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"if y lJf'lAV f i T' -- if ,ir "1 x J "fЏЧ ' Шл v £Чда! The search for roots has become a national preoocupatipn. A visitor to the United States might be puzzled by all the talk about roots - the loss of roots, theiieed for roptslfHe might think that in America a root ; crisis has replaced the energy .cr£risl; But jvhat sort of roots are; these we are seeking -- potatoes, carrots, rutabagas? Nothing of the kind; rather Americans are seeking for the their figurative roots their ancestral lines, their family genealogies. We are asking: where fhoarveebeIarsc?omwe hafrtomis? mwyho dwisetrinectimvey heritage? Americans traditionally have been a fowardlooking people more interested in the future than in the past. In America, it was said, one Was judged not by who one was but by what one could do. Pride of ancestry was regarded as an ariostocratic pretensi-on, out-of-pla- ce in a democratic soci-ety. The present retrospective mood of the country therefore represents a basic shift in the national psyche. This is not, however, the first time that. Americans have paused in their head-long rush, into the future to glance backwards. The late 19th century was also characterized by a quest for ancestors, particularly on the part of oldstock Americans. Genealogy flo-urished as Anglo-America- ns sought to distance themselves from the incoming flood of immigrants. Filiopietistlc soci-eties such as the Sons.and Daughters of the American revolution and the Society of Mayflower Descandants were formed at that time.Th'e depressi-on, decade of the 1930s was also a time of intense interest in tracing family histories. One can speculate that the search for roots has been characteris-tic of troubled, unsettled times, times of economic and psychological. insecu-rity when the future appeared uncer-tain. Certainly the contemporary fever of ethnicity is part and parcel of the sear-ch for roots. Today we appear to be less interested in claiming royal ancestors than in knowing about the real people who were our forebearsr'We want to know, about the lives of our grandpare-nts because in the process we feel that we will learn more about ourselves. As Horace Kallen, an early advocate of cultural pluralism put it; 'Men may change their clothes, their politics, their wives, their religion, their philosophies, to a greater or lesser extent; they cannot change their grandfathers (and we would add grandmathers)," From our grandparents we receive our biological and cultural inheritance. To say so appears trite, and yet such a simple truth challenges a central myth of the American belief system. As my colleague, David Noble has described this myth, "it was the hope of the European emigrants in coming to the New World (that( they could thereby undergo a religious experience of rebirth which would allow them to transcend the tension of the historical communities ' of the Old World." In other words, the American, "this new mcaallne"dashiHme,ctowrasSt. tJoohbne.defrCeerevoefcoseiunr. . America was a new Garden of Eden and the American a new Adam. Since the act of Immigration was to result in spiritual rebirth, the immigrants was expected, as Crevecouer put it, to leave "behind him all his ancient prejudices and manners, and receive new ones from the new mode of life he has embraced."" Or in the words of John Quincy Adams, immigrants "must cast off the European skin never to resume it. They must look forward to thier posperity rather than backward to their ancestors." The myth of rebirth become in Frederick Jackson Turners' frontier thesis the most influential historical explanation of American exceptionalism. "In the crucible of the frontier", the clared Turner, "The Immigrants were Americanized, libe-rated, and fused in to amixed race". And yet we have not forgotten our ancestors. Although we may have never known them or even visted their graves in Galicia, Sicily, or Slovenia, yet they in habited our imaginations. What manner of folk were they and what of myself do I owe a quest for indentity and inevitably in volves an . exploration of one's ethnicity. But why has this become so important to us at this particular time? One can suggest a number of reasons. In the wake of the Black Revolution, Vietnam, and Wate-rgate, faith in the incibility, the righte-ousness, the homegenity of Amarica has taken quite a battering.Cofidence in the wisdom and the will of the the wisdom and the will of the Anglo-America- n establishment has be-en undermined. The compelling power of the Americanization myth has been sapped, allowing the in herend plurali-sm of American society to surface. Our immigrant fathers were per suaded or coerced thad they shoould become Americans and nothing else. As a result much was lost or abondoned, languages, traditions, beliefs, and cus-toms. We of the second and third generations received a mutiliated heri-tage, fragments of culture, a few words, a folk tale, a prayer. For this we' do not blame the immigrants; influenced by the pervasive contempt for foreigners, we has arrogantly declared that we could not be green-horns, we were Americans. In a sense it is a miracle that anything at all of the ethnic heritage has survived. Almost too late we are coming to'realize that to be American is to be ethnic (are not all human beings by definition ethnic?). Americans we now see is composed of a , congeries of ethnicities - and the Anglo-America- n culture is simply one of many ethnicities. It is true thata _ pseudo-cutlur-e is rapidly encroaching upon us all alike, threatening to blight our cultural and spiritual lives just as pollution does our physical habitat. This erzatz culture is the monster child of modernization, born of an incesuous coupling of mass production and mass merchandising. McDonalds, Coca-Col- a, televison,- - the automobile, eptimomize this pseudo-cultur- e of modernization ("pseudo" because if it is not the product of organic historical growth, but .-- the instant creation of machines and salesmen). Advertising, the mass me-dia, and mass consumption have become the instruments for a global standardization of tastes, values and ТШ&Е27 k v ('' Шш LOUIS ADAMIC lifestyle. The ethnic revival (which is by no means confined to the United States) can be understood as a rebel-lion against this grey tide of homogeni-atio- n which threatens to engulf us like a gigantic oil spill. We turn to our ethnic traditions and indetities. as defences against the erosive forces of modernization. As Michael Novak has commented " to be concious in a new way of the path one's family has traversed is to have moral leverage, against current principalities, powers, and propaganda system." Ethnicity provides us with weapons, commete-mets- , affiliations, in the battle against dehumanization by technology and its hand-maide- n, bureacuracy. The "roots' phenomenon has been greatly stimulated by Alex Haley's book of that title - and particularly by the televison production. For eight successive evenings some 130 million Americans (over half the population) watched the saga of a black family unfold over the course of two centuries. The culmination of twelve years of obsessive research, Haley traced his hamily history from the mid-18t- h century when, a Maninka warriorr-Kunt- a Kinte, was captured by slaven-hunter- s - down to the presrent. Altho-ugh critized as to its historical accura-cy, Haley's work vividly portrays certain essential truths about the Black Americam experience. The television series and the book have had an enormous impact upon black and white Americans alike, stimulating many to undertake searches for their family roots; liberaries and archives throug-hout the country have been inundated these past few months with request for genealogical information. In a a nation wide Gallup poll subsequent to the TV series, some 70% expressed an interest In tracing their falmly histories - but for many it will be a difficult task. Some 30% did not know from what countries their ancestors came, while some 70% did not know what year their ancestors had rived in America. At the Immigration History Research Centre, we have received many letters reflecting both the interest and lack of knowledge; "My grandparents came from Sicily sometime in the 1890s" - or "My people came from what was Austria, but were Slavs" "Can you help me find my roots?" Poignant appeals. seHriaelseyo'sf bRoookostswishitchhe hcauvlemainpapteioanredof ina recent years exploring various ethnic histories. Irving Howe's The World of our Fathers, on American Jews, Mic- hael Arlen's Passage to Ararat, on the rediscovery of the armenian heritage, Richard Gambino's blood of My Blood) on being Italian -- and more particularly Sicilian American, and Jimmy Bres-lin'- s World. Without Erid, on the Iris Americans. These works combine his-tory, autobiography, and ficlton in a quest for indentity. But It is Michael Novak's The Rise of the Unmoltable Ethnics (1972) which serves as the manifesto of the new ethnicity. Novak, a third generation Slovak American, addressed himself to the persistence of ethnicity as a vital and creative force In American life. Part history, part literary cirticism, part philosphy, part political polemic, The Rise is a controversial work which inspires so-me and Infuriates others. For many second and third generation ethnics reading the book has been a liberating experience because Novak has spoken the unspeakable. It is ok, he told them to be ethnic, to trust their intuitions, instincts, and sensibilities. "When a person thinks," Novak said, "more than one generation's pasqions and images think in him." The doctrine of Americanization which would have us repudiate our private histories impove-rished both the individual and the large society. Challenging the dominance of the Anglo sperculture, Novak asserted: "No one ethnic group speaks for America. The task is to discover what America Is, or might yet be" : Espousi-ng a politics of cultural pluralism, Novak deflnad the ethnic agenda for the 1970s. It Is worth remembering that much of what Novak and others have been sayhg recently was well said some four decades ago by Louis Adamic. If Novak is the spiritaul father of the new ethnicty, Adamic certainly is it grand-father. Curiously neglected and largely forgotten even by his unknowing disciples, Adamic speaks with remar-kable relevance to our current conce-rns. Born in the Slovenian village of Blato in 1898, Adamic at the age of fourteen came to America. Although he had studied for several years in the gymnasium, Adamic later decribed himself as "essentially a Slavic peasa-nt". Be that as it may, he clearly was endowed with a keen mind and a writting talent. While laboring at menial jobs and serving in the U.S. Army, Adamic mastered the English language sufficiently to become a contributor to H.L. Menchen's America Mercury. In one of his first books, Laughing in the Jungle, Adamic gave a vivid account of these early years in America. With the publication of The Native's Return in 1934 (a Book-of-the-Mon- th Club selection), Adamic still In his thirties had established himself as a successful American writer. It was at this time that the subject of immigration and Its significance for the United States became Adamlc's central concernt - one which stayed with him until his tragic and untimely death in 1951. An immigrant in Intimate contact4' with other immingra-nts- , Adamic brought to the subject a special empathy and insight. In an iBgiasi article antitled" thirty Million New Americans" published in Harper's Magazine in 1934, Adamic focused upon the problem of the second generat- ion. The most important fact about these "new Americans", Adamic repo-rted, was "their feelings of inferiority In relation to old stock Americans and to the mainstream of American life." The children were actually more subject to demoralization than their Immigrant parenc because they lac-ked consciousness of a cultural back-ground and a sense of continuity in human existence. "Some df them", Adamic observed, "seem almost as if they had just dropped of Mars and, during the drop, had forgotten all about Mars." These American-bor- n youths had feeble defenses against anti-immigra- nt prejudices, against the hurtful slurs of Hunky, Polack, or Dago. Adamic also commented upon the tragic estrangement between foreign born parenc and their childern. Lacki-ng pride in family or ethnic group, the "new Americans" sought to repudiate their origins, even to the extent of changing their names. However, they rarely acquired a feeling of being fully American; whether aggressively cha-uvinistic or appathetic, they remained Isolated from the mainstream of American life. ч The ideological thurst of Adamic's argument was that a new conception of America was necessary, one which recognized that America was not longer an Anglo-Saxo- n country and that the childern of immigrants should not be expected to become Anglo-Saxo- n The task, according to Adamic, was to harmonize and integrate the various racial and ethnic elements without "sepperssing or destroying any good cultural qualities in any of them." A short-ter- m pluralist, Adamic envisi-oned an ultimate fusion from which would emerger "a universal or pan-huma- n culture." Adamic saw the-- schools playing a central role in this process of harmoni-zation and intergratlon. Teachers must become senstive too and informed about ethnic cultures - including lear-ning how to pronaunce names! History texts must be revised to include recognition of the role of recent immigrants. The radio and press should be utilised to provide authetnic information about the culture and contributions of various groups. Only through such programs would the second generation be transformed into "a great body self-respectin- g, constru-ctive cittizenery". Thus Louis Adamic defined the problem and the remedy in 1934! Adamic, more the involved activist than the objective analyst, the voted much of the next decade seeking to implement his program for ethnic renewal. Through his writings, lectu-res, and organizational activities, Adamic strove tirelessly to move America towards a new definition of itself - one in which Ellis Island would be regarded as historically inportant as Plymouht Rock. Adamic was parti-curlarl- y fond of Walt Whitman's line: "This is not a nation but a teeming nation of nations."But he was, also sensitive to the ugly side of diversity -- to the prejudice, hatred, and conflict -- and he was fearful for America utiles the diversity could be reconciled and' harmonized with unity. In the late thirties, Adamic himself undertook a vast research project, gathering the stories of thousands of immigrants as the basis for a revision of American history which would be "an intellectual-emotion- al systhesis of old and new America." In a series of books published in the 1940s, including From Many Lands, What's Your Name, and A Nation of Nations. Adamic developed this synthesis. Be-yond his writings, he actively sought to implement his program for creating "a new consciousness of America, of our selves as a people made up of over fifty races and nationalities. "Working thro-ugh the Common Council for America Unity, which he helped established in 1939, Adamic developted an ambitious agenda of work to be done. Among the enumerated tasks were the following: 1. to assemble as complete informa-tion as possbile about the different cultural and racial groups by stimu-lating reasrch in the universities and by establishing historical archives of the various groups; 2. to disseminate this information through a magazine thevoted to ethnic matters (as well as through ot- her publications),exhibits,radio pro- grams, and especially the schools; 3. to revies America history to give proper recognition to the contributi- - ons of all groups; 4. to compile and publish an ethnic encyclopedia of the American people. This was, in fact, an agenda for ethnic studies on a grand scale. Then came Pearl Harbor, and Adamic and America turned .their attention to the issues of war and peace. The hot war against Nazi Germany and the cold war with the Soviet Union created a political climate which was not hospi-table to ideas of pluralism and dive-rsity. Conformity and national uni-ty rather were the passwords of the 1940s and 1960s. Only since the sixties has it been possible to take up Adamic's unfinished agenda. One wonders what happened to those "thirty million new Americans" of 1934. Today these would be the middle-age- d ethnic Americans about whom Michael Novak is writting. One wonde-rs what was the cost to this generation of the failure to implement Adamic's program for ethnic pride. What the cost to society as well as to the individual in terms of creativity, productivity, and happiness? Who can say? But I would venture that the cost has biin great. Siginificantly it is the members of this marginality who comprise the leading advocates of the new pluralism im the 1970s. We have in fact taken up the work which Adamic .began forty years ago. After a lapse of aquarter century, the issue of ethnicity came to the fore once more, initially in the form of the militant black power movement. Yet the violence of the sixties to deal with the elusive problem of reconciling diversity and unity. If one reviews Adamic's agenda of 1939, one is impressed by the achievements of the last decade. We now know a great deal more about the ethnic groups coprising American society. There has been a veritable explosion of knowledge with hundreds of books and thousands of articles (not all of high quality to be , ____—————— —————— —_——_._---_-__—__-—-_-_____________—__-—--——- —--— — Doseljenici sure) published on the histories and cultures of the various groups. Rese-arch centres, archives, and libraries have been established to make such scholarship possible. Journals such as Ethnicity and The Journal of Ethnic Studies have been established. The ethnic theme has penetrated the media with much more reporting and balan-ced portrayal od ethnic concerns. Television, radio, the movies, and advertising, all reflect the heightened interest in ethnic matters. An encyclo-pedia of American ethic' group is in the process of compilation. American history as tought and written incorpo-rates increasing coverage of the many different racial and ethnic elements in the population. In 1973, the Congress of the United States enacted the Ethnic Heritage Stu-dies Bill, a historic measure which for the first time committed the federal go- vernment to the principle of pluralism rather than assimilation. The Ethnic Heritage Studies Program provides grants to school system and other insti-tutions for the development of curricu-lum materials and the training of teac-hers. After only four yearsthis Prog-ram has had a substantial impact upon what is taught in many schools about American history and culture. All of this would have made Louis Adamic's heart glad. The battle for ethnic studies, however, remains tobe won. The majority of educators and teache-rs. I fear, remain assimilationists at heart. They can be expected to resist the introduction of an ethnic perspecti-ve which should in fact permeate the entire curriculum. And this is perhaps, even more true in the colleges and uni-versities than it is in the high schools and elementary schools. But to counteract that gloomy pros-pect, I was heartened recently to hear our governor, Rudy Perpich, speak eloquently about the need to incorpora-te the contributions of all of our people in Minnesota history. Growing up in a Croatian immigrant family, speaking Croatian as his first language, Gover-nor Perpich is very conscious, in his own words, of "the immigrants' strug-gle to maintain their own heritage and place it alongside the cultures of other ethnic groups to create a genuine American society." Like Adamic, he knowns thejanguish of _the immigra-nts, torn between hope for the old, watching, their childern slowly weaned from the old ways and old language to become foreigners under their very roofs. "Governor Perpich advocated teaching in the schools the languages 'of the various groups in order to bring the childern closer to their cultural herita-ge. We are fortunate to have a Governor who is so sensitive to ethnic diversity. Those of us who epouse a pluralistic vision of America should rally to the cause. Certainly this is an opportune time to press for the enactment of an ethnic heritage studies program by the State of Minnesota similar to those which have been established in Illinois, Pennsylvania, California, and elsewhere. Perhaps then Louis Adamic's spirit can rest in peace - perhaps the cause he advanced almost a half century ago has been won. Not quite, by a long shot. There remains a great reservoir of resistance to the concept of a pluralistic America - much of it in places of high influence, in" the gover-nment bureaucracies, in the media, in the corporations, and in the universiti-es.- A broad counter-offensiv- e has been denounced as romantic nostalgia, asa journals and in the press, it has been denounced as romantic nostalgia, as a smokescreen for white racism, as a divisive force, etc. An analysis of the sources and motives of the opposition to the new pluralism woud require another paper. In breif, however, I believe the opposition stems from a correct perseption that conscious ethnicity poses a threat to vested interests. Once American history and society are viewed from pluralistic perspective, inequites, abuses, and repressions, spring into focus. The new ethnicity is not simply a form of therapy to soothe bruised ethnic egos. Rather the formation of anew histori-cal consciousness, as in the case, of Black Americans, is the very basic for concerted group action to correct traditional neglects and injuries. The new ethnicity, therefore, leads to the realization of a more fully democratic society committed to a pluralism of equality among groups a well as individuals. And that, I believe, was the essence of Luis Adamic's new conce-ption of America. RUDOLPH J. VECOLI University of Minnesota sagy iiMis .M9IL4 ГЖ1 — ПИТТИмМГ ШШ IIIIIIH 1 I I I II ТГПШ1Т Iffillln .-- .- tT7f ~V_ Л. HVi t- - К"в V УЛ-'-M " " ТвП." љЈ'М '1Д.---——- . .-- -: -- -: _ - --% jn— i (Л I— X to. . eglaMJill 1ПГД-ВП- ц --.ur- n ТГТПГПм i i rfTMT- - ' 1 1 Will "№ " ' '" t9 ' ПГ~ III IM ' ИШ1 .:' i
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, August 09, 1978 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1978-05-31 |
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 | nanod2000071 |
Description
Title | 000439 |
OCR text | "if y lJf'lAV f i T' -- if ,ir "1 x J "fЏЧ ' Шл v £Чда! The search for roots has become a national preoocupatipn. A visitor to the United States might be puzzled by all the talk about roots - the loss of roots, theiieed for roptslfHe might think that in America a root ; crisis has replaced the energy .cr£risl; But jvhat sort of roots are; these we are seeking -- potatoes, carrots, rutabagas? Nothing of the kind; rather Americans are seeking for the their figurative roots their ancestral lines, their family genealogies. We are asking: where fhoarveebeIarsc?omwe hafrtomis? mwyho dwisetrinectimvey heritage? Americans traditionally have been a fowardlooking people more interested in the future than in the past. In America, it was said, one Was judged not by who one was but by what one could do. Pride of ancestry was regarded as an ariostocratic pretensi-on, out-of-pla- ce in a democratic soci-ety. The present retrospective mood of the country therefore represents a basic shift in the national psyche. This is not, however, the first time that. Americans have paused in their head-long rush, into the future to glance backwards. The late 19th century was also characterized by a quest for ancestors, particularly on the part of oldstock Americans. Genealogy flo-urished as Anglo-America- ns sought to distance themselves from the incoming flood of immigrants. Filiopietistlc soci-eties such as the Sons.and Daughters of the American revolution and the Society of Mayflower Descandants were formed at that time.Th'e depressi-on, decade of the 1930s was also a time of intense interest in tracing family histories. One can speculate that the search for roots has been characteris-tic of troubled, unsettled times, times of economic and psychological. insecu-rity when the future appeared uncer-tain. Certainly the contemporary fever of ethnicity is part and parcel of the sear-ch for roots. Today we appear to be less interested in claiming royal ancestors than in knowing about the real people who were our forebearsr'We want to know, about the lives of our grandpare-nts because in the process we feel that we will learn more about ourselves. As Horace Kallen, an early advocate of cultural pluralism put it; 'Men may change their clothes, their politics, their wives, their religion, their philosophies, to a greater or lesser extent; they cannot change their grandfathers (and we would add grandmathers)," From our grandparents we receive our biological and cultural inheritance. To say so appears trite, and yet such a simple truth challenges a central myth of the American belief system. As my colleague, David Noble has described this myth, "it was the hope of the European emigrants in coming to the New World (that( they could thereby undergo a religious experience of rebirth which would allow them to transcend the tension of the historical communities ' of the Old World." In other words, the American, "this new mcaallne"dashiHme,ctowrasSt. tJoohbne.defrCeerevoefcoseiunr. . America was a new Garden of Eden and the American a new Adam. Since the act of Immigration was to result in spiritual rebirth, the immigrants was expected, as Crevecouer put it, to leave "behind him all his ancient prejudices and manners, and receive new ones from the new mode of life he has embraced."" Or in the words of John Quincy Adams, immigrants "must cast off the European skin never to resume it. They must look forward to thier posperity rather than backward to their ancestors." The myth of rebirth become in Frederick Jackson Turners' frontier thesis the most influential historical explanation of American exceptionalism. "In the crucible of the frontier", the clared Turner, "The Immigrants were Americanized, libe-rated, and fused in to amixed race". And yet we have not forgotten our ancestors. Although we may have never known them or even visted their graves in Galicia, Sicily, or Slovenia, yet they in habited our imaginations. What manner of folk were they and what of myself do I owe a quest for indentity and inevitably in volves an . exploration of one's ethnicity. But why has this become so important to us at this particular time? One can suggest a number of reasons. In the wake of the Black Revolution, Vietnam, and Wate-rgate, faith in the incibility, the righte-ousness, the homegenity of Amarica has taken quite a battering.Cofidence in the wisdom and the will of the the wisdom and the will of the Anglo-America- n establishment has be-en undermined. The compelling power of the Americanization myth has been sapped, allowing the in herend plurali-sm of American society to surface. Our immigrant fathers were per suaded or coerced thad they shoould become Americans and nothing else. As a result much was lost or abondoned, languages, traditions, beliefs, and cus-toms. We of the second and third generations received a mutiliated heri-tage, fragments of culture, a few words, a folk tale, a prayer. For this we' do not blame the immigrants; influenced by the pervasive contempt for foreigners, we has arrogantly declared that we could not be green-horns, we were Americans. In a sense it is a miracle that anything at all of the ethnic heritage has survived. Almost too late we are coming to'realize that to be American is to be ethnic (are not all human beings by definition ethnic?). Americans we now see is composed of a , congeries of ethnicities - and the Anglo-America- n culture is simply one of many ethnicities. It is true thata _ pseudo-cutlur-e is rapidly encroaching upon us all alike, threatening to blight our cultural and spiritual lives just as pollution does our physical habitat. This erzatz culture is the monster child of modernization, born of an incesuous coupling of mass production and mass merchandising. McDonalds, Coca-Col- a, televison,- - the automobile, eptimomize this pseudo-cultur- e of modernization ("pseudo" because if it is not the product of organic historical growth, but .-- the instant creation of machines and salesmen). Advertising, the mass me-dia, and mass consumption have become the instruments for a global standardization of tastes, values and ТШ&Е27 k v ('' Шш LOUIS ADAMIC lifestyle. The ethnic revival (which is by no means confined to the United States) can be understood as a rebel-lion against this grey tide of homogeni-atio- n which threatens to engulf us like a gigantic oil spill. We turn to our ethnic traditions and indetities. as defences against the erosive forces of modernization. As Michael Novak has commented " to be concious in a new way of the path one's family has traversed is to have moral leverage, against current principalities, powers, and propaganda system." Ethnicity provides us with weapons, commete-mets- , affiliations, in the battle against dehumanization by technology and its hand-maide- n, bureacuracy. The "roots' phenomenon has been greatly stimulated by Alex Haley's book of that title - and particularly by the televison production. For eight successive evenings some 130 million Americans (over half the population) watched the saga of a black family unfold over the course of two centuries. The culmination of twelve years of obsessive research, Haley traced his hamily history from the mid-18t- h century when, a Maninka warriorr-Kunt- a Kinte, was captured by slaven-hunter- s - down to the presrent. Altho-ugh critized as to its historical accura-cy, Haley's work vividly portrays certain essential truths about the Black Americam experience. The television series and the book have had an enormous impact upon black and white Americans alike, stimulating many to undertake searches for their family roots; liberaries and archives throug-hout the country have been inundated these past few months with request for genealogical information. In a a nation wide Gallup poll subsequent to the TV series, some 70% expressed an interest In tracing their falmly histories - but for many it will be a difficult task. Some 30% did not know from what countries their ancestors came, while some 70% did not know what year their ancestors had rived in America. At the Immigration History Research Centre, we have received many letters reflecting both the interest and lack of knowledge; "My grandparents came from Sicily sometime in the 1890s" - or "My people came from what was Austria, but were Slavs" "Can you help me find my roots?" Poignant appeals. seHriaelseyo'sf bRoookostswishitchhe hcauvlemainpapteioanredof ina recent years exploring various ethnic histories. Irving Howe's The World of our Fathers, on American Jews, Mic- hael Arlen's Passage to Ararat, on the rediscovery of the armenian heritage, Richard Gambino's blood of My Blood) on being Italian -- and more particularly Sicilian American, and Jimmy Bres-lin'- s World. Without Erid, on the Iris Americans. These works combine his-tory, autobiography, and ficlton in a quest for indentity. But It is Michael Novak's The Rise of the Unmoltable Ethnics (1972) which serves as the manifesto of the new ethnicity. Novak, a third generation Slovak American, addressed himself to the persistence of ethnicity as a vital and creative force In American life. Part history, part literary cirticism, part philosphy, part political polemic, The Rise is a controversial work which inspires so-me and Infuriates others. For many second and third generation ethnics reading the book has been a liberating experience because Novak has spoken the unspeakable. It is ok, he told them to be ethnic, to trust their intuitions, instincts, and sensibilities. "When a person thinks," Novak said, "more than one generation's pasqions and images think in him." The doctrine of Americanization which would have us repudiate our private histories impove-rished both the individual and the large society. Challenging the dominance of the Anglo sperculture, Novak asserted: "No one ethnic group speaks for America. The task is to discover what America Is, or might yet be" : Espousi-ng a politics of cultural pluralism, Novak deflnad the ethnic agenda for the 1970s. It Is worth remembering that much of what Novak and others have been sayhg recently was well said some four decades ago by Louis Adamic. If Novak is the spiritaul father of the new ethnicty, Adamic certainly is it grand-father. Curiously neglected and largely forgotten even by his unknowing disciples, Adamic speaks with remar-kable relevance to our current conce-rns. Born in the Slovenian village of Blato in 1898, Adamic at the age of fourteen came to America. Although he had studied for several years in the gymnasium, Adamic later decribed himself as "essentially a Slavic peasa-nt". Be that as it may, he clearly was endowed with a keen mind and a writting talent. While laboring at menial jobs and serving in the U.S. Army, Adamic mastered the English language sufficiently to become a contributor to H.L. Menchen's America Mercury. In one of his first books, Laughing in the Jungle, Adamic gave a vivid account of these early years in America. With the publication of The Native's Return in 1934 (a Book-of-the-Mon- th Club selection), Adamic still In his thirties had established himself as a successful American writer. It was at this time that the subject of immigration and Its significance for the United States became Adamlc's central concernt - one which stayed with him until his tragic and untimely death in 1951. An immigrant in Intimate contact4' with other immingra-nts- , Adamic brought to the subject a special empathy and insight. In an iBgiasi article antitled" thirty Million New Americans" published in Harper's Magazine in 1934, Adamic focused upon the problem of the second generat- ion. The most important fact about these "new Americans", Adamic repo-rted, was "their feelings of inferiority In relation to old stock Americans and to the mainstream of American life." The children were actually more subject to demoralization than their Immigrant parenc because they lac-ked consciousness of a cultural back-ground and a sense of continuity in human existence. "Some df them", Adamic observed, "seem almost as if they had just dropped of Mars and, during the drop, had forgotten all about Mars." These American-bor- n youths had feeble defenses against anti-immigra- nt prejudices, against the hurtful slurs of Hunky, Polack, or Dago. Adamic also commented upon the tragic estrangement between foreign born parenc and their childern. Lacki-ng pride in family or ethnic group, the "new Americans" sought to repudiate their origins, even to the extent of changing their names. However, they rarely acquired a feeling of being fully American; whether aggressively cha-uvinistic or appathetic, they remained Isolated from the mainstream of American life. ч The ideological thurst of Adamic's argument was that a new conception of America was necessary, one which recognized that America was not longer an Anglo-Saxo- n country and that the childern of immigrants should not be expected to become Anglo-Saxo- n The task, according to Adamic, was to harmonize and integrate the various racial and ethnic elements without "sepperssing or destroying any good cultural qualities in any of them." A short-ter- m pluralist, Adamic envisi-oned an ultimate fusion from which would emerger "a universal or pan-huma- n culture." Adamic saw the-- schools playing a central role in this process of harmoni-zation and intergratlon. Teachers must become senstive too and informed about ethnic cultures - including lear-ning how to pronaunce names! History texts must be revised to include recognition of the role of recent immigrants. The radio and press should be utilised to provide authetnic information about the culture and contributions of various groups. Only through such programs would the second generation be transformed into "a great body self-respectin- g, constru-ctive cittizenery". Thus Louis Adamic defined the problem and the remedy in 1934! Adamic, more the involved activist than the objective analyst, the voted much of the next decade seeking to implement his program for ethnic renewal. Through his writings, lectu-res, and organizational activities, Adamic strove tirelessly to move America towards a new definition of itself - one in which Ellis Island would be regarded as historically inportant as Plymouht Rock. Adamic was parti-curlarl- y fond of Walt Whitman's line: "This is not a nation but a teeming nation of nations."But he was, also sensitive to the ugly side of diversity -- to the prejudice, hatred, and conflict -- and he was fearful for America utiles the diversity could be reconciled and' harmonized with unity. In the late thirties, Adamic himself undertook a vast research project, gathering the stories of thousands of immigrants as the basis for a revision of American history which would be "an intellectual-emotion- al systhesis of old and new America." In a series of books published in the 1940s, including From Many Lands, What's Your Name, and A Nation of Nations. Adamic developed this synthesis. Be-yond his writings, he actively sought to implement his program for creating "a new consciousness of America, of our selves as a people made up of over fifty races and nationalities. "Working thro-ugh the Common Council for America Unity, which he helped established in 1939, Adamic developted an ambitious agenda of work to be done. Among the enumerated tasks were the following: 1. to assemble as complete informa-tion as possbile about the different cultural and racial groups by stimu-lating reasrch in the universities and by establishing historical archives of the various groups; 2. to disseminate this information through a magazine thevoted to ethnic matters (as well as through ot- her publications),exhibits,radio pro- grams, and especially the schools; 3. to revies America history to give proper recognition to the contributi- - ons of all groups; 4. to compile and publish an ethnic encyclopedia of the American people. This was, in fact, an agenda for ethnic studies on a grand scale. Then came Pearl Harbor, and Adamic and America turned .their attention to the issues of war and peace. The hot war against Nazi Germany and the cold war with the Soviet Union created a political climate which was not hospi-table to ideas of pluralism and dive-rsity. Conformity and national uni-ty rather were the passwords of the 1940s and 1960s. Only since the sixties has it been possible to take up Adamic's unfinished agenda. One wonders what happened to those "thirty million new Americans" of 1934. Today these would be the middle-age- d ethnic Americans about whom Michael Novak is writting. One wonde-rs what was the cost to this generation of the failure to implement Adamic's program for ethnic pride. What the cost to society as well as to the individual in terms of creativity, productivity, and happiness? Who can say? But I would venture that the cost has biin great. Siginificantly it is the members of this marginality who comprise the leading advocates of the new pluralism im the 1970s. We have in fact taken up the work which Adamic .began forty years ago. After a lapse of aquarter century, the issue of ethnicity came to the fore once more, initially in the form of the militant black power movement. Yet the violence of the sixties to deal with the elusive problem of reconciling diversity and unity. If one reviews Adamic's agenda of 1939, one is impressed by the achievements of the last decade. We now know a great deal more about the ethnic groups coprising American society. There has been a veritable explosion of knowledge with hundreds of books and thousands of articles (not all of high quality to be , ____—————— —————— —_——_._---_-__—__-—-_-_____________—__-—--——- —--— — Doseljenici sure) published on the histories and cultures of the various groups. Rese-arch centres, archives, and libraries have been established to make such scholarship possible. Journals such as Ethnicity and The Journal of Ethnic Studies have been established. The ethnic theme has penetrated the media with much more reporting and balan-ced portrayal od ethnic concerns. Television, radio, the movies, and advertising, all reflect the heightened interest in ethnic matters. An encyclo-pedia of American ethic' group is in the process of compilation. American history as tought and written incorpo-rates increasing coverage of the many different racial and ethnic elements in the population. In 1973, the Congress of the United States enacted the Ethnic Heritage Stu-dies Bill, a historic measure which for the first time committed the federal go- vernment to the principle of pluralism rather than assimilation. The Ethnic Heritage Studies Program provides grants to school system and other insti-tutions for the development of curricu-lum materials and the training of teac-hers. After only four yearsthis Prog-ram has had a substantial impact upon what is taught in many schools about American history and culture. All of this would have made Louis Adamic's heart glad. The battle for ethnic studies, however, remains tobe won. The majority of educators and teache-rs. I fear, remain assimilationists at heart. They can be expected to resist the introduction of an ethnic perspecti-ve which should in fact permeate the entire curriculum. And this is perhaps, even more true in the colleges and uni-versities than it is in the high schools and elementary schools. But to counteract that gloomy pros-pect, I was heartened recently to hear our governor, Rudy Perpich, speak eloquently about the need to incorpora-te the contributions of all of our people in Minnesota history. Growing up in a Croatian immigrant family, speaking Croatian as his first language, Gover-nor Perpich is very conscious, in his own words, of "the immigrants' strug-gle to maintain their own heritage and place it alongside the cultures of other ethnic groups to create a genuine American society." Like Adamic, he knowns thejanguish of _the immigra-nts, torn between hope for the old, watching, their childern slowly weaned from the old ways and old language to become foreigners under their very roofs. "Governor Perpich advocated teaching in the schools the languages 'of the various groups in order to bring the childern closer to their cultural herita-ge. We are fortunate to have a Governor who is so sensitive to ethnic diversity. Those of us who epouse a pluralistic vision of America should rally to the cause. Certainly this is an opportune time to press for the enactment of an ethnic heritage studies program by the State of Minnesota similar to those which have been established in Illinois, Pennsylvania, California, and elsewhere. Perhaps then Louis Adamic's spirit can rest in peace - perhaps the cause he advanced almost a half century ago has been won. Not quite, by a long shot. There remains a great reservoir of resistance to the concept of a pluralistic America - much of it in places of high influence, in" the gover-nment bureaucracies, in the media, in the corporations, and in the universiti-es.- A broad counter-offensiv- e has been denounced as romantic nostalgia, asa journals and in the press, it has been denounced as romantic nostalgia, as a smokescreen for white racism, as a divisive force, etc. An analysis of the sources and motives of the opposition to the new pluralism woud require another paper. In breif, however, I believe the opposition stems from a correct perseption that conscious ethnicity poses a threat to vested interests. Once American history and society are viewed from pluralistic perspective, inequites, abuses, and repressions, spring into focus. The new ethnicity is not simply a form of therapy to soothe bruised ethnic egos. Rather the formation of anew histori-cal consciousness, as in the case, of Black Americans, is the very basic for concerted group action to correct traditional neglects and injuries. The new ethnicity, therefore, leads to the realization of a more fully democratic society committed to a pluralism of equality among groups a well as individuals. And that, I believe, was the essence of Luis Adamic's new conce-ption of America. RUDOLPH J. VECOLI University of Minnesota sagy iiMis .M9IL4 ГЖ1 — ПИТТИмМГ ШШ IIIIIIH 1 I I I II ТГПШ1Т Iffillln .-- .- tT7f ~V_ Л. 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