while learning the language of my parents, I found it to be very rich, phonetically perfect — no spelling of orthograp-hy is required with a Greco-Lati- n base like all of the Indo-Europe- an family of languages. It was codified by Vuk Karadtid, who gave it a practical grammar with the help of a great Slovenian philolog-ist Jernej Kopitar. This Slovenian grammarian corrected the con-jugation and declension of nouns and adjectives of the Serbo-Cro- at language. He was a leader of the lllyrian movement of the time along with Ljudevit Gaj, the Croatian writer. The name of the movement received its name from the Napoleonic invasion and oc-cupation of Slovenia, Lika and Dalmatia. Napoleon called them the lllyrian provinces. They were named after the original settlers of these areas, even before the Romans. With the Napoleonic occupations came the Napoleonic Code and the encyclopaedic mentality of the democratic tradit-ions of France which helped to enrich the literature and civil code of this part of the world. John did you every hear any mention of Jernej Kopitar? JOHN ABLATNIK: Yes, I did hear of him. That was during the war years in which we would have time at night to talk about philosophy. I always wanted to know where did the Slovenians come from, and also the lllyrians, the whole historical movement of peoples, tribes, the tribal system and all of that. I realize that these people prized the spoken and written word highly, even in their early history. They would make words sing; they would make them sing through poetic rhyem and through the song itself. Yes, they had their fun sungs with the wine and accordians and all that; but, they prized their serious literature and their culture immensely. They would put words into epic poems. I learned about France Presern and Cankar and political writers. I read the history of the peasant revolt in feudal times when they fought with pitch-fork- s and sickles. They were a people who desired freedom very much. They were defending their freedom — no matter how many invaders traversed their lands. I don't know how far back historical-lv- , but as an amateur historian, I read way back when the Goths and the Visigoths, the Huns and then much later the crusaders on their way across the land bridge of the Balkan peninsula crossed this land and pillaged and plundered. It seemed that everyone walked over Yugoslavia. The Turks came from the south and to the very gates of Vienna up north. The struggle of the religions and cultures in wars that ebbed and flowed back and forth. You mention the Napoleonic conquest. That was recent history for these people. In fact, Napoleon went all the way to Dubrovnik in his conquest of the European land mass. There were cannonball marks in Dalmatia all the way down the coast. There are cannonball marks still in some of the build-ings. Here were the armies that crossed and re-cross- ed this land for centuries. The Turks on the one hand with violent men from the east invading this land. These people maintained their ethnic identity and integrity and their language and literature. They surveved through all of these trials and tribulations. DR. V.TOMOVIC: Well, Mr. Blatnik, I am very much impressed with your knowledge of the history and culture of the Slovenian people. I associate your knowledge of historical necessity of Canada to venture into a formal proclamation of the multicultural state, because Canadian politici-ans have realized that the melting pot type of assimilation cannot meaningfully take place with constant influx of mewcomers to the new world. This richness of Slovenian culture had a tremend-ous impact on Louis Adamid, because in My Native Land and the Native's Return, he definitely tries to revive the meaning of the old culture and tries to bridge the old Slovenian culture with the new culture with pride. Your own reminiscence on Adamic's love for the new country and the constant emphasis of the culture from whcih he came at age 14, not even 14, will be of interest to our readers, if I may ask you this? JOHN ABLATNIK: Well, as I said, Louis Adamic I never forgot from whence he had I come; and he never forgot the peasants who were back there in the cultural milieu which is his cultural heritage. To those of our parents who were trying to sort of "Americanize", which meant to become Anglo-Saxo- n and shed your language, your native songs, native food, native traditions of the holidays — be it Christmas or Easter or New Year's day or a baptism or marriage, Adamic disagreed. He said that that should be kept alive, whether it is a Pole, Swede, Norwegian or Finn; keep the customs and the whole indigenous culture alive. Adamic said that therein lies the strength of America. As I look back now, Adamic wanted to reconstruct and rebuild and to retain the sources of the rich European Yugoslav heritage. He was, at the same time, enormously impressed with the land of opoortunity, yet a' land of contraditions; a land of peace and generosity and good-wil- l, and yet a land of brutality and selfishness and greed and very violent strug-gles. It was just a tremendous struggle just to earn or make out a living, let alone trying to educate one's children; any child who may flower into a very famous or useful citizen to enrich the quality of life in the U.S. He was particularly impressed with the enormous contribution of the sons of these immigrants durino World Was II. Not only in Minnesota, a high percentage of the sons and daughters of the foreign born volunteered for combat duty. I volunteered and I couldn't even be drafted because I was a member of the Minnesota Senate; and yet volunteered for combat duty and became eventual-ly a paratrooper for a few years and was sent to Yugoslavia because of my knowledge of the country when I had been there as a boy. I knew and still know the Slovenian language fluently and it didn't take me long to learn colloquial Serbo--Cro- at and the songs and the kolos, plus their history. I had been the State President of what was known as the American--Yugosla- v Association of Min-nesota which was a society to perpetuate the cultural traditions through various programs. Because of my familiarity with the people in Yuoslavia and interes-tingly enough, because of my love for the outdoors, I was a good candidate for behind the lines assignment. I also could survive in the cold weather, knew how to ski. I learned that from the Norwegians and learned how to play hockey. This served me in good stead. I learned how to play hockey from your Canadians, Dr. Tomovid. A man came down from Fort Francis to teach us how to play years ago. We learned how to live in the woods and hunt for food, I used to canoe in the summer when I was 17 years old at a Foresi where we were stationed in the C.C.C. This was on the Canadian border. So, I had the best training possible to survive with the Yugoslav Parti-sans. I felt that in this way, I would be of service to our government, the armed forces. We wouldn't be able to survive in the German occupied area without the support of the people, the students, the workers and the poor peasants. Our mission was to relay infor-mation to headquarters and to find Americans who had parachuted to safety from their downed planes. We had picked up 380 Americans and led them to safety. Many others were picked up further south in Serbia by the Partisans and Canadian and British soldiers doing similar work as we. The air fields where we would get supplies were cow pastures or a corn meadow. We would light brush fires so that they could land at night. We would get supplies and fly out American airmen, some English, Canadian. We had even Australians, New Zealanders, South Africans and others. We were all taught at a British Parachute School. We had also fown out many wounded Partisans. The greatest source of esprit-de--cor- ps was not the material we had flown in, but our presence there. The amount that was dropped was minimal. How much can be flown in a few planes? They had to go into the enemy camps and raid the garrison and kill the guards by hand with a knife at night That is how they were able to supply themselves with warm boots and a woolen coat to survive the riggors of a cold winter that lay ahead. They had to do it to survive. This resistance was built up into one of the greatest resistance move-ments, I think, of all time. I don't know of any other place where so many people engaged in behind the lines resistance as in Yugosla-via during World War II. i After that, we came back and ' , ._ ,, . , i ucycm iu num сши icyiuufj uuin a war-tim- e economy to a peace-tim- e economy. There were dislocations as a result. Millions perished. The Yugoslavs lost 10% of their population — men, women, children and soldiers. We were fortunate in America. We had 140,000 dead. Thank God that it was low. The Russians lost 20 million, the Germans 10 million and millions in France, Holland, Belgium and Great Britain. Then the awesome thing hap-pened, the explosion of the Atomic bomb; we thought that it was the end of the world. I think that this single event had a traumatic effect on Louis Adamic. I can't say that it was the sole thing, but, I feel it might have been decisive in losing his positive perspective and concepts of humanity. His faith in man's humanity was shattered and eroded with the advent of the atomic bomb. He seemed to think that this was the end of the world. He had told me so. He said, "John, man is hell bent down the road to self-destructio- n". I was really ap-palled and saddened by the enormity of the negative effect this had on Adamic's thinking. He became more and more depressed and more and more discouraged. His faith in mankind was at a low ebb at this point in time. I did not hear this type of talk from him in the thirties and forties. He was so positive and inspired by the pro-gress of mankind: This was only the atomic bomb; the hydrogen bomb had not been produced yet! WPfflfff He went to California for a few months and finally came back to Milford. New Jersey. I had never visited him there, even though he had invited me. He would still keep sending these carbon copies of letters to Rogel and me and to about six or eight of his friends. He telephoned me once from Cleve-land to meet him there and spend the Labor Day weekend with him. This was about two or three weeks prior to Labor Day. He lived alone at this time in a lovely wooded area in New Jersey on the Pennsylvania border. I couldn't make it; I remember it well. I had to go home to Minnesota to go on a three day speaking tour with Hubert Humph-rey. We had done this every Labor Day. This was in 1951. Adamic was found dead on September 4th; what an omen; he died; a man who worked for the working people would, die on their Holiday. I received a phone call about 3:00 or 4:00 in the morning. I believe it was Stella, his wife, I'm sure it was Stella. We were good friends, we got along very well. She had a lot trust and confidence in me, I don't know why? She told me the news that Louis had died and the whole farm had burned to the ground. She asked me to come up. I got in my car immediately. It was about 4:00 or 5:00 in the morning and drove north to his home. I recall that it took about three and a half hours and arrived at 10:00 a.m. John Rogel was already there. I wish John were alive to tell this story. Rogel was crying like a baby and the sight was awesome. (Nastavide se u idu6em broju)
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, September 23, 1981 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1981-06-24 |
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 | nanod2000114 |
Description
Title | 000250 |
OCR text | 'i .;: " t. I )! I II ' ,( W ill s4 I "J ч 1-6- NASE NOVINE, June 24, 1981 S RETIRED AMERICAN CONGRESSMAN HON. JOHN A. BLATNIK'S REMINISCENCES OF LOUIS ADAMIC (Nastavak sa st. 15) no xerox copiers. " He would type a letter not to anyone in particular and then forward it to a friend, usually to John Rogel in Cleveland. His daughter is now a professor at Ohio State University. He and John became very close friends. Louis Adamic and I had many friends in Cleveland. He spent much time there. Rogel went back to Yugo-slavia and passed away a few years ago. He would send eight letters in carbon copies of the same letter to us and write about his thinking and his travels. I have the misfortune of not being able to locate those letters in my moving back and forth from Washington to Minnesota I think that Rogel's daughter, the professor Ruth has some of them, maybe most od them. We can find out when we see her at the Adamic symposium on the 28th of Mayt 1981 at the University of Min-nesota. You will be participants with me at this occasion. Adamic was a great influence in getting us to understand America itself. He was proud to be an American and served in World War I in the army. He was proud of the mosaic of nationalities that made America a great pluralistic society — how the different and diverse cultures were woven into a mosaic thread of a common purpose of democracy. It was a fertile ground to plant the seeds which made this democracy flourish and became a beacon or a shining light through-out the world. He was really an inspirational man. Nick, you helped me very much on the cultural matters now. I had learned quite a bit when I was over in Yugoslavia dur_ ing World War II and then many trips after the War. I learned about the history, about the great writers; about their great literary people; they love poetry and music. I noticed that the Slovenes, I only mention Slovene because Louis was a Slovene, never had a general in all of their history. NICHOLAS KOSANOVICH: The literature of the Slovenian people interests me because at a mature age, while learning the language of my parents, I found it to be very rich, phonetically perfect — no spelling of orthograp-hy is required with a Greco-Lati- n base like all of the Indo-Europe- an family of languages. It was codified by Vuk Karadtid, who gave it a practical grammar with the help of a great Slovenian philolog-ist Jernej Kopitar. This Slovenian grammarian corrected the con-jugation and declension of nouns and adjectives of the Serbo-Cro- at language. He was a leader of the lllyrian movement of the time along with Ljudevit Gaj, the Croatian writer. The name of the movement received its name from the Napoleonic invasion and oc-cupation of Slovenia, Lika and Dalmatia. Napoleon called them the lllyrian provinces. They were named after the original settlers of these areas, even before the Romans. With the Napoleonic occupations came the Napoleonic Code and the encyclopaedic mentality of the democratic tradit-ions of France which helped to enrich the literature and civil code of this part of the world. John did you every hear any mention of Jernej Kopitar? JOHN ABLATNIK: Yes, I did hear of him. That was during the war years in which we would have time at night to talk about philosophy. I always wanted to know where did the Slovenians come from, and also the lllyrians, the whole historical movement of peoples, tribes, the tribal system and all of that. I realize that these people prized the spoken and written word highly, even in their early history. They would make words sing; they would make them sing through poetic rhyem and through the song itself. Yes, they had their fun sungs with the wine and accordians and all that; but, they prized their serious literature and their culture immensely. They would put words into epic poems. I learned about France Presern and Cankar and political writers. I read the history of the peasant revolt in feudal times when they fought with pitch-fork- s and sickles. They were a people who desired freedom very much. They were defending their freedom — no matter how many invaders traversed their lands. I don't know how far back historical-lv- , but as an amateur historian, I read way back when the Goths and the Visigoths, the Huns and then much later the crusaders on their way across the land bridge of the Balkan peninsula crossed this land and pillaged and plundered. It seemed that everyone walked over Yugoslavia. The Turks came from the south and to the very gates of Vienna up north. The struggle of the religions and cultures in wars that ebbed and flowed back and forth. You mention the Napoleonic conquest. That was recent history for these people. In fact, Napoleon went all the way to Dubrovnik in his conquest of the European land mass. There were cannonball marks in Dalmatia all the way down the coast. There are cannonball marks still in some of the build-ings. Here were the armies that crossed and re-cross- ed this land for centuries. The Turks on the one hand with violent men from the east invading this land. These people maintained their ethnic identity and integrity and their language and literature. They surveved through all of these trials and tribulations. DR. V.TOMOVIC: Well, Mr. Blatnik, I am very much impressed with your knowledge of the history and culture of the Slovenian people. I associate your knowledge of historical necessity of Canada to venture into a formal proclamation of the multicultural state, because Canadian politici-ans have realized that the melting pot type of assimilation cannot meaningfully take place with constant influx of mewcomers to the new world. This richness of Slovenian culture had a tremend-ous impact on Louis Adamid, because in My Native Land and the Native's Return, he definitely tries to revive the meaning of the old culture and tries to bridge the old Slovenian culture with the new culture with pride. Your own reminiscence on Adamic's love for the new country and the constant emphasis of the culture from whcih he came at age 14, not even 14, will be of interest to our readers, if I may ask you this? JOHN ABLATNIK: Well, as I said, Louis Adamic I never forgot from whence he had I come; and he never forgot the peasants who were back there in the cultural milieu which is his cultural heritage. To those of our parents who were trying to sort of "Americanize", which meant to become Anglo-Saxo- n and shed your language, your native songs, native food, native traditions of the holidays — be it Christmas or Easter or New Year's day or a baptism or marriage, Adamic disagreed. He said that that should be kept alive, whether it is a Pole, Swede, Norwegian or Finn; keep the customs and the whole indigenous culture alive. Adamic said that therein lies the strength of America. As I look back now, Adamic wanted to reconstruct and rebuild and to retain the sources of the rich European Yugoslav heritage. He was, at the same time, enormously impressed with the land of opoortunity, yet a' land of contraditions; a land of peace and generosity and good-wil- l, and yet a land of brutality and selfishness and greed and very violent strug-gles. It was just a tremendous struggle just to earn or make out a living, let alone trying to educate one's children; any child who may flower into a very famous or useful citizen to enrich the quality of life in the U.S. He was particularly impressed with the enormous contribution of the sons of these immigrants durino World Was II. Not only in Minnesota, a high percentage of the sons and daughters of the foreign born volunteered for combat duty. I volunteered and I couldn't even be drafted because I was a member of the Minnesota Senate; and yet volunteered for combat duty and became eventual-ly a paratrooper for a few years and was sent to Yugoslavia because of my knowledge of the country when I had been there as a boy. I knew and still know the Slovenian language fluently and it didn't take me long to learn colloquial Serbo--Cro- at and the songs and the kolos, plus their history. I had been the State President of what was known as the American--Yugosla- v Association of Min-nesota which was a society to perpetuate the cultural traditions through various programs. Because of my familiarity with the people in Yuoslavia and interes-tingly enough, because of my love for the outdoors, I was a good candidate for behind the lines assignment. I also could survive in the cold weather, knew how to ski. I learned that from the Norwegians and learned how to play hockey. This served me in good stead. I learned how to play hockey from your Canadians, Dr. Tomovid. A man came down from Fort Francis to teach us how to play years ago. We learned how to live in the woods and hunt for food, I used to canoe in the summer when I was 17 years old at a Foresi where we were stationed in the C.C.C. This was on the Canadian border. So, I had the best training possible to survive with the Yugoslav Parti-sans. I felt that in this way, I would be of service to our government, the armed forces. We wouldn't be able to survive in the German occupied area without the support of the people, the students, the workers and the poor peasants. Our mission was to relay infor-mation to headquarters and to find Americans who had parachuted to safety from their downed planes. We had picked up 380 Americans and led them to safety. Many others were picked up further south in Serbia by the Partisans and Canadian and British soldiers doing similar work as we. The air fields where we would get supplies were cow pastures or a corn meadow. We would light brush fires so that they could land at night. We would get supplies and fly out American airmen, some English, Canadian. We had even Australians, New Zealanders, South Africans and others. We were all taught at a British Parachute School. We had also fown out many wounded Partisans. The greatest source of esprit-de--cor- ps was not the material we had flown in, but our presence there. The amount that was dropped was minimal. How much can be flown in a few planes? They had to go into the enemy camps and raid the garrison and kill the guards by hand with a knife at night That is how they were able to supply themselves with warm boots and a woolen coat to survive the riggors of a cold winter that lay ahead. They had to do it to survive. This resistance was built up into one of the greatest resistance move-ments, I think, of all time. I don't know of any other place where so many people engaged in behind the lines resistance as in Yugosla-via during World War II. i After that, we came back and ' , ._ ,, . , i ucycm iu num сши icyiuufj uuin a war-tim- e economy to a peace-tim- e economy. There were dislocations as a result. Millions perished. The Yugoslavs lost 10% of their population — men, women, children and soldiers. We were fortunate in America. We had 140,000 dead. Thank God that it was low. The Russians lost 20 million, the Germans 10 million and millions in France, Holland, Belgium and Great Britain. Then the awesome thing hap-pened, the explosion of the Atomic bomb; we thought that it was the end of the world. I think that this single event had a traumatic effect on Louis Adamic. I can't say that it was the sole thing, but, I feel it might have been decisive in losing his positive perspective and concepts of humanity. His faith in man's humanity was shattered and eroded with the advent of the atomic bomb. He seemed to think that this was the end of the world. He had told me so. He said, "John, man is hell bent down the road to self-destructio- n". I was really ap-palled and saddened by the enormity of the negative effect this had on Adamic's thinking. He became more and more depressed and more and more discouraged. His faith in mankind was at a low ebb at this point in time. I did not hear this type of talk from him in the thirties and forties. He was so positive and inspired by the pro-gress of mankind: This was only the atomic bomb; the hydrogen bomb had not been produced yet! WPfflfff He went to California for a few months and finally came back to Milford. New Jersey. I had never visited him there, even though he had invited me. He would still keep sending these carbon copies of letters to Rogel and me and to about six or eight of his friends. He telephoned me once from Cleve-land to meet him there and spend the Labor Day weekend with him. This was about two or three weeks prior to Labor Day. He lived alone at this time in a lovely wooded area in New Jersey on the Pennsylvania border. I couldn't make it; I remember it well. I had to go home to Minnesota to go on a three day speaking tour with Hubert Humph-rey. We had done this every Labor Day. This was in 1951. Adamic was found dead on September 4th; what an omen; he died; a man who worked for the working people would, die on their Holiday. I received a phone call about 3:00 or 4:00 in the morning. I believe it was Stella, his wife, I'm sure it was Stella. We were good friends, we got along very well. She had a lot trust and confidence in me, I don't know why? She told me the news that Louis had died and the whole farm had burned to the ground. She asked me to come up. I got in my car immediately. It was about 4:00 or 5:00 in the morning and drove north to his home. I recall that it took about three and a half hours and arrived at 10:00 a.m. John Rogel was already there. I wish John were alive to tell this story. Rogel was crying like a baby and the sight was awesome. (Nastavide se u idu6em broju) |
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