Friday, October 10, 2025

Guest Author, Becky Van Vleet

 

This is a precious story, filled with courage and perseverance, and excellent mostly unknown (to me) history from Europe and the United States. Thank you, Becky, for sharing with us.

 


When I was quite young, I'd sit cross-legged on our living room floor while Grandma Alzbeta wove tales of her journey from Poland to America. Her words came wrapped in an accent I barely noticed at the time. It wasn't until high school, in my American history class, that I connected the dots. I had a significant piece of history right in my family, sitting at our kitchen table, while our family enjoyed my grandmother’s authentic dishes from the old country. I dropped my timidity and spoke up in class about my Slavic grandmother, sharing bits and pieces of her personal story to emigrate to our country by way of Ellis Island. 

It was in this class I discovered the brutal reality faced by immigrants who had gambled everything on America’s promises. Most traveled in steerage passage on vessels across the Atlantic Ocean enduring filth, disease, and inhumane practices. I asked my grandmother about this. Yes, she confirmed the treacherous journey, adding she was pushed down the gangplank and slammed against hundreds of steerage passengers like cattle. A mandatory tag with the number 215, marking her as cargo in a human shipment, was pinned to her chest.

Like so many others, she gave up her country, customs, family, and friends for a better life in America. A life of opportunity. After all, she’d heard America had streets paved with gold.

The hundreds of thousands of immigrants who came to America in the latter part of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century played a significant role in shaping the United States into the country it is today, building a bold new America. Between 1892 and 1954, more than twelve million immigrants arrived in the United States through Ellis Island. 

 

Each immigrant had their own unique story. Some came to escape intolerable poverty and starvation with very little productive farmland or steady jobs. Others sought freedom of religion and speech from oppressive governments. Some fled to escape massacres called pogroms in Russia in which minority groups were targeted. But what they all had in common was their desire to seek a new life in a strange but promising land. Their fortitude and determination to succeed triumphed.

 

My grandmother’s stories of coming to America took up a restful residence in my mind as a young girl. More than fifty years later, they awakened, prompting me to share them with others in my novel, Her Strength Within. My grandmother Alzbeta was a trailblazer, traveling alone on the SS La Touraine ship at the age of nineteen. She had no idea she was participating in our country’s history. Her inner strength prevailed against extraordinary obstacles.


 

Today, I still prepare stuffed cabbage rolls, borscht soup, and pierogis, using my dear grandmother’s original recipes. For a moment, I can hear her laugh, followed by aye yi yi yi yi! Her spirit lives on through my family.

 

Purchase link: http://bit.ly/3IwYmW1

Becky’s website: https://www.beckyvanvleet.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authorbeckyvanvleet/

Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/becky-van-vleet-ms-806055181/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/becky_van_vleet_author/

3 comments:

  1. I love that you have sooo many treasured family memories! What a gift! Thank you, Kathy, for hosting Becky today! God bless you both! :) (love, Erma)

    ReplyDelete
  2. I loved your story! You have a very interesting family history!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Becky, I'm so excited that you were able to bring the story of your grandmother's courage and strength to light in a book. This story will bless your readers. Kathy, thank you for hosting Becky today.

    ReplyDelete