Rallentanda

Rallentanda

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

La Musique de mes Grands Parents

 

 they moved forward

leaving war torn europe

 to a land of no olive oil

no wine

no garlic 

no family

no one


it was safe with good weather

no bosch hiding in the bushes

fresh air space and beautiful beaches

like being on holidays 

you did not have to be wealthy

to live near the sea back then



memories

of two sweet people

with their rimless specs

hunched over a newspaper

struggling

teaching themselves english


 they would not have passed the

current citizenship test

(i don't think I would pass it even now

would fail the sports section :)

and our family would not be here


so eventually we all came along

generation after generation

little aussies in the making

wearing akubras and r m williams boots

rejecting the old music and ways

not realising at the time that

even with our blue eyes

 fair skin and blonde hair 

(no one ever called us wogs)

we will always 

be different

feel different 

think different

 

our forefathers

never leave us

they whisper in our ears

sing lovely corny french songs to us

forever


 Weekly Scribblings #  92   PSU

Earthweal Open Link Weekend # 89



 


 



13 comments:

  1. Not a drop of French in me as far as I know, but I love Tino Rossi myself. Also Charles Trenet. And Edith Piaf. And Juliet Greco....

    I enjoyed this tender reminiscence. (And I probably wouldn't pass the sports section of the citizenship test myself.)

    ReplyDelete
  2. What a beautiful tribute to your ancestors.
    Is there really a sports section of the citizenship test? XD

    ReplyDelete
  3. This is lovely ~ especially the whispers in our ears.

    ReplyDelete
  4. A touching family history of changes through the generations, while still retaining some of the "old world" history.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Our roots do stay attached, even when their presence aren't evident on the leaves. Sometimes, that isn't the best thing. But when we make it so, it is the very best.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I like this, it brings memories. Mine came from England, Isle of Man, and Germany. Possibly a few others not in the male lines. We have a mysterious Smith lady who may have been in the Hapsburg line.
    Two other thoughts, my grandparents wore wire rimmed glasses, and that all of us have migrated ancestors except for those of us who remain with pure indigenous blood lines.
    ..

    ReplyDelete
  7. A tender immigrant song. Its so ironic that the earlier immigrants would judge the later one. Some thing happens here in the U.S. - Brendan

    ReplyDelete
  8. A lovely tribute. My father's maternal grandparents came from Lithuania. His grandfather was a lieutenant in the Czar's army. He and his brothers fled Russia with bullets being fired at them as they jumped on the boat.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Beautiful memories, words and music! What an adventure. It's strange enough being a Brit in Europe...

    ReplyDelete
  10. I love "our forefathers never leave us"....I can almost hear their whispers. This is a wonderful poem of remembering. I can see them, hunched over the newspaper.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Ancestors only whisper to those who can listen.

    ReplyDelete