Tag Archives: Italian family

2024 NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION

Photo by Djordje Vezilic on Pexels.com

A new year begins with hope and praise for new beginnings. New year’s resolutions? I still wonder what I shall be when I grow up. It becomes harder with age to grow up. Angela and Angelo who brought me into world, parented me through life, showing me the way to be better and stronger, have been dead many years. The aunts and uncles who shepherded me through trials and struggles are also gone from the sight of those of my family still alive. Even my older brother Angelo and several lovable cousins have died. Childhood friends, too, have accepted their mortality and left me behind. 

Who is left to help me grow up? To remind me how to behave myself, and direct my steps of exploration? Too few for one as strong-willed as I. I find myself more child-like and childish than ever. Perhaps I do it deliberately so that I may hear my Mother’s chiding tone in my head as she shares her exasperation over my antics,. Her words have taken up permanent residence in my brain. She comments on everything I do, still. It is a mystery to me, one I endure willingly, now.

I fought that constant harangue and meddlesome interference while she lived. All the older Italian women, family and friends, had no qualms about meddling in my life. I laugh now, at their efforts, with some stirring of guilt. It was a hopeless task, and I made certain they knew it as I laughed in their faces. Who is laughing now? I hope they are. I hope I can still make them smile. I only wanted to watch their determined faces break into smiles as they hit me with a rolled-up newspaper and shook their heads. Oh, yes, they operated as a gang. When my mother’s singular efforts seemed to get nowhere, she called in the troops. They would descend on my latest apartment, in the latest city I had moved to, to take the latest job. I was supposed to remain at home, or live next door with a husband, or at least within a few blocks of Mom. I never did. When I was about 35 years old she asked her sister, “ She is not coming home, is she?” Aunt Millie disclosed this to me long after Mom had died. Aunt Millie kept Mom with me all those years after her death. Now, Aunt Millie is also dead to this world. But, she and mom, and all those other Italian women who mothered me will always be alive in my head and my heart. One day, I will be grown up enough to join them. I dread that newspaper. My guess is they still keep it at-the-ready.

Dad lives in my head and heart, too; along with uncles, brothers and older male cousins who formed a protective barrier around me sight unseen. I seldom hear their words. What I hear is their laughter. I see their smiles and watch them quietly hand me a baseball, fishing pole, chocolate milk shake, deck of cards, rake, electrical tape, cement tool. And best of all, their grins. They stood behind the women who were intent on “setting me straight” with grins on their faces and laughter in their eyes. They redirected my thoughts from my transgressions, as I watched them with great delight. Probably,  they smiled and smirked because I had taken the focus of the women off their own antics, temporarily relieving them of the women’s attention. 

I felt more kinship with them. I wanted their freedom. The women were content to stay in their place. I wanted to go find my place, separate and apart. I wanted the right to control every choice. I did not want to “ask my husband” before I took a step. I wanted to go farther and wider than our insular neighborhood of people and ideas, which seemed enough to satisfy those I knew. I am still searching for that place. I seek a place where freedom of thought and affection expand rather than contract. Often, but not always, like E.T. and all travelers, I simply want to “go home.” So, I do.

I travel through memories tough and sweet back to the South side, just beyond the railroad tracks where Italian immigrant families had settled down. Eventually, most of the children of those families left the neighborhood, as did I. But, I truly still live there no matter my current address. There are no dead parents, no dead aunts and uncles, no dead cousins, no dead brother or dead friends there. All those I love still live there.

Aging brains do not become forgetful. Aging brains simply choose to remember all that once was alive, all those whom they loved. Aging brains hold memory alive with a strength no young brain can comprehend. We do it out of love, not loss. We have lost no ability to remember. We simply choose to remember what we chose to love.

So, here is my New Year’s resolution; I shall love all that is new, and all I can remember from what is old. I shall continue trying to grow up. I shall look for new paths, new journeys of discovery. I may appear to move more slowly than I did last year. I am carrying more baggage with me. I am carrying more of those who died and can no longer physically walk beside me. I love this journey. I am in no hurry to end it. However, I may have to take more stops along the way. The journey of life may seem slower when young. But, it is not. The young simply have fewer bags to carry. They only imagine they go faster, because they go lighter. I may be old now, but I feel light, too. Those whom I carry share their lightness of spirit with me. Someday, I shall become as light a spirit as they. 

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ANGELA’S DAUGHTER

Angela Abbruzzi Annarino, high school graduation photo

“So Long as we have food on our table, I won’t let anyone else go hungry!” answered Angela to her husband’s warning not to feed every man who came to her door.  It was soon after her husband, each of his three brothers and her five brothers returned from WWII that Angela began feeding the homeless who knocked on her door. Hobos, they were called, who had ridden the trains cross country, looking for work. Most had been soldiers, airmen, or sailors; now just trying to be useful, and survive an uncomfortable and confusing civilian life. At Angela’s door they were welcomed with a smile and hot food, and a sandwich and fruit in a brown lunch bag to take with them.  Before leaving they could be found cleaning out gutters, painting the garage door, pulling weeds from the curb crease. “They could be you,” Angela would remind her husband; “and, I hope someone would have fed you if you were hungry.” Angela did become curious as to why so many men came to her door rather than other doors on the street. One hobo showed her she had been marked as a “kind woman who will feed you” with a coded chalk mark on the curb in front of her house.

The homeless did not seem fearsome to her children, just visitors who enjoyed their Mother’s food like any other visitor to their home. No one was allowed to leave unless they had first had something to eat at Angela’s table. She would tell her children, “I remember what it was like to go to bed hungry. My brothers stole milk off porches to bring home to us. Sometimes that is all we would have to eat that day.” 

On her daughter’s 5th. birthday she took to the streets on her new Huffy bike with training wheels. A year later, the wheels were off, and she was free to ride the  neighborhood closely guarded by the Italian family and friends who lived among the now retreating German immigrants who had “moved up” into middle class neighborhoods. On every block were two or more Italian grandmothers sitting on the porch keeping tabs on the neighborhood children: Annarinos, Akes, Angelettis, DiBlasios, and Corsis vigilantly covered the south end. Angela’s daughter felt safe enough to ride to the river, drop her bike by the side of the dike and climb over it into the Tectum drywall dump where she and her brothers had built forts. 

Hobos sometimes slept in their forts. She loved the stories they shared with her, and she could be found sitting around their campfires as they swapped tales of glory and remorse. She also shared cans of beans heated in the flames, passed around the circle with a shared spoon. No one never knew about these afternoons with the hobos. Instinctively, she knew these men were misunderstood and needlessly feared. She did not even tell her Mother. Not because she was banned from talking to hobos; but, because she was banned from the river and the dump.

And still, the wandering soldiers and sailors return, too often feared; too often, ignored. Homeless, jobless, weary beyond all understanding by those of us who live in peaceful worlds with food on our tables. Angela would be ashamed of what she sees happening today. For today’s homeless include women and children, people forced out of their homes and jobs by the greed of investors seeking exceptional profits rather than expecting CEO’s to reinvest in companies, spend profits on research and development for long-term growth; unwilling to pay taxes to support local schools, build their own infrastructure and pay public employee salaries.  Corporate  boards buy off CEO’s of our corporations and universities with exorbitant salaries and bonuses; until they are forced to lay-off workers, increase tuition, reduce salaries-pensions-healthcare, ignore environmental and safety regulations, or relocate to foreign countries to make the profits ever higher to satisfy Wall Street’s greed.

Some things never change. It is not Wall Street’s greed which causes us to forget we are a community of people relying on each other for survival. It is our own greed and our own fear. It is our fear someone else will get more than we have. Our fear that sharing what we have will make another stronger. And our fear of “the other”, those who may be of a different race or nationality, have mental health issues, or simply difficulty coping, who just returned from repeated war zones, who have never had family security, who have been beaten and abused. We don’t fear them because they are “not like us”; we fear them because they are JUST like us. We fear that we could all too easily become one of “them”. And so we shun them, and try to forget they exist. We turn a deaf ear to their pleas and arrest anyone who would occupy Wall Street, or main street.

What would Angela tell us today? “Open your doors and feed everyone; make a seat at your table for anyone who needs you, not just for food, but for love.” I know she would say this. How do I know?  Because, I am Angela’s daughter.

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WOKE WITH A POKE

Louise,Angela,Angelo,Angelo,Jr.

By the age of two

chocolate was my favorite hue.

One day, I was firmly woke

by my mother’s forceful poke.

We were shopping 

in the lower level of the Five and Ten

when I saw the most lovely woman,

elegantly sleek with a stately mien.

I pulled my thumb out of my mouth

and stood in silent awe

at the first person of color I ever saw.

As soon as I spoke I felt the poke

and knew what I had said was wrong.

What had I said that made Mom move

to wake me up, and make me see

some new truth among the many

she tried to teach me?

I said with joy, so gleefully,

“Mommy, look at the chocolate lady!”

Mom’s horrified look 

was accompanied by the poke.

“Shush,” Mom said, “we do not comment

on how others look.”

The lady grinned, 

then opened her smile to take us in.

She said to my Mother, “Your little girl is fine.

I assume she loves chocolate as much as I.”

The two women laughed and shared a smile

that brought out their beauty, in eyes that shined

with love and joy in the innocence

of a child who thought chocolate ladies

are oh, so deliciously fine.

I asked the lady, “Why are you a different color?”

Then, Mom said, “God made people of many hues,

sizes, and shapes to make the world more fun for you.

We would all be so bored if we were the same.

Like the bigger box of crayons of sixty-four hues

you keep asking me to buy for you, 

God made each one of us different

so we could enjoy life so much more.”

Then the two ladies said, “So very nice to meet you.”

That day I came home with a box of sixty-four

crayons and wisdom, and so much more.

I was woke with a poke 

and found a new and bigger world to explore.

At seventy-three it still holds true

that I love chocolate, and diversity, too;

in the paints near the easel, the neighbors nearby,

the books on the shelf, and the places I fly.

The world awakens with pokes to keep us awoke

so life’s many wondrous possibilities do not pass us by.

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MOM AND DAD’S KITCHENS

Louise Annarino

November 20,2021

My mother’s kitchen was a restaurant.No visitor to our home left unfed. My father and his brothers actually opened a restaurant when they returned from military service following WWII. All my life I dreamed of opening a restaurant. I dreamed so last night. Really, what I dream of, is being back in my parents’ kitchens.

In Mom’s kitchen all was fragrant, warm and comforting. That tiny ten by ten foot space held a universe of possibilities. Packed  in were a double-oven stove, refrigerator,  sink, washer and dryer, and a round table with six chairs. The only way to reach the pantry was to climb above the washer and dryer. Working side by side in this cheerfully yellow painted space required a dance of consideration and subtlety, agility, and a sense of humor. It was not the single window above the sink which lit up this room; but, the love of creating sustenance for all who entered.

The kitchen was also our ballroom. Mom and I sang duets while listening to top hits on the radio, or sang Neapolitan love songs at the top of our lungs. In this space Mom taught me to dance the Mambo Italiano, Cha Cha, Charleston, Lindy Hop, Jitterbug, Polka, Fox Trot, Waltz and swing a dishtowel through the Tarantella. This meant pushing the table against the wall, moving out chairs, and putting aside our work for a few moments of sheer joy. Even so, bumping into things was inevitable and added to the laughter. The aroma of food nearing the end of cooking/baking time often saved the day.

The kitchen was also our parlor, where every guest was ushered past the living and dining rooms, and seated at the kitchen table. Immediately the coffee began to perk and whatever was in the oven or on the stove was soon shared. “No one leaves until they eat” was Mom’s sacred rule. New visitors soon learned that Mom meant what she said, and left sated.

In our home children could be “seen but not heard,”when adult guests were present. I learned of the larger world through conversations overheard at my Mother’s table. Freed to simply listen, and not add my “two cents”, taught me the invaluable lesson that truly listening to others is a great gift to the speaker and to the listener.  Listening is gold. Sharing food and drink is platinum. 

I also explored the larger war listening in on Dad’s kitchen table conversations. My father and his war buddies freely discussed their experiences as soldiers and sailors, the politics of war, the necessity of peace, the uselessness and danger of weapons in the home. I watched silently as they passed around Samurai swords, German Lugers and beer steins, and other artifacts bearing stories which would have remained hidden if my presence had been noted by my chatter. I learned to stay silent, openminded, and sensitive to the nuances of honest communication. After, Dad would talk with me to help me interpret what I had heard. As long as I stayed silent, I was never ushered out of the room. I learned that rules to control my behavior were not meant to deny my personal freedoms, inhibit my creative expression, nor demand too much of a child. Those rules were in place out of respect to the adults, and to me; to teach me to think as an adult, and to learn how to respect others. 

When the women gathered, they too respected me enough to expect my respectful silence. Nothing was off the table when they spoke English. However, they sometimes used Italian if they wanted to keep some juicy tidbit from me. That did not actually work as they had planned because I soon picked up enough Italian to understand most of what they discussed. Of course, since I had to keep silent, I never gave away my ability to understand spoken Italian. This came in handy in public spaces when Mom and my aunts and cousins would comment on people around us without anyone knowing what they were saying. It was a useful tool on many occasions. it taught me the need for discretion when in public, in a way no lecture would have taught such a lesson.

Every Saturday night, the cousins who lived in our neighborhood spent the night at our house. in the afternoon, Mom simmered suga and meatballs in a massive restaurant pot, while kneading dough for pizza, bread and pizzafritta. The aromatic blend of oregano, garlic and basil in tomato sauce permeated the neighborhood. The aroma brought Niki, our dog to the foot of the stove, awaiting his meatballs. He had permanently stained orange whiskers and a love-hate relationship with Mom. Mom would make hundreds of ravioli at a time, freezing them for later use. She needed every surface in the house to dry the fresh pasta filled with cheese, spinach or meat; including the kitchen and dining room tables, washer and dryer, and even her bed…each surface covered with layers of clean, white sheets dusted with flour. Once, after distributing the ravioli throughout the house to dry, she forgot to close the bedroom door before leaving the house on an errand. Niki took advantage of the opportunity to reach the ravioli. He usually greeted us as soon as the door opened upon our return. That day, he was nowhere to be found as we searched the  house. Mom noticed a double row of missing ravioli on the three sides of the bed he could reach. A moan from beneath the bed, then Mom’s curses, told the tale. Niki hid under that bed for two days, afraid to come out and face Mom’s wrath. She still continued to give him his meatballs every Saturday. She never could hold a grudge. A trait which served her four rambunctious children well.

The mouth-watering aroma also attracted our cousins and friends to our kitchen. That aroma speaks “home” to me to this day. In my many moves to new living quarters, the first thing I cook is suga and meatballs. The wafting aroma from  my new kitchen tells me, “You are finally home.” We kids would hang about, playing cards at the kitchen table, until Mom sliced the fresh bread which we dipped in sauce as we ate our meatballs. 

Some of the dough would be used Sunday morning for pizzafritta, fry-bread Italian style. The dough would be stretched into small rounds, dropped in hot oil, then pricked with a fork. Just when golden brown, Mom removed the fried dough from the pan and dropped it into a brown bag containing sugar; and shook it until the pizzafritta was covered in warm sweetness. She always did a separate bag with both cinnamon and sugar for me. 

Later in the evening Mom stretched out dough for pizzas. After a prolonged argument with our friends and cousins, we  would  add the toppings we decided upon before Mom popped them into the hot oven. Laughing, teasing, and arguing, just for the fun of it, kept us busy until the satisfied moans of eating those pizzas made music around the table. Later, we put on our pajamas and settled into the living room to watch TV until Nightmare Theatre came on. By then, we were hungry again.But, Mom’s restaurant was closed for the night. That is when we called Dad at his restaurant.

One of us played waitress and took down each kid’s order: cheeseburger (BodyBuilders at Dad’s restaurant), french fries (fresh cut), onion rings, fried mushrooms, chocolate milk shakes, Coca-Colas. Since Dad was working hard on a Saturday night he would send our food to us in a cab, exchanging the delivery cost for the cost of the order he was serving to the cab driver sitting at the bar. To say we were spoiled is to put it mildly. No restaurant could ever match the food served by my Dad, or by my Mom. 

Every Sunday and holiday, our kitchen became a party house. We always had guests for the noon meal, most of whom remained for left-overs later in the day. It was usually an all-day event. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins and friends of my parents gathered around the extended dining room table; kids around the kitchen table. Kids were allowed to talk  in the kitchen! So, it was the best seating in the house.The kitchen was our freedom space. We could laugh and joke around. My oldest brother Angelo thought it great fun to make someone laugh so hard he spewed his…or her… drink out his nose. 

While Mom hosted the adults in the dining room, my job was to cut up food for the babies and toddlers at the kitchen table, and serve the other kids at the kitchen table. I was also the runner meeting requests from the dining room. Mom  taught me the joy of serving others in a joint enterprise, and the strength developed by belonging to a team. 

Even the clean-up taught team-work. The men scrubbed the heavy pots and pans. The kids removed small items to the proper place, the women washed, dried and put away the delicate plates and cutlery. As we all worked together the adults talked, and not about the weather. When the conversation really delved deep, the work stopped until that conversational thread had been fully explored. Clean-up took hours. And, then, we made more work for ourselves by serving coffee and dessert. The other kids who had disappeared suddenly resurfaced. The talking continued. Kids disappeared. The clean-up began anew. 

I never opened my dream restaurant-bakery-tea room. I guess I never really expected to do so. Some dreams are meant for other purposes. I had seen how much devotion and sacrifice a restaurant requires. “Annarino Bros.Center Cafe’s” tilting sign hung over the alley-wide restaurant just off the square in Newark,Ohio. Returning to their hometown following their service in WWII, the four Annarino brothers could not find work, like many Italian-Americans and African-Americans, despite their service to their country. They positioned trestles across an alley between two downtown buildings, strung rope from which to hang items across the alleyway, and began cooking using outdoor grills. 

As soon as they had enough money they added a roof and floor. Eventually, they completed the interior and had a restaurant an entire block long and alley-width wide. In the rear was the dishwashing and food prep area, a butcher shop, a walk-in refrigerator, a walk-in freezer. A partial loft over-head became the storage area. in the front was a very long narrow room with a bar its full length to the right, and booths on the left. In the from corner was a wine shop. The red vinyl covered barstools made great spinning games possible for kids who delighted in swiveling nervous energy while waiting for their Dad. In between were two dining rooms, separated by a folding accordion wall which could be pulled aside for larger gatherings.

We always knew how to find Dad. He was always available at the Center Cafe. He may not have made every dance recital or ball game but he was always there for us. We were sometimes relegated to sit quietly in an empty booth until he had a break in serving the needs of customers. We watched the world go by from that booth. Politicians, judges, lawyers and CEOs hung out there. They usually sat in booths. Working men on their way home from the factories usually sat at the bar. The interplay between these groups was fascinating to watch. I learned how power-plays work by observing these men. 

As dinner hour approached the customer base shifted to families with children. Every child was warned by my dad or an uncle to eat all their dinner if they wanted some bubble gum, freely handed out as the family headed out the door after dinner. The dining rooms were a place of fascination. One table might be politicians discussing legislative strategy, another table a family discussing in-law strategy. The dining room at the restaurant was no different than the one in my house. Life was discussed, problems unearthed, strategies discussed and solutions found. At my parents’ tables there was always a solution. The world’s inhabitants were one big family. My parents made them each diner a member of our family.

We saw my Dad, my uncles, my grandfather and my cousins every day. The restaurant door was open to us, and it was a short walk uptown. Any request of my Mom for a special treat or rights to undertake an unusual endeavor resulted in the reply, “Go ask your father first and let me know what he says.” This is often the penultimate delay tactic in most families. But, we lived only a few blocks from the downtown and this was easily done. We simply walked to the restaurant, sometimes several times before we had convinced each parent of our wisdom. 

As Dad considered our requests, we were put to work running errands to get more chops from the refrigerator, clear a table, push the dish cart to the dish washer, load and wash dishes, peel potatoes, climb to the storage area and get more pasta, slice pies coming out of the oven in the back. 

The grill work was done up front, behind the bar. Pots of suga, soups or stew simmered on the range behind the bar. Steaks  sizzled on the broiler behind the bar. Mushrooms and potatoes crisped in fryers behind the bar. The ovens were in the back. This block-long restaurant wore out our dad’s uncles’ legs. 

Kids became the runners whenever we showed up. We might be sent to the store to fetch products which had run low with unexpectedly high demand. We would accompany Dad to the bank with a deposit. We would talk with the fathers of our school chums, facing an inquisition regarding their son’s or daughter’s behavior at school. This taught us loyalty. In the meantime Dad would come up with a solution he and Mom could live with. By then, we were too tired out to argue much. I think I know now why Dad always had a grin on his face when we showed up. 

When we had a serious concern, we simply waited in the “family” booth until Dad had time to hear what was on our mind and offer his wise counsel and firm support. And our uncles, and sometimes waitresses passing by the booth, offered suggestions. Then Dad would make a joke to ease our worries and we would both grin.

Sitting at the bar was an education. The entire town seemed to sit at that bar. Customers spoke with us about their factory job, their wives and children, the latest political upheaval, the new construction in town, the new teacher, doctor, insurance agent, priest, minister, rabbi in town. I guess they thought a kid sitting at a bar could take it. Of course those sitting at the bar had had a drink to loosen their tongues. Bar-tenders…and their kids…hear everything. 

Sitting behind the bar on Great-uncle George’s stool was even more lucrative. I sold thousands of candy bars for school fund-raising efforts from that stool. Dad counseled me to count the drinks each man drank; and to not try to sell my candy bar or raffle ticket until the customer was on his second drink. Later, as they settled their bill I would always suggest they take a candy bar home for their kids. It worked like a charm. And I have the St. Joseph statue awarded for top sales to prove it.

We learned to be entrepreneurs from Mom and Dad’s kitchens. Home from school one day I was sitting at the table as Mom looked through recipes  deciding what we would cook that day. I saw a recipe for rum fondant. Soon I had created fruit shaped candy, painted with food coloring and placed in one of mom’s milk-glass candy dishes atop left-over Easter grass. 

Dad saw my production when he came home from the restaurant after midnight, and took it tback work before I had arisen the next morning. 

When I came  home from school that day, Mom showed me the 32 orders Dad had taken for a bowl of rum fondant fruit at $3.50 per bowl. Every day for months I rolled and painted fruit for candy bowls. By summer I had collected over $2,000 which I used to take our entire family to the World’s Fair in NYC for a week. It was dream come true. The entire world, not just Newark Ohio, came through our door thanks to Mom and Dad’s kitchens. An open door works both ways. I miss those kitchens.

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