Posted on 09/04/2017 8:05:20 PM PDT by TBP
On this Labor Day my thoughts are with a laborer I wish I had taken the time to know better:
For much of my life, I carried an extra letter with me. It was a d. My name was Patrick Sajdak, S-a-j-d-a-k. It was pronounced as it is today (SAY-JACK), but that silent letter baffled teachers. They inevitably struggled with my name, and my fellow students enjoyed teasing me with the results of those struggles. The pronunciation difficulties followed me through school, the Army and into my adult years. I hated that d.
When I began to work in television, I dropped itunofficially, at leastand viewers were introduced to Pat S-a-j-a-k. Even though the offending letter remained on my drivers license and credit cards, my TV audience only saw the newer, sleeker version of my name. And, when I was about to marry in the late 80s, I felt it was time to take the legal steps to finally rid myself of that d forever. My wife and my children would never have to deal with it. It was gone for good, and I almost never thought about it.
Then about a year ago, a viewer whose business is genealogy was doing some research for a Polish client when he ran across my name and its old spelling. For some reason, he remembered reading about that d in an interview, and he took it upon himself to put together a family tree that stretched back into the 1600s. He sent the information to me (along with photostatic copies of documents relating to marriages, births, deaths and immigration) explaining that he wanted to thank me for years of viewing pleasure. Of course, I wrote to thank him for the very kind thing he had done, but the documents, while interesting, were soon placed in a drawer and largely forgotten.
Recently, however, an opportunity arose for me to travel to Warsaw to help launch a Polish version of Wheel of Fortune called Kolo Fortuny, and I remembered the papers. This time, I looked at them more carefully. It turned out that my fathers father was born in a small town called Laskowa (La-SKOH-va) in southern Poland, as were previous generations dating back at least 400 years. Not only that, but my grandfather, his father, and his fathers father had all been born in the same house, designated as House #108. Wouldnt it be interesting to find that house, I thought. And so it was off to Poland to spin a wheel and, if time permitted, to search for my paternal grandfathers birthplace.
I wasnt particularly close to Jozef Sajdak (or Joseph, as he had become in America). My grandfather was a stern man who had been a laborer all his life, had lost a leg to disease, and whose son (my father) was an alcoholic and abusive husband. There was a divorce (much less common in the 50s) and, inevitably, its attendant unpleasantness. The result was that visits to my grandparents and my father (who had moved in with them) became experiences I didnt always look forward to.
When my father died in 1961, I pretty much lost contact with my grandparents. In fact, when Grandpa Joe died less than three years later, I didnt find out about it for several weeks. Even as I grew older, I never developed an interest in exploring my familys history. Still, there I was, just three days ago, on a train from Warsaw to Krakow, where I was to be met by an interpreter and driven for about an hour to the small village of Laskowa.
The first thing I discovered upon my arrival was that Sajdak was a very common name in those parts. (The Poles pronounce it SIGH-DOCK.) You couldnt toss a pierogi without hitting a Sajdak. But the commonness of the name made the search more difficult. Grandpa Joe had left for America in 1920, so there was no one there with any memory of him, and no one seemed to have any idea where to find House #108. For all they knew, it was long since gone. The people of Laskowa could not have been more willing to help, and I was sent from one person to another in search of clues, but nothing from personal memories to church records was providing the answer.
Happy, at least, to have seen the family village, I was ready to give up and head back, when we ran into an elderly man who seemed to remember some old houses in the hills outside of town. So up a small winding gravel road we went. After several wrong turns by the driver and shrugged shoulders by the locals, there it was. House #108. Still not positive, we knocked on the door of another small home just up the path. The owners knew all about the Sajdaks, and their oral history perfectly matched the genealogical records I had brought along. It was, indeed, the house we were looking for.
I didnt expect to be moved by the discovery, but I was, and deeply so. I thought about Jozef and his brothers and sisters living and working and playing on the land. I thought about how difficult life was in post-WWI Poland. And, for the first time, I realized how indebted I am to this man who left the land of his birth to come to America. His life in his adopted country was hard, too. But three generations later, my childrenhis great-grandchildrenare enjoying the blessings of America thanks to a man who was born and raised in House #108 in Laskowa, Poland.
I wish I had gotten to know him better. I wish I had made an effort to get past his sternness. I wish I had talked to him about the town that I was gazing down on and the home in front of which I stood. But I realized at that moment that I had reclaimed the d. Its not on my drivers license or credit cards, but it is in my heart, where it has always belonged.
Thank you, Grandpa Joe.
genealogy bump
I like Pat Sajak . D or no d.
Absolute bookmark.
Neat guy. He is a Viet Nam era vet who down plays his service. Yes, he was a disc jockey for armed forces radio, but unlike so many, he served.
VERY NICE!
Mr. Sajak’s family came from an area of Poland that was ruled by Austria during WWI and before.
I wonder if he had been from a village that was under control of Russia and the cyrillic alphabet, it would look different when it was translated into latin letters.
Thanks so much for posting.
Leni
Great story. Wish I could know more about my father’s side of the family, not from Poland, but in that corner of Europe.
Sorry, I have to disavow Pat Sajak because his father was an abusive alcoholic, and of course white, hence inevitably racist. /sarc
“Zero-tolerance history”
Nice
Interesting story. He seems to be a thoroughly nice guy.
Hey, thanks for posting that. I enjoyed it so much!
Hey, thanks for posting that. I enjoyed it so much!
A thoroughly nice guy and a conservative. He’s written several articles for Hillsdale College’s publication “Imprimus”. A wise man too - years ago he moved his family to the East Coast so his kids wouldn’t grow up in Hollywood.
Thanks for that post - it really touched my heartstrings.
I wish I had a chance to tell Pat there really is at least one advantage to having an unpronounceable Polish name with a bunch of silent letters: you always know when it’s a telemarketer on the phone. Although I guess if you’re Pat Sajak, you may not have to worry about telemarketers that much.
Thanks for the best overnight/early a.m. reading I’ve seen today. Pat Sajak tells his unique story yet it’s not hard to imagine that there are millions of parallel stories from that era of European immigration to the US. All of the endings may not match the fame and fortune of a TV personality but Pat’s story illustrates well that essentially all benefitted greatly from one heroic act of that faraway family member who left to find freedom. The “d” was lost along the way yet so much more was added, due to freedom.
Great story! Pat grew up in the same neighborhood I am from on the East Side of Chicago. He is just a few years older than me.
Nice to hear of someone from the area! I’ve actually had to argue with Chicagoans (!!!) that an east side to the City even
exists....
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