One
Man's Family By Pasquale Lorina
The
illuminated dial on the giant radio was glowing in the parlor, as Pop
lit his cigar. The voice of Edward R. Murrow reporting from war torn
Europe was echoing throughout the apartment. This had been an evening
tradition in our house ever since Germany invaded Poland in '39.
Pop had a heart attack shortly after the war started so his daily
ritual to keep motivated was tuning into the radio for the events of
the day. Pop worked on the Brooklyn docks since he emigrated from
Sicily in 1921. After the Great War, Italy was left in devastation
and work was scarce. Pop had an Uncle who lived in Red Hook, he
sponsored him and Pop came and lived with him. He met my mother at a
show in which was a venue for the Italian Theater. After they married
the couple rented a three room apartment above Chiarelli's Butcher
shop on Court St. The doctors told Pop that he would have to rest for
a couple of years before he could go back to the docks. It was tough,
we were on Home relief and Ma took a job at Funaro's Grocery store
to help out. I was still in the seventh grade during this time and
after school my older brother and I worked shining shoes on the
corner of Baltic and Court. We didn't make a lot of money but it
helped buy some groceries while the old man was laid up. Thankfully
old man Funaro had a "Book". In those days the local grocer gave
some of their customer's credit and everything went into the book.
Pop made sure that as soon as we got our monthly home relief check,
he would run down to Funaro's and settle his account. ''You
only hava you honor in this worlda", he often told me in his broken
English. However, as the weeks went by Pop got stronger and the
Doctor told him he could go back to work again. ''Great news
Pop!!!'' I shouted as he told us the doctor's report. ''Yes,
very good", he said in a low tone. I wondered to myself why he
wasn't happier. He was going crazy when he was laid up and this
news should have delighted the old man. I thought about it for a
while in amazement, then I spoke to my Uncle Joe whom also worked on
the docks. Uncle Joe told me that my father was worried because he
wasn't around for a couple of years and he didn't know how the
''Men in Power" would see this. Uncle Joe also told me that a
guy named Tony Giuliani ran the piers and if he didn't like you,
you didn't work. I felt bad for my old man; he would have to do
some groveling to get his job back. I wondered, "What about this
sense of honor he spoke about?" I guess at this point with his
family in mind he would have to forego his thought of honor, and how
it was everything to him. Pop went back to the docks and found work.
He never told us how he got on so fast and I never thought it was my
place to ask. Now it didn't matter, nothing mattered since that
Sunday afternoon. As Pop sat in the parlor awaiting, the Sunday feast
that we always had, a news flash interrupted the program. The
announcer took the carbon spring microphone and reported that the
Japanese had bombed our naval base in Hawaii. I looked at Pop and he
sank in his chair, my mother dropped a dish she was holding and my
brother ran into the bedroom. What was going to happen? I remember my
father telling me stories about war ravaged Europe during the Great
War. Will this act of aggression on the behalf of Japan send us to
war? That night everything just stood still, there were no cars
moving, no movie theaters open and our church rang funeral chimes
echoing throughout the parish. The next day, President Roosevelt had
declared War on the Empire of Japan. Life as we knew it would be much
different from this point on.
The country
was one hundred percent behind the President's decision and guys
joined the service in droves. I was too young for the draft, however
my brother was 17. You couldn't enlist under 18 unless you had a
signed letter from your legal guardian. My brother was full of
vengeance and wanted to kill every Japanese person he saw, he wanted
to join the Navy and wasn't going to let anyone stop him. Now Pop
was a smart man and knew all about the world and what was going on,
but because of his immigrant background he couldn't read that well.
So Vinny knew how he could get into the Navy at 17, he told Pop to
sign a contract that was a petition to help in the war effort. The
old Man signed it happily and that was that. My brother left the next
morning to enlist in the United States Navy, and guess who had to
tell Ma and Pop? My father had mixed, emotions, he loved his adopted
country but now what if his Vincenzo was killed in battle? He just
shook his head, looked up to the sky and said in Italian ''Help
my son O Lord". My Mother cried for two weeks until we got a
postcard from Vinny telling us he was okay and on a nice ship in the
Pacific.
As
the war began to unfold, Italy allied with Germany and war was
declared on them as well. Now my father had a big problem because his
brothers and parents were still living in Sicily. Where would his
allegiance lie? He had often told me how great Mussolini rebuilt
Italy after the Great War, all the advantages that he gave the
Italian people whom were starving. However my father who was a smart
man, knew that Mussolini had to ally with Hitler for the good of his
nation. The Germans would have taken over Italy in two days and
soldiers we are not. Pop had to sign papers declaring himself to be
an American and that he would make no attempts to side with his
native land. I heard that Joe DiMaggio's father who is a fisherman
can't go out on his boat after a certain time. I began to become
afraid, we are Americans but we are Italian what will happen to us?
My buddy Sal Perocrocce told me that they were putting Japanese-
Americans in camps. Will they do this to Italians as well? I was much
frightened of the war, of what would become of us and worried about
my brother Vinny. Even though the war was on and there was rationing
going on and we had to alternate days to get gas, life in house was
running pretty smoothly. With Vinny overseas and Pop back to work, we
were able to pay our bills. I started my second year of High School,
I was going to Ebbets Field once a week and going to the parish
dances. I loved Ebbets Field. I knew every player and also was able
to go down in to the dugout now and then because my neighbor Mike
Daley was a groundskeeper. I started taking girls there and when they
saw me go into the dugout and shake the player's hands they thought
I was a big shot. I often felt ashamed, I am safe at Ebbets Field and
Vinny was on some ship in the Pacific theater risking his life. My
mother was the never the same after Vinny enlisted, she walked around
with rosary beads wrapped around her hands all day, she even stopped
working at Funaro's. All she did was take care of Pop and I, and
worry and pray for Vinny. My mother went to church four times a day
during the war. Msgr. Gianetti joked he was going to make her an
honorary Nun!
As the days went on
and the war dragged on, Pop would come home and go straight to the
radio. He kept his ear on it each night to follow the war
correspondents that would broadcast. He couldn't get in touch or
write to his family in Italy, because there was a restriction on
that. So he worried that his parent's house would get destroyed by
Churchill's bombardment. The English were hitting Italy with
everything they had, and they were told to demoralize the citizens. I
really felt for the Old Man, He had a son on one side and a family on
the other. Pop wasn't a religious man, but during the war he never
missed Mass at Our Lady of Peace, he was probably just asking God to
watch over them all.
With the frost of
fall chilling the air, the World Series over with another loss for
Brooklyn the war still blazing. I really missed my brother and
worried about him constantly, I didn't care about the girls, the
Dodgers, or School I just wanted the Damn war to be over. The war
would soon be over for us, but we didn't know it. One day as I rode
my bike home I saw a telegram deliveryman at the door to the
apartments, on top of the butcher. As I approached him I asked him
what apartment he was looking for. He told me 2A, Bruno! I told him
that was my family and he handed me this envelope. I looked at it
with fear; it was from the War Department. Oh No I screamed, not
Vinny, not my brother!!! I couldn't open it I was trembling. My
mother was out shopping and Pop would be home soon. I stayed in my
parents' bedroom and just stared out the window as the envelope
lied atop the radio. I heard the door downstairs close and someone
walking upstairs, I knew it was Pop because he always jingled his
change. Oh God I thought, please don't let that telegram be what I
think it is. Not seeing anyone around my father went as he always did
to the radio. This time it was different, the news was atop of the
radio in writing. I peered half of my head out of the doorway, having
a clear view of the parlor I watched as my father opened the
telegram. He opened it, stared at it for awhile and went to the
cabinet where he kept his whisky. Pop grabbed the bottle and poured
himself a healthy shot, and then he went back to his chair in the
parlor and began to cry like a baby. I never heard my father cry
until that day. I began to scream but he did not come to me and I
didn't go to him. Shortly thereafter another noise downstairs, it
was my mother coming home with groceries. Oh ,No I said to myself,
she is going to get a heart attack. I stayed in the bedroom as she
came in the door, Pop was in the parlor. My mother put the groceries
down on the Kitchen table and went into the parlor. Then like the
gates of hell were open, my mother screamed on the top of her lungs
and threw herself on the floor. Trying to be strong for us, Pop
picked her up and held her in his arms. In Italian he told her "He
belongs to the Angels Now", I came out of the Bedroom and fell in
their embrace. The war was over for us now; I picked up the telegram
and read it ''Vincent Bruno died in action", my father looked
at me and said in his broken English lowed from crying ''I Tolda
you, you hava you honor!'' '' Your Brother died with Honor,
they never forgetta!''That night the light on the Radio was dark.
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