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Some pride has nothing to do with fads

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  • Some pride has nothing to do with fads

    Central Maine Morning Sentinel, ME
    Kennebec Journal, ME
    Dec 5 2004

    Some pride has nothing to do with fads

    I have never understood the pride fad.

    The attraction of bumper stickers with statements such as "Proud to
    be an Irish-American" (and I am one) escape me. My father's father
    came from Ireland, which makes me half-Irish, of which I am neither
    proud nor embarrassed. It is just a fact.

    A lot of people identify themselves as "a proud American" or a proud
    Hoosier or march to express their pride in being gay, etc. They
    insist on being prideful of something that is nothing more than an
    accident of birth.

    I can understand being proud of an accomplishment, say a baseball
    player who is proud of throwing a no-hitter. But someone who is proud
    of being, for example, a Red Sox fan has done damn little to earn
    that pride. (OK, maybe that is a bad example. Red Sox fans do have
    their suffering to point to, but, generally, fandom does not require
    much more than a TV and time to spend in front of it.)

    But an involuntary glow of pride popped into my head the other day
    and really surprised me. I said, to myself, "I'm proud of America."

    It happened on Ellis Island, that former sandbar in New York Harbor
    that is now a shrine to the American immigrant.

    While there is much shameful in America's treatment of immigrants,
    such as turning a blind eye to many who tried to flee Nazi Germany,
    there is also a history of generosity, decency and openness. And a
    trip Ellis Island brings it all out, the good and the bad. You can
    literally walk into the same rooms that 12 million immigrants entered
    from 1887 to 1938, some of them perhaps your grandparents or great
    grandparents.

    The statistic that got to me was this one: Of those 12 million who
    arrived at Ellis Island, only 2 percent were turned away. The main
    reasons for rejection were contagious disease or proof that the
    immigrant's passage was paid by a U.S. employer in return for working
    here as a virtual indentured slave. Everyone else was accepted, no
    matter their country of origin, religion, language, social class,
    etc. In fact, most were poor refugees, fleeing famine or political
    and religious oppression.

    Although their trip over, often in steerage, was harrowing, their
    time at Ellis Island was made as quick and comfortable as possible.
    Most were processed in five or six hours in a beaux-arts style
    building erected just for this purpose and so beautiful it won
    international design awards. Yes, the immigrants were herded through
    various inspections process, checked for heath and mental capacity
    and some had to stay longer if they were deemed seriously ill or
    mentally deficient.

    Those rejected had the right of review by a Board of Special Inquiry
    and five out of every six cases were reversed and allowed into the
    country.

    Dormitories and hospitals were erected to care for those who were
    ill. Some were eventually sent back to their country of origin, but
    others were treated, cured and allowed into the country.

    Visitors to Ellis Island can see the actual menus served to the
    immigrants who had to stay longer. They got three meals a day,
    nothing fancy, usually beef stew as the main meal, and Jewish
    immigrants were offered a kosher meal.

    The main building at Ellis Island is a museum now, with displays of
    photos, clothing, artifacts and other items that represent the
    experiences of different ethnic groups that made their way through
    Ellis Islands.

    Two million people a year make the trip via ferry from Battery Park
    on the southern tip of Manhattan (the ferry also stops at the Statue
    of Liberty). The wait for a ferry is often two hours or more, but
    that does not dissuade many. Odds are that many of those in line are
    descendants of immigrants who came here through Ellis Island. The
    museum records show that more than 100 million Americans "trace their
    ancestry ... to a man, women or child whose name passed from a
    steamship manifest sheet to an inspector's record book in the great
    Registry Room at Ellis Island."

    That included me. My grandmother (on my mother's side) came through
    Ellis Island in 1920, a 21-year-old refugee from Armenia. She walked
    those wide steps up the Registry Room, was questioned and inspected
    by the strangers in starched white shirts and admitted to the United
    States of America. Her finance (also Armenian) was already here and
    they were married right away, at Ellis Island.

    They moved to Dover, N.H., and had six children. Shortly after the
    sixth was born, her husband died and she raised her kids herself,
    surviving the Depression as what we now call a single mother.

    Now that is something to be proud of.

    John Christie is publisher of the Kennebec Journal and the Morning
    Sentinel. He can be reached at [email protected].
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