SUMMARY OF THE
SPRING 2007 ISSUE
Volume 15, No. 1, Spring 2007
Slovak
Heritage Live
A quarterly newsletter
published by Vladimir Linder
Spring issue was published in
January 2007 and it was mailed to 1200 recipients world wide.
FROM THE EDITOR
This is our 15th
anniversary issue and the Spring 2007 is here. Only three more years to
Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic games. Construction on all major projects
has started and Vancouver looks like one huge building site. Traffic
delays, diversions are everywhere. But I guess we have to suffer through
it and the bright future is guaranteed.
We had a great progress on our web pages.
www.slovakheritage.org had 3.025097 hits
and 174785 visitors and that is an increase of 16% over 2005
www.lindervideo.com had
630411 hits and 14711 visitors and that is an increase of 256.19% over
2005
www.liptovskateplicka.com
had 126646 hits and visitors and that is an increase of
208.76%% over 2005
All together my three sites had 3.782154 hits and that is 25.49%
increase over 2005 of 2.685261 hits and 183792 visitors and that is an
increase of 16.579 % over 2005 of 157654 visitors.
US$ Donatios for 2006:
BERISH Paul, Kingston, NY, $ 100.00; CUNNINGHAM Esther Fojt, Grand
Prairie, TX, $ 10.00; BELANSKY Evelyn, Buttler, PA, $ 20.00,; HORECKY,
Bob, Aurora CO, $ 25.00; PAFKO Donald, Bloomington, MN, $ 25.00; KOSLAK
Patricia, 93 SW Main St., Douglas, MA,$ 10.00. TOTAL USA donations $
190.00. CANADIAN donations for 2006: DUNAY John,
Tilley, Alberta, $ 21.00. Many thanks to all donors for their generous
donations.
I would like to ask you once again as usual in almost every issue to see
your expiry date on your address label and if you are behind with your
subscription, please send in the overdue amounts, as you well know I am
financing the newsletter from my own resources and need every penny you
can spare. No donations above your subscription amount will be refused
doesn’t matter how large they may be. By the way the postage in USA and
CANADA has increased substantially again. Remember that you will receive
a free one-year subscription to Slovak Heritage Live on any order over
US$100.00 and two free video tapes on becoming a Slovak Heritage circle
subscriber by donating US$150.00. You can now also order from a large
selection of 34 folklore DVD titles from Linder Video Productions.
Vladimir
FROM THE
MAIL BAG
Dear Vladimir,
I took the DVDs of this year’s Festival at Liptovská Teplička back to
Pennsylvania to watch with my parents. My father and I spent two
wonderful afternoons watching them and commenting. For him, it brought
back memories of when he was a boy, watching his father and the other
men dancing at weddings, and watching the women gather in a line and
sing. A lot of the things are exactly as he remembers. He could even
remember and point out the differences between what the immigrants
themselves did, versus the first-generation who grew up in America. The
best thing was he remembers when his father was trying a dance and lost
his balance and fell over. He got up and announced to the crowd: “That’s
it, if I can’t do that anymore; I am no longer a young man.”
The most fun was imagining that this was two or three centuries ago,
when this would be the only entertainment. It puzzled us for a while why
one group of men were wearing what looked like belts slung down around
the backs of the legs, when something like that would make it harder to
do certain dance steps. Then we realized-it was supposed to draw your
eyes to their butts to better show them off! That’s when we started
studying the different costumes, to see how they were designed to show
off or hide parts of the body (high aprons or colored bands to show off
the breasts, tight boots to show off the legs in younger women; colors
around the middle or on the arms to draw attention away from the
middle-age spread on older women; etc.). And how they stood at times,
both men and women, how they’d be showing off their chest or shoulders
or bosoms or legs to attract a mate. It was hilarious and at the same
time very educational.
It was also great to watch my son-adopted from Russia-respond to the
music and movements. This is a kid who will run from the room when my
wife puts in a video of Irish folk dancing, but loves the Slavic rhythms
and colors! (He’s also into polkas just as much as rock n’ roll!)
Not the kind of memories I expected to make by watching these videos.
Quite a bonus! Thanks!
Paul M. Paulochik
501 South Sevenhills
O'Fallon IL 62269 USA
Dear Friend,
I have obviously overlooked renewing our subscription. We enjoy
immensely reading your quarterly newsletter. At this time, I am missing
the Fall and Winter 2006 issues. Please find my renewal enclosed,
keeping my renewal date continuous and sending my back issues.
My own heritage seems from Czech-Moravian Highlands, however, my wife’s
heritage stems from the county of Šariš and the village- Mestisko is
mentioned from her relatives.
Thank you,
Tom and Bernadine (Matas) Wanek
MY
FALL 2006 TRIP TO SLOVAKIA
I left
Vancouver on October 22, with over two hour departure delay, as the
plane was late leaving London, arrived and late and departed late to
London. I knew in Vancouver that I will miss my connecting flight to
Vienna as soon as I seen my boarding pass. Maria was still waiting as
usual to see if everything was fine at the check in counter and I asked
her to call Milan in Slovakia with my new arrival time. I flew
BRITISH AIRWAYS again as the price was right and on top of it
British Airways is the only airline that I know off that still allows
overseas luggage to and from North America to be 32 Kg or 70 pounds and
that is great. This is also on top of the great service they provide.
The food is always good, drinks are plentiful and the entertainment
music and videos are non stop, not as the other airlines that give you a
choice of two movies. Funny, it doesn’t matter to me as I usually fall
asleep soon after take of and I don’t remember one movie that I watched
from beginning to the end. Mostly I seen all beginnings and some end
scenes but very rarely the whole movie. I had a three hour wait at
Heathrow airport and arrived in Vienna after 9:30 PM. Vienna’s Swechatt
airport is relatively small airport among world’s busy airports, but
that will soon change and there is a huge expansion on the way currently
for couple of years now. Most of the time the plane isn’t parked at the
terminal and you are bussed to the customs passport control and then you
walk short distance to the luggage hall. I found one of my huge
SAMSONITE oyster shell suitcases almost right away on the carousel,
so I thought that is great, as seeing a piece of luggage on the carousel
from London is many times a great surprise as they misplace lot of
luggage in London. My second suitcase didn’t arrive. I started to
believe that after the unclaimed suitcases passed by me several times,
while waiting for my second one. So I gave up and went to the misplaced
luggage counter and joined a huge lineup. I didn’t really know where I
will be staying in Bratislava so I gave them my old address with
instructions to call me prior to arrival in Bratislava as I have a car
and can meet the driver on his way in some shopping mall. I was assured
that the suitcase will be on the next plane early morning and that by 10
AM I will have my suitcase in Bratislava. As late as I was, I finally
went out of the airport and was greeted by my friends MILAN ŠTEFÁNIK
and his wife NÓRIKA. Soon we were at their place in Dúbravka,
part of Bratislava. They have a lovely apartment and since their two
daughters are grown up they are what we call here empty nesters and they
had a room for me. We talked into the late night, and then I was working
on my stuff and organizing things and went to bed with sleeping pills. I
had a good night sleep and woke up at 6 AM...
RETURN TO ROKYTOV
by Gene Lubas
“You have to kiss the icon when
you enter the church,” Mother reminded us while blessing herself, tears
welling up in her eyes upon entering this little countryside gem. It was
July 6, 2006, and having traveled nearly two hours from Košice, my
mother Anna, my partner Jerry and I were comforted to be inside the
silvery tin-roofed Greek Catholic Church of Sv. Mikhail (St. Michael) in
the village of Rokytov. With our friend, Immy Semniak, who lives in
Košice, we had driven to this nostalgic place, officially known in
Slovak as “Rokytov pri Humennom” (in Rusyn, Rokytiv kolo Humennoho; in
English, Rokytov near Humenne), located in the far northeast corner of
Slovakia.
Moments later, while five little children belonging to St. Michael’s
pastor scurried under our feet, we walked a few dusty steps beyond the
church yard to seek the ancestral home of my mother’s mother, Anastasia
Bednar, nee Nastia Štefková.
Finding this hallowed dwelling was the goal of our journey-a lifelong
dream to bring my mother, Anna Bednar Lubas, to her ancestral home.
Number 41 in Rokytov is the house where my Baba was born and raised in
the Rusyn and Greek Catholic traditions of eastern Slovakia. The house
most recently belonged to Mikhail Štefko, brother of my grandmother, and
after his passing, to his sons Mikhail and Jan.
On a cold February morning in 1890, Nastia Štefková came into this world
in that single-story white stucco house. In 1909, she left her beloved
Rusyn village to find a better life in America, traveling through what
was then Austria Hungary (Czechoslovakia) to Germany, where she would
board a large ocean liner to carry her and others who shared her dream
to the “New World.” After days on this crowded vessel, she arrived at
Ellis Island in New York harbor, endured the tedious process of
immigration scrutiny, and was finally released, under the given name,
Anastasia Stefko to search for members of her family who had come before
her and settled in a far-away place called McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania.
It was there in McKees Rocks, shortly after her arrival, that Anastasia
Stefko met Joseph Bednar (originally from the Rusyn village of Lukov
near Bardejov in the Šariš district of Slovakia). She soon found
employment in a cigar factory, and two weeks later became Mrs. Joseph
Bednar in a union which was blessed at the newly-formed Holy Ghost Greek
Catholic Church.
Although “Nastia” kept in touch with her brother Mikhail in Europe
through letter-writing, she never returned to Rokytov. Likewise, neither
her brother Ivan (John), who immigrated to McKees Rocks before her, nor
Nastia’s children nor grandchildren had ever gone back to Rokytov.
It wasn’t until seventy-six years later, in 1985, that I was fortunate
enough to study with choreographers from the folklore group, Lúčnica and
perform at the Detva Festival in central Slovakia. I had been the first
of Nastia Štefková’s descendants in two generations to return to the
“old country.”
Czechoslovakia at that time was under communist rule and still one
country, so getting around and not speaking the language fluently was
difficult for this fresh-out-of-college American. Fortunately, I
traveled with a translator from Detva who was kind enough to take me to
that far northeast corner of Slovakia.
During my 1985 visit, I had brought gifts from my Baba for Uncle
Mikhail, his wife Anna and their family. A story that I’ll never forget
is my uncle’s reaction when he opened his gift-a crisp, brand-new white
shirt. Upon receiving the present, he proudly told the translator that
when he died, he wished to be “put into the earth in this beautiful
white shirt.”
My mother and family had also packed many trinkets for me to present to
their European relatives. Delighted with the unexpected gifts, these
down-to-earth folk wished to return the favor. So, in a short second,
Aunt Anna bustled out the front door, climbed a sturdy homemade ladder,
and, reaching onto the porch roof of the little white stucco house where
hens nested, returned with an apron full of brown eggs and a bag of
mak (poppy seeds). Certainly, I couldn’t carry the eggs back to
America, but the contents of that precious bag, presented to my Baba
upon my return, made for some delicious poppy seed rolls back in McKees
Rocks.
Each wonderful memory of this 1985 life event was an important one that
I have always cherished and always wished that my mother could
experience as well. We had talked many times about traveling there
together to see where Baba was born, lived, and went to church. Jerry
and I were determined to take Mother to visit the house where Baba lived
with her family until 1909. This summer it finally happened.
After flying to Vienna, and meeting our generous friend, Vlado Linder in
Bratislava, we flew to Košice to meet Immy Seminak and his lovely wife
Adriana. We then made the pilgrimage to the edge of our destination,
greeted by a green road sign bearing the village name of Rokytov in both
Slovak and Rusyn languages. We leisurely strolled the quiet streets of
the tiny farming village where Nastia and her friends played at the turn
of the 20th century. We arrived at Sv. Mikhail, the little church which
was built two centuries earlier -the church with a beautiful iconostas
where Nastia was baptized and made her First Communion.
We left the churchyard and slowly walked the street behind Sv.
Mikhail’s, making certain that Mother took it all in.
Seconds later, Mother stopped suddenly and stared straight ahead in
disbelief. “This is it.” She gazed at the little house before her like
it was an epiphany, a surreal moment-something which in all your life
you have seen only in your mind’s eye, and now incredibly come to meet
face-to-face. Here-in this abode a world away-is where we began.
One of six children born to Joseph and Anastasia Bednar, my mother Anna
was born in 1924 and grew up speaking the Rusyn language, honoring the
culture and religion of her parents. She did not speak English until she
started the first grade. She was visibly speechless now, at the sight of
her mother’s birthplace.
It appeared that no one was home as we approached the house, to our
disappointment; we realized that it was empty. We were then met by a
neighbor, Maria Polomčáková, a sweet lady who asked our translator what
we were looking for. Mother spoke Rusyn to her, explaining who we were.
Maria dolefully replied that Uncle Mikhail, his wife Anna and son,
Mikhail had passed away and that no one lived in the house any longer.
She informed us that Uncle’s other son, Ján, visits the house several
times a year and wishes to eventually sell it. We left our address
information for Maria to pass on to Ján, who currently resides in
Liberec in the Czech Republic.
An hour later, we were enjoying lunch, reeling from the Rokytov
experience, sharing Šariš beer, pyrohy, halušky, šalát and
fried breaded cheese in an old world krčma (tavern) in the main
city of Humenné. While driving back to Humenné, our friend and
translator Immy related that it sent shivers up his spine to hear Mother
speak to the neighbor Maria in Rusyn-a language, he said, that was
unique and rarely heard conversationally in mainstream Slovakia.
Mother, looking none the wearier in spite of the long and sentimental
day of discovery, spoke again-in English. Her voice cracked with emotion
as she expressed her gratitude to Jerry and me for planning this
long-awaited journey. Through joyful tears, she told us that never in
her 82 years of life did she, Anna Bednar Lubas, think that she would
see the place where the matriarch of our family, her dear mother, was
born. A blissful grin quickly grew across Mother’s face, awed and
delighted that she had finally visited that Rusyn village of white
stucco houses amidst sunflower fields and framed by mountains covered
with blue flowers-the place where Nastia Štefková Bednár called “home”
for the first nineteen years of her life.
Mother, Jerry and I intend to renew and maintain ties with the Štefko
family, and are even considering the possibility of purchasing the
little house in Rokytov from cousin Ján. Perhaps then, next summer-when
we return to visit our friends in Bratislava and Košice-we’ll also stay
up north near the Slovak-Ukraine border at our very own “summer cottage”
in the quaint and quiet hamlet of Rokytov.
50TH ANNIVERSARY OF FOLKLORE
ENSEMBLE ZOBOR FROM NITRA
The academic folk ensemble Zobor at the Slovak Agriculture University in
Nitra was founded in 1956 and belongs among the oldest folk ensembles in
the Slovak Republic. It comprises folk music band, chorus and dance
group.
During its existence, Zobor has performed countless shows in Slovakia
and other 20 countries throughout the world, as well. Performances at
EXPO 1998 in Lisbon and at EXPO 2000 in Hannover have been of the utmost
interesting and notable events within the last period. Zobor
participates in various folklore festivals, contests and celebrations
all over Slovakia. Every second year it organizes the C.I.O.F.F.
International Festival of Academic Folk Ensembles called Academic Nitra,
where approximately 900 people from all over the world take part. The
repertoire consists of performances from different parts of Slovakia and
by means of typical costumes, dances, music and songs represents wide
scale of the very Slovak traditional culture.
The academic folklore ensemble Zobor from
the Slovak Agriculture University in Nitra was founded in 1956 and
belongs to the oldest folklore ensembles in Slovakia. It is created by
folklore musicians, girl’s singers group and dance group. The repertory
consists of program numbers from different parts of Slovakia and through
typical costumes, dances, music and songs represents the wide scale of
Slovak traditional culture...
35th ANNIVERSARY OF FOLKLORE
GROUP DETVA
I have been going to Devta’s folklore festival under Poľana from 1987
and enjoying performances of folklore group DETVA since then. I
have been to their 30th anniversary gala performance five years ago and
liked it a lot. In their 35th anniversary bulletin their director and my
friend MILKA SEKEREŠOVÁ wrote:
When they were preparing VI. year of festival under Poľana, Detva didn’t
have its own representative in the form of folklore group. On initiative
of then director of the house of culture of A. Sládkovič in Detva
a folklore group DETVA was established on January 18, 1971.
Its first artistic director and choreographer was VLADIMÍR POLÍVKA.
Together with the folklore group a folk music ĎATELINKA was born
as well with primáš ONDREJ MOLOTA. These two groups were enhanced
by women singing group under leadership of VERONIKA GOLIANOVÁ and
soloist instrumentalist JOŽKO RYBÁR. This year we are remembering
would be his unlived 100 years. In one year the folklore group created
all evening program and the name of Detva’s folklore group started to
resonate on prominent domestic folklore festivals or competitions.
Successes started to come from aboard as well.
In 1982 Vladimír Polívka passed away, who would be 75 this year. After
his sudden departure the group was cooperating with and was lead
artistically by VLADIMÍR MALIŠ, JOZEF MAĽA, its former
dancers ANNA OSTRIHOŇOVÁ, LUBOMÍR OSTRIHOŇ, JOZEF SMUTNÝ and
IMRICH ĽALÍK. From fall of 1992 its director is member EMÍLIA
SEKEREŠOVÁ. Essential part of the folklore group was costume keeper
and for some time organizing director IRENA POLÍVKOVÁ who created
beautiful costume storage for the group, still in use today.
Young musicians started to
cooperate with folk music group DETVANČEK in 1985 that became in
1989 good continuators of their role models and with primaš JAROSLAV
HAZLINGER, are the music of Detva’s folklore group
DETVA.
From 1998 performing together with the
folklore group DETVA is folk singing group under leadership of
ANNA KLIMOVÁ.
The group presented
repertoire portraying the Under Poľana region in almost all countries of
Europe and Detva’s bare bellies were also
admired in Africa, directly in Algeria. Folklore group DETVA is
successful at home and abroad. To their latest honors belong: Laureate
of all Slovakia’s contest in creative choreographies, Main prize in the
National competition of radio recordings GRAND PRIX of
SVETOZÁR STRAČINA
folloved by PRIZE OZIS finalist of all Slovakia’s
competition of program blocks and creative choreographies. ANNA
KLIMOVÁ and PETER BABICA are finalists of all Slovakia’s
competition and JÁN
MURÍN became vinner of
all Slovakia’s competition of
instrumentalists.
Today folk music with Primáš
Jarko Hazlinger is preparing its musical continuers, dance group is
getting younger from 13 year olds members and folk singing group is
giving us average of the whole ensemble.
Emília Sekerešová
Director of the Floklore Group Detva...
PROFESSOR ŠTEFAN NOSÁĽ CELEBRATED HIS 80TH BIRTHDAY
First time I met Professor Štefan Nosáľ
during auditions for Lúčnica in 1965 when I was studying at the Trade
Secondary School for Electrical Technology in Bratislava. LÚČNICA
was the only amateur Slovak Folk Ensemble that was traveling the world
as the showcase of Slovak Folklore. We knew they will be going to Expo
67 World Fair in Montreal and I thought that if I get accepted to become
a dancer I would get a free trip to Montreal and I would not return
home. You see I newer ever thought in my life that I would be living my
adult years in Czechoslovakia. Well, I wasn’t accepted, since I dint
know any folk dance elements. I knew only twist, rock and Roll and Jive
and similar dancers. So I continued in my studies. In 1967 instead of
Montreal I went hitchhiking around Eastern Europe visiting, Hungary,
Romania, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia. I graduated in 1968 and in 1969
I immigrated to Canada.
Second time I met Professor Nosáľ was in 1986 during Lúčnica’s
performances at EXPO 86 in Vancouver, that awaken the love for Slovak
culture, heritage and folklore in me, and we stayed friends ever since.
You see until that time I didn’t know one folk song; I wasn’t interested
in the Slovak culture or heritage.
Professor Nosáľ was born in 1927at a hamlet above village Hriňová near
Detva. He spent his childhood years there. He finished high school
studies in Banská Bystrica and University studies in Bratislava. He is
the Artistic Director of Lúčnica for over 50 years and celebrated his
life jubilee 80th birthday in Late January. On his 75 he was granted
honorary citizenship of Detva.
He created countless of choreographies for Lúčnica and other folklore
ensembles around the world. Someone once wrote about Lúčnica: “The
Rolling Stones of Folklore.”
We usually meet by chance in Bratislava and for sure at VÝCHODNÁ
and DETVA festivals. In Detva we stay at the Hotel Detva, many
times on the same floor. Since I always carry a lot of photographic and
video equipment I have a pass at the festivals to the amphitheater
grounds and I always drive and therefore I can’t drink, and I become his
personal driver and a guard for the night. For instance after the
Detva’s Saturday final performance, we stay in the VIP lounge at the
amphitheater, then I drive him to the old orphanage, where there is the
first party, we stay for a while and then we go to hotel, change our
clothes and we go to another party at the Cultural Center. It is a lot
of fun.
Professor Nosáľ once said:
“I have spent many years of my life in constant discovering and creating
beauty. Not only the one that can be receptive by eyes, but also one
that beautifies the spirit. I am happy that many young people in Lúčnica
and at the school have helped m. They have filled with this happiness
themselves and they had seeded her with handful to our people at home
and the people around the world.
I am grateful to you.”
Štefan Nosál.
Dear Professor Nosáľ for your life jubilee 80th birthday I wish you lots
of health and happiness and many more years of creative spirit in
Lúčnica.
Vladimir Linder.
FOLKLORE ENSEMBLE JÁNOŠÍK
FROM THE BEGINNINGS TO THE PRESENT
On the proposal of the trade
union it was decided to form a small singing and dancing folk group that
had to perform occasionally at various cultural and social events in our
town and its surroundings. Young musician‑violinist FRANTIŠEK PRISTAČ
was assigned by this task. In summer 1956 he, together with the former
SĽUK (the Slovak Folk Art Ensemble)‑dancer JÁN KRATOCHVÍLU,
succeeded in forming this group. The first regular rehearsals twice a
week under the name, Dance group Jánošík‑began in September 1956. The
ensemble gained its name Jánošík according to a famous Slovak outlaw.
František Pristač became the first chief executive. At the beginning the
group had only one folk costume from the village Važec and that is why
they were rehearsing the songs and dances from this region. The first
amateur choreographers were JÁN TOMKO, JÁN KRATOCHVÍLU and
ALFRÉD BOBULA. The first public performance was on April 26, 1957
in the nearby village Nižná Šuňava. It was a great success.
The first years of the ensemble were very successful. Among the most
important successes belonged an invitation to the most famous Slovak
folk festival in Východná in 1958, where it took the first place. In
this period the ensemble was divided into dancing and singing parts.
In 1962 the ensemble moved to new building of the Cultural house, where
it has had its home until today. In 1966 on the occasion of the 10th
anniversary of the ensemble the first foreign trip was organized to the
former German Democratic Republic. Other successful trips followed.
France, England, the Soviet Union, Austria and Italy. The ensemble also
performed several times in the programs of the Slovak television. During
this period of the existence of our group a lot of folklore experts and
outstanding artists helped to create its importance and high art level:
CYRIL ZÁLEŠÁK, JOZEF MAJERČÍK, PAVOL BALŽANKA, JOZEF BUTELA, JÁN
PIVOLUSKA and IRENA JANKU‑the famous Slovak folklorists, who
created a lot of successful choreographies...
SLOVAK
BETHLEHEM POST CARDS
For sample issue of
The Slovak Heritage Live Newsletter, please send US$2.00
together with your postal address to:
Vladimir
Linder
3804 Yale Street
Burnaby, BC,
Canada, V5C 1P6
Phone/Fax:
1-604-291-8065
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Copyright © Vladimir Linder 2006
3804 Yale
Street, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5C 1P6
The above article and photographs may not be copied, reproduced,
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the express written permission of Vladimir
Linder. All rights
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