Showing posts with label Catholic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catholic. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2014

Doručak na granici

"America."  Everybody in the world knows where is "America."  The fact, however, is that "America" is a continent.  Actually there are two of them, North and South.  Still, everybody in the world knows that "America" is the "United States."  Even that is a wee problem because in North America there are two "United States."   There is Sjedinjene Meksičke Države and there is Sjedinjene Američke Države.  Despite those little technical difficulties no one in the world is confused about which one is "The United States," or just "America." 

It wasn't always so.  When the first Croats showed up in the waters around America, America was still America in the broader sense.  Those early Croats shared the continents with Britain, France, Spain, Portugal, Denmark, the Netherlands, the Muskogee, the Cherokee, the Comanche and others.  What's more, Croatians, along with others,  helped build a few countries in North America like Texas, California, and even the Kingdom of Hawaii out in the Pacific.

With no independent Homeland back in Europe, these Croats were, for the most part, uninvolved in empire building or "colonialism" in the usual sense of that term, but they were having great adventures.  One of those adventures has to do with what I am eating this very morning. 

The histories all show that Napoleon III withdrew French troops from Mexico but hardly a word is written about the Croatian Hussars who were in Mexico with Carlotta's husband even though everyone loves Carlotta.  When the Emperor was captured and shot, the Mexican officers with Benito Juárez asked him what to do with all these soldiers.  Juárez is reputed to have said something like "We have cut off the head, the body of the snake is harmless."

So now, you are a Croatian soldier in a strange land far away from home.  You have no money in your pocket and no way home.  Besides, why would you want to go home? What is there for you? You have little future except perhaps to be a fisherman or a farm worker on some large estate owned by one of the Austrians who run the place.   

You are hungry.   Your belly is crying out to you.  You've managed to steal two eggs out from under a chicken, one stale tortilla, an onion and a tomato.  Beside yourself, you have three companions to feed.  What do you do?

You crack open the eggs and you put them in the mess kit you were issued by the military. As always, te dvije oči jaja su namigujući on you.  Those two eyes of the eggs are winking at you. What next?  You crumble up the tortilla into the eggs, you cut up the tomato and the onion and you mix everything all together in the pan over the fire.

The war was vicious as all wars are.  There is a shortage of young Mexican men. The smell from your cooking attracts the attention of a young Mexican woman carrying water home from the well. You try to explain your recipe to her.  There is laughing and giggling.  She tastes your meal.  The closest she can come to saying all that about the eyes of the eggs winking is just "migas."  Close enough.  A new dish, a new word, and a new love has been born in the same hour.  You are married and you have children.  Your neighbors love your music.  Eventually the community around you forgets that once you were a stranger.

Two generations later, Mexico cracks down on the Catholic Church.  Your grandchildren don't remember exactly why, but they are Catholic among the Catholics and they find themselves across the border in Texas.  They bring with them their Mariachi tradition also born in Eastern Europe. Your great grandson composes a song for his daughter for her wedding but he has been taught that it is not permitted for him to play and sing in church. But somehow a Croatian - American pastor who knows and understands what he is seeing insists that the father serenade his daughter at the end of the wedding service INSIDE the church.  Perhaps he will not forget that day the rest of his life.

I know his daughter has not forgotten because, you see, I was that pastor.  This happened about a decade ago.  My musician friend is Croatian - American in the wider sense of that term. Mexican culture has mostly but not entirely forgotten there ever was such a thing among them. Homero Prado's family knows, and a few other musician families know.  All the average Anglo - American sees when he looks at my friend is one more "Mexican." As a matter of fact, all the average Mexican - American sees is one more "Mexican."

My musician friend is one of those Croatian - Americans like those which Ambassador Joško Paro spoke of a few nights ago at the Croatian Embassy in Washington D.C.  My musician brother knows some about the Croatian part of his roots and he is interested in knowing more.  He is proud of his ancestry and he treasures that part of the culture he retains.  Is he, or any of his extended family interested much in modern Croatia and other Croatian people?  No, not especially.  He is content here in South Texas where he can live his life as he wishes playing his music on special occasions. His children and grandchildren however just might be tourists in Croatia someday.

My friend is an example of one of those ethnicities about which neither Mexico nor the United States have any awareness.  That's not surprising considering hardly anyone except us old ragged grey-haired historian types know about the Jews and the Arabs who also live in North Mexico and in Southern Texas - people who were exported from Spain and who lived under the thumb of "religious police" for several generations. Throw in the descendants of several Indian nations whose states disappeared long before they migrated into this area, a few modern Croats, some Poles, a handful of Polish Jews, and some "Anglos" and you begin to see that down here at the Rio Grande we are a rich and complex tapestry of "ethnicities" even though the statistics want to lump nearly everyone together as "Hispanic" just because almost all of us speak at least a little on Spanish.  

Being Brownsvillian is complicated.  We are not all the same, yet we share a lot in common.  Being Croatian - American is complicated.  We are not all the same, yet we share a rich heritage.  Being Croatian is complicated.  We are not all the same.  Being South-East European is complicated. Being East European is complicated especially when you hyphenate any of that with "American" and then you discover that the US National Security Administration doesn't even know where East Europe is, much less anything about South East Europe.  What hope do we have that they know anything much about Croatia or Bosnia.  God forbid that they should need to know about the Sandjak or the Vojvodina or anywhere else in our neck of the woods. God help anyone from anywhere else.   This is the start of another story ... its important, so I will write about that a little later.  Do stay tuned for more over the next few days.

do sljedeći put, blagoslov - until next time, blessings,
David Byler a.k.a. Canovals
10. veljače 2014




Saturday, November 5, 2011

Sjeti se, sjeti se

Sjeti se, sjeti se
petog studenog


Twe oczy, skąd Kupido na wsze ziemskie kraje,
 Córo możnego króla, harde prawa daje,
 Nie oczy, lecz pochodnie dwie nielitościwe,
 Które palą na popiół serca nieszczęśliwe.
 Nie pochodnie, lecz gwiazdy, których jasne zorze
 Błagają nagłym wiatrem rozgniewane morze.
 Nie gwiazdy, ale słońca pałające różno,
 Których blask śmiertelnemu oku pojąć próżno.
 Nie słońca, ale nieba, bo swój obrót mają
 I swoją śliczną barwą niebu wprzód nie dają.
 Nie nieba, ale dziwnej mocy są bogowie,
 Przed którymi padają ziemscy monarchowie.
 Nie bogowie też zgoła, bo azaż bogowie
 Pastwią się tak nad sercy ludzkimi surowie?
 Nie nieba: niebo torem jednostajnym chodzi;
 Nie słońca: słońce jedno wschodzi i zachodzi;
 Nie gwiazdy, bo te tylko w ciemności panują;
 Nie pochodnie, bo lada wiatrom te hołdują.
 Lecz się wszytko zamyka w jednym oka słowie:

 Pochodnie, gwiazdy, słońca, nieba i bogowie.


a fellow who calls himself Deacon Jim translates this as:

 O great king’s daughter! Your eyes
 From where Cupid continues to abide.
 No, not eyes but two cruel torches
 Which burn to ashes the hearts of the unlucky.
 No, not torches but stars, which aurora
 With sudden wind tosses the sea.
 No, not stars but suns which burn so bright
 That no mortal eye can comprehend to view.
 No, not suns, but the heavens, because they have
 In their color that which the heavens cannot give.
 No, not the heavens, but almighty gods
 In front of whom kneel all the world’s monarchs.
 No, not even gods! For do gods
 Rule so severely over the hearts of men?
 No, not sky: For sky has only one course.
 No, not sun: For the sun always rises and sets.
 No, not stars: For stars only shine at night.
 No, not torches: For torches fail in the storm.
 No, they are everything contained in the word “eye:”
 Torches, stars, suns, heavens, and gods.


About her Shakespeare wrote "The Tempest" and Peacham, in honor of her marriage to  the Elector Palatine, Frederick V on St. Valentine's Day 1613 wrote the "Nuptial:"


Nymphs of sea and land, away,
This, Eliza's wedding day,
Help to dress our gallant bride
With the treasures that ye hide:
Some bring flowery coronets,
Roses white and violets:
Doris, gather from thy shore
Coral, crystal, amber, store,
Which thy queen in bracelets twist
For her alabaster wrist,
While ye silver-footed girls
Plait her tresses with your pearls:
Others, from Pactolus' stream,
Greet her with a diademe:
Search in every rocky mount
For the gems of most account:
Bring ye rubies for her ear,
Diamonds to fill her hair,
Emerald green and chrysolite
Bind her neck more white than white;
On her breast depending be
The onyx, friend to chastity;
Take the rest without their place,
In borders, sleeves, her shoes, or lace:
Nymphs of Niger, offer plumes,
Some, your odours and perfumes:
Dian's maids, more white than milk,
Fit a robe of finest silk:
Dian's maids who mont to be
The honour of virginity.
Heavens have bestowed their grace,
Her chaste desires, and angel's face.

She was of Carpathian descent, Polish in fact.  Had Guy Fawke's torches touched the tinder leading to the powder she might have been Queen Elizabeth II of England,  nay, more, queen of all the lands between the Urals and the Great Western Sea.

Alas and Alack, as it was to be, the Queen of Hearts became only Zimní Královna, the Winter Queen, and that for one winter alone as her husband was defeated at Bílá hora (White Mountain) in 1620. 

Alas alas alas.  If the Catholics had won in England, the protestants would have won on the continent.  How we in the south would have loved a Polish monarch instead of a Hungarian one.  Instead, what happened subsequently happened subsequently and here we are.   Hmmm, as it is, all the English monarchs since Elizabeth are her descendants, and there are some who worry that we Carpathians and Balkan types will overwhelm the "native" population of the Western Islands.  Heh, perhaps we shall.  

Sjeti se, sjeti se
 petog studenog

remember remember
the fifth of November

 do sljedeći put, blagoslov - until next time, blessings,

Canovals a.k.a. Slavonac
5 studenog 2011