Sunday, July 21, 2013

Politics at Home - by Mom



Personal history question:
    Didn’t get m’s email. But I think her question for today was something like
“Did your family (growing up) have discussions about the news and politics of the day?”

Yes!
To clarify, there wasn’t so much discussion as there was avid discourse by my father to all of us children and our mother. He was a passionate anti-Communist, a believer in the necessity of the Cold War.  Dad belonged to Toastmasters and to a speakers’ bureau, which sent him like a missionary to various service clubs and other gatherings to preach about the Communist infiltration of American institutions.  I think now that many of his dinner table diatribes were “practice runs” for his speeches.
            If we listened respectfully (i.e., silently) all was well.  If we interrupted, the wrath came down on us.  To ask a question was to threaten his authority, and by extension, to reveal indoctrination by Communist influences, such as the Beatles.  So we just listened.
At the age of six, I organized the littler kids in the neighborhood to shelter from atomic bombs. We would hear or see an airplane go by overhead, and run for cover. The screaming was amazing as we ran around the yard pretending to look for a place to hide, finally ducking under lawn furniture. Someone started crying once, imaginations being so vivid at that age, and I got into a heap of trouble for frightening my little peers, a caustic irony given the fact that everywhere we turned in those days, gigantic adults were frightening us out of our wits.
Dad’s bedtime stories for me included tales of the crucifying of Chinese Catholic priests and nuns at the hands of the communists and little Chinese
Catholic children having chopsticks rammed through their ears if they failed to denounce Jesus. Naturally, this was going to happen in America, as soon as the Russians and Chinese got the bomb.  Catholics would be the first to go, and all due to the Commie pink-o sympathizers at Harvard and Hollywood, who were going to give them the plans for the bomb and open the garden gate for them to come get us.

            In 1959, when I was 8 years old, the communist Fidel Castro overthrew the Catholic Cuban dictator Batista.  To hear the ranting and fear from my parents and their friends, you would have thought the Russians had invaded Evansville, Indiana.  Obviously the next step would be the atomic bombing of our home. That same year, Nixon ran for President against Kennedy and lost. Nixon had been prominent in the congressional committee on Un-American Activities, that era when academics, politicians and artists were “exposed” as having been members of the International Communist Party or having sympathy with communists, or just knowing any.  Naturally this made Nixon a hero, and Kennedy a villain.  It must have been hard for my parents at some level, having divided loyalties between the anti-Communist conservative and a liberal Catholic.
            Around this time, Catholic people associated with the Batista regime were fleeing Cuba and seeking asylum in the US, as well as other Catholic countries in Europe and South America.  There was a program through our diocese whereby Catholic families in good standing could take in some of these refugees.  My parents applied to take in a teenaged boy about 4 years older than me.  We were all very excited, getting a room ready, preparing ourselves for a new brother.  Then we got the news that we were denied.  We were all very disappointed.  When questioned why this action was taken, the answer was “Politics.”  Whether it was because of Dad’s virulent speaking against Communism and Castro, or because of their very public support of Nixon over Kennedy, I don’t know.
           
   Once when I was in the7th or 8th grade, he spoke at a high school assembly at Mater Dei High School, the Catholic high school on our side of town. The principal there was Sister Mary Esther. They became great friends, based, I believe, mainly on her high personal standards, which included being ferociously anti-Communist.  She was tall, willowy, with an elegant swaying walk, quick and light, despite her height.  It was she who recruited me to attend the Academy Immaculate Conception, where she was being transferred by her order to become the principal there, and where I would attend four years of High school, although only two of them with her as Principal.
Political fervor went way back in the families of both my parents, although it was not universal.  My father’s maternal grandmother, Marie Boudousquie Cabiro, was fiercely antagonistic toward Huey Long, governor and later assassinated Senator from Louisiana. She loathed him so much that she took an oath never to cross the Huey P. Long Bridge in New Orleans.  Her sons, my dad’s uncles, known for their pranks, once got her into a car on some pretense and distracted her about the destination and route, until they had her out in the middle of the bridge, when they revealed that she had broken her oath. Clearly, not everyone in the family cared so much about politics!
ON my mother’s side, it was quite a different story.  My grandfather Dominic Galeota was reputed to have been a Socialist at best, and a Communist at worst.  My Uncle Art Bisone, married to my Aunt Kathleen Galeota, told me that Dominic had been in Utah to work on the railroad, and that he had written for the Daily Worker.
I have never seen anything to verify either one of these statements, and Uncle Art was known for joking around.  However, my father was heard to say on more than one occasion that Dominic was a Communist.  They didn’t get along, but that’s not proof of anything.  It would be a fun area to research; once more important research is completed.
My mother had some friends who were active politically, and she read a lot of books and pamphlets brought to her by our friend and neighbor Mrs. Kautzman, but I really don’t know what they were about.  She may have participated in a few Republican social outings, but it wasn’t a driving force for her to be active.  She did read quite a bit, but her belief was that the wife should follow the political opinions of her husband.  Given my dad’s fiery commitment to his own opinion, I think it would not have been wise for her to do otherwise.
           



My Dad ran unsuccessfully for the Indiana legislature once, and I still have some of his campaign flyers. 

As a 12 year old, I wore a “Goldwater for President” campaign button to school, ensuring my Least Popular status in the 7th grade.  This may also have contributed to the general downfall of my family at Corpus Christ Parish School, recounted in another chapter. Evansville Catholics were predominantly Democrats and liberals.  I was enthusiastic for no other reason than family loyalty, and I think my parents were naïve or fearless enough not to care about the consequences of being different.
As a teenager, I was encouraged to spend my summers working as an unpaid volunteer for the campaign of a Republican congressman, Roger Zion.  You can read the Wiki article about him at this address:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_H._Zion. 
At the time, I thought he was quite the hero, but to look at his picture now, I don’t remember anything about his politics.   I loved the campaign activities—attending county fairs in a little white boater hat passing out leaflets to crowd about the candidate and his stance on Social Security, among other things, none of which I understood or cared much about.  I liked the boys who rode the campaign van, danced with them in the dance tents at the fairs, and kissed most of them at least once.  I was such an activist!
            My one distinct issue-oriented encounter was at one of these fairs, when I handed a flyer about Social Security to a man in his 20s.  He kind of threw it back in my face and said, “Why would I bet interested in Social Security?” I have to laugh when I realize that he is at least 65 by now, and receiving that income that he didn’t care about when lawmakers were making big decisions about it.