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The
'Old-Timers': What I Saw In Their
Faces
I can remember looking down
the main street of Lopez on a summer's day and seeing many of
the "Old-timers" tending their gardens. It seemed as though
the work was never done. Pulling weeds and grooming the plants
to ensure the harvest was a never-ending labor. It must have
been a labor of love because I never remember anyone
complaining that it was too much work. At least not the
"Old-timers," the people from the "Old Country."
When I was growing up in Lopez there were many people living
in town that came to this country to build a better life, to
live free and to pursue the riches that America promised. I
didn't know at the time of my youth what life in the "Old
Country" was like. I didn't know where places like Poland,
Austria, and the Slovak countries were. I only knew that the
people came to America by boat and that Europe was on the
other side of the Atlantic. I knew they came here because they
wanted to and that, well . . . that's just the way it was.
Today, as I travel through town, I can still remember seeing
the faces. For some reason certain images from your youth stay
with you. You don't know why. Some of the simplest things
remain fixed and vivid in your memories, as if it were
yesterday. As if it was meant to be. That's how it is with me
and the faces of the "Old-timers."
I remember my Grandfather Stavisky. I can still see him
sitting on the porch swing of his home just down the street .
. . his old felt hat that would never mate with a suit . . .
smoking his pipe. Prince Albert in a can was his choice. The
old pipe had the same aroma whether it was lit or not. And
mostly I remember his face. It was a face of a man worn by
time, by hard work, by hard times. And yet it was a face of
kindness and laughter. It would also be a face of a man near
the end of his life. My Grandfather died in 1955 when I was 7
years old. So, I didn't know him well, but it seems I know him
better now than ever. I can see his life in his face. My
Grandfather died in his home, in the bed where he slept. I can
remember looking out my bedroom window that November night,
and seeing the porch light on through the night. It is still
with me today when I see a porch light left on as a sign of
someone passing.
My Grandmother Stavisky lived only a few years beyond her
husband. I can see her standing on that same porch. She was a
woman who gave birth to ten children. Nine of them were to
live to adulthood. My Grandmother's face was worn and heavy
with wrinkles her hair was always pulled back and tied. Her
eyes were set deep and her cheekbones pronounced. It was also
a face that told a story of many hard times and a constant
struggle through life. As my memory works its way down through
the small village, I can find many faces that tell the same
stories. In house after house lived the "Old-timers" from the
"Old Country." I can pick them out so easily and read the same
stories on every face.
Today, all those strong and hard worn faces are gone. Only
faint echoes of the stories told by the faces of the
"Old-timers" remain, carried proudly by a new generation. And
for me, the memories will always remain; the memories of the
"Old-timers" and what I saw in their faces.
By
Alex Stavisky |