Thursday, November 27, 2008

EPI TENCHISQHIVI * (HAPPY THANKSGIVING) -2008

A FAMILY FEAST AT THE RODONI'S IN SANTA CRUZ (c.1955-60)

IVANO SAYS: The above photo was sent to me by Donna Rodoni. I can identify the following people in the photo: On the left side starting from nearest to camera: Elio Rodoni, Julio Rinaldi,
Roberto Degli Esposti, Fabby Degli Esposti, Mario Rodoni and Jeannie Rodoni. At the far end on the right side: Vanda Degli Esposti. I need some help with the rest on the right side.

Thanks to my "blaggatori" (see comments) the right side of the table has been ID as: Vanda, then Sallie Rinaldi Barilati, Barbara Barilati, Rico Barilati, Sandra Rogers and Alma Rinaldi Rogers.

________________

* As written in Gino Campioni's Itanglish Dictionary

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

PASTURES OF PLENTY





IVANO SAYS: I was searching the web and I came up with the below article regarding "Pastures of Plenty". This program was done for NPR (Public Broadcast Radio). by Rachel Goodman. Thought I'd remind fellow "Blaggatori" that transcripts and audio of this excellent program are still available on the internet.



PROGRAM 2: 1920-1940’s
Hard Times in the Country: Europeans, Okies and Fruit Tramps

This program looks at the European immigrants who came to work the fields of California. We’ll tour the farms of Ivano Comelli, son of an Italian farm worker, and Nita Gizdich, Croatian-American apple farmer. The decade of the 1930’s was marked by bloody labor battles across the state, in places like Pixley and Salinas, as workers began to demand their rights. As times got harder, thousands of families took to the roads, picking crops up and down the Central Valley. The Okies joined the migrant stream in 1935, swelling the ranks of unemployed pickers. We also hear about El Repatriacion, where law enforcement and immigration officials deported nearly 400,000 Mexican and American citizens of Mexican descent. We think we know this chapter of our history, but we haven’t heard this part.

Travers and Sakata Fruit Company employees, Watsonville, CA, September 1932. Photo: PajaroValley Historical Association.

Europeans
"They said in California, that work it grew on trees, And everyone was going there, just like a swarm of bees." Poem, Arkansas migrant, 1935.


Nita Gizdich, Owner, Gizdich Ranch (apples and ollalieberries), Watsonville, CA
"My father came from Croatia, and my mother came from Sacramento. They started a farm right here, and I was born around the corner, and I’ve been here all my life." Listen Read Transcript
LaNORMA, RACHEL GOODMAN, 'THE OLD RANCERE' ON THE RODONI RANCH "SU PER LA COSTA".
Ivano Comelli, Son of Italian Ranceri, Davenport, CA
"My father, who was an immigrant from Italy, worked these ranches from 1923 to when he died in 1993. It was a hard life but it was a good life."Listen Read Transcript


Okies and Fruit Tramps


Ed Maples, Retired Union Leader, Fruit Tramp, Salinas, CA
"We were getting seventeen cents an hour picking apricots."Listen Read Transcript


Gerri Martin, Teacher, former packing shed worker, Watsonville, CA
"Dorothea Lange pictured all these families as having great despair.I remember nothing but happiness and laughter."Listen Read Transcript
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