Sunday, December 23, 2018

Scotland, Christmas and a Little Red Truck



     Oh my heck, the stuff I could tell you about my family. I might have mentioned some of it before. We have a rich, documented history. My father's side of the family (Owen-Owens) lived in the highlands of North Carolina and Georgia for several generations; since before the American Revolution (with the exception of one soldier who also eventually settled in North Carolina after the Revolution). My dad, the youngest, was raised in Detroit, but his siblings lived in the hills for a great deal of their childhoods. My ancestors knew how to read and write, so please, don't think they were ignorant. My people held positions such as postmaster that required one to be literate. People in Michigan always thought that I talked differently, but I thought I sounded fine, since I spoke like my father's family. We used a lot of what I later found out was considered Shakespearean language; words like “ya’ll”, “learnt” and “amongst”, or a request such as “go fetch that hen for me, she done escaped her coop again!”  

     My Aunt Lynn, born in 1919, adhered to the belief that a Stuart must hold the throne. She used to show me illustrations in books about Bonnie Prince Charlie. Mary, Queen of Scots was Lynn’s hero. She had a deep love for Scotland’s Queen Mary. Even into the 1970s my dad and family still hated "Tories" and I heard how those scoundrels hid in Canada after the war. Just tonight I was telling my husband and children some of my Owen Family traditions and how my uncle always wanted a little red truck for Christmas when he was a boy – but he never got one. The family story went on that my grandparents didn't go in for the holiday. In fact the aforementioned Aunt Lynn did not celebrate Christmas. Her husband and children gathered at Thanksgiving and had their big dinner and present exchange at that time. Life had moved on in Scotland and Ireland, but not for my father’s Appalachian family. His people were isolated. The region’s lore was very Scots-Irish, too, as were the songs. Even my German-born mother thought my dad's relatives were a little odd. That doesn't mean that they were screwy, but up until many families moved north for work or the men marched to Europe for the World Wars, entire communities lived in isolation. You don't know just how much the Outlander book series tugs at my heart. Call me crazy if you wish, and maybe there was my aunt's influence, but much of Scottish history was not taught in public school and I felt a little less informed because of that lack of instruction. (According to the history books, suddenly the Colonists wanted freedom from King George—it was spontaneous after all, wasn't it, in our way of thinking?) I learned later that the Revolution had been simmering all the way back to Scotland, a nation that resented the English kings and their desire to control all people from their own isle and beyond to other nations, creating an empire that up until recently, stretched to continents such as Australia, North America, Europe and Asia. When I read the Outlander stories, I felt like I was living them. I had dreams long before I’d even heard of Diana Gabaldon’s novels, long before I knew there were such books—things I could not know. I truly believe, that some of those memories were passed down, cellular memories you could say.  (I will post one particular eerie story in weeks to come.)

     Back to Christmas and the Scots, the people in that country did not celebrate the holiday until it became legal in the 1950s. The church in Scotland had outlawed any Yuletide celebrations for nearly four hundred years claiming them to be influenced by the Catholic Pope. Yes, the Scots believed in the birth of Christ, but Christmas as we know it in the United States for the last 150 odd years was not celebrated across “the Pond”. We here in America gradually took on several rituals brought over from Germany and crafted our own traditions around their lore. In the meantime, the Scots and Irish who had come to the USA in the mid to late 1700s still believed that ceremonies and feasts centered around trees were pagan and somehow distasteful.

     My father, uncles and aunts were not raised to observe Christmas. My own papa taught me to remember that Jesus was most likely born during the Holy land’s lambing season in April. He, being an atheist, believed in the history of Christ the man, not His claim to deity. Add to that, I’d heard that the good Christian people in the Blue Ridge and Smoky Mountains would not allow a tree in their homes let alone fancy decorations. My mother on the other hand was rich with tales from Germany. She and her sister Maria got hand-crafted dolls with dresses hand-sewn by my Oma (German for grandmother). My Opa (grandfather) used to melt down metal to make soldiers for my Uncle Heinz. Decades ago I was told the sad tale of how, as a child, all my Uncle Edward wanted was a little red truck. He’d begged and begged for one since the Owen family moved to Asheville in the late 1920s. Some of the city kids actually observed Christmas. Not my grandparents or their offspring. It just was not a part of their culture—and why should they participate, just because a few fancy people wanted to sing and dance around trees and boughs? I don’t believe my father and his brother Harold, who was closest to him in age, celebrated Christmas at all until after they’d moved to Detroit in the late 1930s. Harold died having only enjoyed one, possibly two, real Christmases.  Luckily my other uncles, Edward and Eugene, both married women who embraced the holiday and all its trappings.

     As a man nearing his forties, and as the father of his first and only child, Edward finally settled into Christmas with his wife Agnes. They battled dry trees, needles and sap on the carpet, and waded into the deep waters of parenthood. They bought my cousin Gregory presents, some of which I was lucky enough to get when he outgrew them. I got gifts from my parents, as well: dolls, jumping mechanical frogs and puppets. We ate sweets sent from Germany, too! These are memories I treasure.

     Recently I ran across a tiny red, metal truck. Right now it’s tucked beneath my little Christmas tree. Come spring, I want to take a trip out to the Michigan Memorial Cemetery south of Detroit. I’m going to take the little toy and put it on my uncle’s gravestone. Merry Christmas Uncle Edward.
Merry Christmas, to all of you.

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