By Sage
Date: 2001 Nov 26
Comment on this Work
[[2001.11.26.08.36.313]]

The Promised Land

He came to this country when he was but seven.
His family thought that America was a place to start a fortune,
a land flowing with milk and honey, the promised land.
They had left Reggio Calabria, Italy, where their family and
ancestors had lived for many years.  They had a comfortable
upper class life style, complete with running water,  indoor toilets,
and other comforts of life, many years before it was common even
in the U.S..   The family grew olive trees and grape vines in their
many acres of vineyards.   They had an oil press which was run by
oxen and huge cement rollers.  Producing both olive oil and wine,
the family prospered and enjoyed a lucrative life style.  

His grandfather had lost his life while still young.  He had been gored
open by one of the ox, during a stubborn battle between the two, when
the beast refused to move, as the olives were being crushed into oil.
Speared and ripped by the horns, as he came carelessly close, he
soon bled to death.

Carl came to this country with his mother, grandmother, and father.
The oldest of four children, who were yet to be born.  They settled in
Bayonne/Jersey City, amongst other Italian immigrants, who also thought
that America would be an answer to their prayers.

Their dreams were turned into reality, and disappointments, as they
experienced unemployment, and racial predjudice against Italians.
His mother experience the frustrations of taking care of her elderly mother,
as well as having to deal with a violent husband, who believed in beating
his wife, and bullying his authority in the home, as had been taught to him
by the domination of earlier Italian family heads.  She also endured
watching him, take his frustrations on their son, Carl.  

Her marriage to him, back in Italy , before they immigrated to the U.S.,
was not a happy one..  Their families had arranged it, while they were still
children.  They did not marry out of love, or passion, but out of the will
of their families who demanded that they marry.   He made it clear from the
beginning that he did not want her, even after their marriage.   The years
that followed were unpleasant and abusive for her.   At one point in their
marriage, after little Carl was born, he left her for another woman.  This woman
had many children, as she had been previously married.  I believe her husband
had died, and so she was alone.  He moved in with her, thus abandoning
his wife and son, Carl.   This arrangement lasted for awhile, until his family,
and his wife, Teresa's family, got wind of it.   He was creating quite an
embarassment for both families.  Eventually, his health and life were
threatened by the family heads, and he knew that they truly meant business,
and so he returned to his wife and son.   Returning with great anger, even
more than before, he now began to abuse his wife and son, on an even
far greater scale than before.  Carl became a punching bag, for all of his
father's frustrations.

In horror, his mother looked on, as he took beating after beating, not to
mention verbal abuse from his angry father.  Being of Catholic beliefs,
she prayed to the virgin Mary, every day.  Her prayers went from those
of joy, for the new found prosperity that they thought they had found in
America, to outcries and pleas to either take her husband or take her
son.  It may sound cruel for a woman to ask for the death of her husband
or her son, but the anguish of watching her son, be continually abused
by a cruel, vicious, and dominating father, was more than she could bare.
In time the Virgin Mary answered her prayers, or at least she thought that
she did.   One day, her husband took ill with pneumonia, and died.
The abuse was over, but the emotional and mental scars remained.

Carl was fifteen when his father died.  Now he was left with a mother and
grandmother to support, as well as a two sisters, and a baby on the way,
who was later to be his younger brother.   Carl had to drop out of school,
in order to pursue full time employment.  He endured many job refusals
that he was more than qualified for, simply because he was Italian.
He endured much ridicule at that time,  where he was called "salt and pepper",
etc.   He eventually got a job, by lying about his last name, to hide his
Italian descent.    He remained with that employer for the rest of his life.
Starting out as a common laborer, he eventually worked himself up
into a machinist position, making a steady, and somewhat prosperous
living.

During this time, he bypassed romance, and all the fun frilly things that
young men do, in the prime of their life.  His only concern was providing
for his siblings, mother, and grandmother.   His mother shared in trying
to provide for the family. but being hindered by her inability to read or
write English, she took whatever jobs she could find.  Most of her work
was done in her home, as she had young children to tend.   Many nights
she stayed up all night, sewing linings into jackets by hand,  and stringing
beads for necklaces...  Her youngest daughter, Katrina, would not sleep
at night either, as she was worried about her mother, and would string
beads with her, and fill sewing needles with thread, all night long.
Her mother would try to force her to sleep, but she would insist on helping
her.   She strung many hundreds of needles with thread, all night long,
sticking them into pillows, ready for her mother to use, in sewing the silk
linings, into expensive suit jackets.  Her mother got paid only ten cents
per jacket.   It took many hours of sewing, just to provide food for them to
eat.

As a result of her lack of rest and sleep, Katrina took sick.   She must have
been ill for a long time, and not feeling well, but never told anyone.  She did
not want her mother to worry about her, nor her brother Carl,  who just adored
her.  So in silence, she bore the pain and aches of an illness, that they knew
so little about in those days.  One day, when Katrina was twelve years old
she was sitting on the steps talking with some friends, when her brother Carl
came home from work.   He was amazed to see her sitting there, since she
normally would be upstairs at this time, helping her mother to cook.  Carl was
a little upset with her, and chastised her verbally.  After telling her to get
upstairs several times, Katrina began to cry.  

"What's wrong?",  Carl asked.
"I can't go upstairs, " Katrina replied,  I can't walk.  
Carl thought she was kidding, and prodded her into getting up.  She politely
but firmly refused.  At this point, he began to realize that she was not kidding
with him.   He bent down, and picked her up, and carried her upstairs to her
bed.  Gently he placed her under the covers, and pulled off her shoes.
Immediately, he went to get the doctor, who arrived in less than an hour.
She was diagnosed with rhuematic heart, and the prognosis was not good.
Later that night, after the doctor had left, she called for Carl to come into her
room.   He did.  She motioned for him to sit down on her bed.  He did.
Then she asked him to hold her.  He hesistated at first, and then she
tugged on his shirt, until he lied down on the bed next to her.   Cradled in her big
brother's arms, she seemed to relax and drift off to sleep.  Her arm muscles
began to relax, as Carl could feel her grip on his arms lessen.   Slipping
into a deep sleep, she slowly but gradually gave up her last breath, in a slow
and gentle last heave.  And so Katrina died that night, in her brother's arms,
so suddenly she left them.  A little twelve year old angel, who had done nothing
but try to help in any and all ways that she could, while she avoiding being
any impact to their lives..... And yet she left a deep void in their lives, that
even in the many years that passed afterwards,  this void was never filled.

And so as many foreigners have made up the population of this nation, we
call America, their stories are wide and varied, but like so many today, who
still seek to start new lives in foreign lands, there is much suffering, and hidden
problems, that go unnoticed, but are a common denominator in their lives,
in their passion, and in their quest to reach the promised land.

~

~