The Nazi
In the mid-1980s, Jorge
was working for a newspaper in Saginaw, in central Michigan, when he
was invited by a worker in the mail room to play in the modified
softball team a few friends had formed to enter in the city league.
Although he didn’t
usually socialize with Mike or the others, Jorge liked to play
baseball, having played fast pitch with the Chippewas of a nearby
reservation. Before that, he used to play in grade school in South
Texas. He figured it couldn’t be much more difficult to hit the
slower ball than it was to hit a fast pitch hurled much faster by
someone winding up and letting it fly. He agreed to join and Mike
signed him up on his roster.
“It’ll be a lot of
fun,” said Mike. “We have a few of guys who played for the local
community college playing with us. A couple of them are pretty good.”
Mike Patello was something
of a sea lawyer, which made him perfect as the manager for the team.
His father and brother also played for the team. The older Patello
played first base passably, since bunting was not allowed in modified
softball in that city league. Sometimes, when Mike’s aim was off,
the older man would try his hand at pitching. Like Mike, everyone
knew him simply as “Dad.”
Mike’s brother Don
played second base. Although he was not a great athlete, he liked to
make all the moves, holding up his hand to stop play as he dug a hole
with the toe of his left baseball shoe – his personal ritual when
he came to bat.
“Need some hits, Don,”
someone on the bench would shut.
“Get a piece of it,”
said another.
The team was fairly
representative of the population in Saginaw. Besides the Patellos,
Mike Schwab, one of the college students, played shortstop. Rick
Oberman, the catcher was an office worker. Joe Haas, an auto worker,
played left field. Bob Lewis, another student, was in center and
Michael Rucker, a dispatcher with the local sheriff’s department,
filled out the roster at right field.
The first inhabitants of
the Thumb area of Michigan were Native Americans, mostly Chippewas.
It was later populated by farmers and loggers from western Europe and
even some Lithuanians and Greeks. Later, a massive immigration from
the south by Blacks attracted by jobs in the General Motors foundries
was joined by Hispanics attracted by jobs in the sugar-beet fields
and fruit harvesting. Over time, many stayed and made Saginaw their
home. As the biggest city in the region, it was a natural magnet for
all these groups.
These groups had lived in
a somewhat uneasy coexistence. The Saginaw River was the unspoken
divide between the groups, with the latest arrivals – the majority
of Blacks and Hispanics living on its east side. Except for a handful
of professionals, gentrification had not taken a firm root in the
original inner city on the river’s east bank.
A local pub sponsored the
softball team, and after each game the team would gather at the
sports bar to celebrate or commiserate, as the case might be on that
particular evening. While the bar sponsored the team with jerseys
bearing its name, the management did not give them any discounts on
the beer. Pitchers were $7 each, and few of the players could afford
to buy more than two before they reached their financial limit. The
team usually stayed around for about an hour, which took everyone
home at a decent hour.
It was during one of these
gatherings, while the players team recounted their performances in a
rare victory over a more powerful team while belting down some suds,
that Jorge met his first Nazi.
Don had retold the story
of getting a run-scoring hit for about the fourth time when Albert
Scheck showed up. In his tan tailored suit, Italian shoes, blond hair
and blue eyes, he cut an attractive figure. His entrance stopped Don
in mid-swing and Jorge could see that Don and his dad admired Scheck,
or had known about him.
“Hi Al,” said the
older Patello, holding out his hand over the tables the group had
strung together to sit the entire team. Don, too, walked toward the
good-looking, obviously wealthy man smiling and extending his hand.
“Al is a millionaire,”
Haas told Jorge. “His father left him an insurance company in
town.”
After glad-handing his way
around the table, Albert called over the bar tender and ordered five
pitchers for the team. Money, apparently, was no object for this man.
The sudden outlay of brews produced an instant uplifting of the
team’s spirits, and the talk flowed. Soon another round of pitchers
followed and more kept coming.
The bar had several
sections where patrons could toss darts (a favorite sport in
Saginaw), pinball, or shoot pool and play fooseball. Television
screens were placed on every wall with different channels featuring
different sports. Baseball, usually the Detroit Tigers if they were
playing, was a customary choice. But recorded hockey, boxing, or
basketball games also filled the screens.
Jorge was sitting in front
of one monitor which suddenly broke in with a news bulletin.
“Israeli jets bombed
southern Lebanon today...” droned the announcer as an Israeli jet
was seen screaming across the sky firing missiles at an unseen
target. The next shot showed survivors of the attack – poor Arabs
in some dusty little village – digging bodies out of the rubble.
The bulletin barely made
an audible dent in the din of the conversation, now thoroughly
lubricated by Scheck’s pitchers, which seemed to flow interminably.
In fact, it was Scheck who
was the only one who made any comment at all about the news flash.
“If they had let Hitler
finish the job, we wouldn’t be having those problems,” he said.
Jorge turned away from the
screen and looked around. No one seemed to have heard the comment,
and if they did, they didn’t give any indication they had. The
merriment continued unabated.
In his mind, Jorge debated
whether he should say anything about Scheck’s surprising comment.
Surely the elder Patello, who had served in the Army in World War II,
would not agree with it, he thought. And what about Lewis and
Obermann? Surely, if they had any part Jewish, they would have
protested. Hesitantly, he rose from the row of tables and joined a
few of the others at the dart section.
“That was nice of Al to
get all those pitchers,” said Don. “He’s a hell of a nice guy."
“Yeah,” Jorge said. “I
guess he is at that.”
Don was not a very good
dart player, but the idea was not so much to finesse his game but to
kill time. He and Mike stumbled through the game and started another
when Jorge grew bored and wandered back to his seat almost directly
across from Scheck.
“Thanks for the brews,
man,” Jorge told him as he sat at the table.
“Don’t mention it,”
Scheck replied. “I hear you play third base.”
“Yeah, I do,” Jorge
said. “It’s a little slower than fast pitch, but the ball gets
hit just as hard as it in fast...”
As he replied, his comment
was cut short by the announcer’s voice and the roar of Israeli jets
on the screen behind him.
“There was more
confrontation in the Middle East today as Israel launched bombing
runs in Southern Lebanon in retaliation for guerrilla incursions by
the Hezbollah...” blared the announcer as more shots of jets and
destroyed adobe villages filled the screen.
“They should have let
Germany get done with that little problem,” said Scheck again.
This time Jorge could not
restrain himself.
“Wait a minute,” he
told Scheck. “What are you trying to say? Are you a Nazi?”
“Yeah, I am,” replied
Scheck blandly, with an easy smile on his handsome face.
Taken aback, it took Jorge
but a moment to regain his thoughts and confront the smiling Nazi.
“You mean to tell me
that you think I’m inferior to you? That you’re a superior race?”
“Well, all the research
shows that the people living in the northern hemispheres are more
industrious than those who live in the southern hemispheres,” said
Scheck smoothly. “You can’t argue with research.”
“Here’s your beer,”
Jorge replied, sliding his glass across the table at Scheck as the
rest of his teammates looked on at the confrontation. The
conversation had died down as other patrons at the bar listened on.
“Do you know who kicked
your superior ass during both world wars?,” Jorge asked the smiling
Scheck as he leaned slowly across the table from Scheck.
“No,” Jorge cut him
off. “It wasn’t just the United States who kicked you superior
race’s ass. It was Hungarian-Americans, Italian- Americans,
German-Americans, African-Americans, even Jewish Americans. It was
his uncle, his brother, his father, who kicked your superior race’s
ass,” he said pointing at the others. “It was mongrel Americans
that did it.”
Jorge’s outburst had an
appreciable impact on the patrons at the bar and on the four tables
filled with his teammates. Suddenly, they had a stake in the outcome,
too.
On the defensive now,
Scheck now spoke to Jorge in a friendly tone.
“You know what? I like
you. How much do they pay you at the News? I’ll double it if you
come work for me,” he said.
“Or how about one of
these,” he asked, and pulled a rolled marijuana cigarette from
behind his ear and showing it to Jorge.
“No thanks,” Jorge
replied. “I wouldn’t work for you for a million dollars. And I
don’t smoke.”
An uneasy silence followed
and was broken only when Kirk Gibson slammed a double to deep center
and the bar erupted into hollers and clapping.
“How about them Tigers?”
said Haas next to him.
“Yeah,” said Jorge.
“How about them Tigers?”
4 comments:
Oye Montoya, GayBob just received his most recent check from Ernie and he is attacking Alex Dominguez and he is using the Veterans as excuse, well, please read one of his posts from the past! It's a shame GayBob, a shame!! you do have a price!!
Thursday, June 3, 2010
CONTINUING WITH THE PEÑA/HERNANDEZ ELECTION CONTEST
blah blah..
After trial yesterday in the election contest - people were hanging out around the elevator. Rendon was pushing his candidacy. As the elevator doors open Rendon looks to Erin Garcia (daughter/lawyer of Ernie Hernandez) an says’ “make sure you get out the vote for me.” Erin responds “we always get out the vote in large numbers.” After watching this trial only the sickest and most dishonest minds would have asked Erin Hernandez Garcia for help with their election.
From the beginning my gut feeling about Rendon has been, he is a Breedlove replacement - a plant by Garcia. People he said he wants to continue with the construction. This means using the bond money being paid for with local tax dollars. How is this not Garcia and Breedlove?
Finally a word on Erin Garcia, Ernie Hernandez’s equally evil twin - I do not lie I had to take a second look to realize it was his daughter and not him.
During closing argument Peña noted that Monday was Memorial Day and that veterans died defending our right to vote. Erin was smirking at the argument. I did everything I could to contain myself. Erin, you need to sue your parents for raising you to be worse than the scum of the earth. You are a disgrace as a human being. You might consider therapy to try and learn how you became the person you are. Tens of thousands of Americans have not died in service to this country so you can make light of the fact they died defending our fragile democracy. I guess you learned that from your parents.
Nazi is a term thrown about in a careless fashion to describe anyone with racial superior bent their thinking. In fact, Nazi was a political party long extinct in Germany.
Racism is nasty stuff no matter who is one the receiving end. These days and times the few remaining "anglos" in Brownsville are on the receiving end of intense racism.
The local population seems to think this is OK and some sort of payback for something that might have been done to their ancestors by perhaps on of Anglo's ancestors. They think it is OK to try and drive them out of "their land".
There are no true Nazis anymore, but their are many people with Nazi attitudes and thinking. Se abundan mucho por aca.
Did the "niggas" even know who that was? I'm sure they (actually) were referring to someone they knew in the ghetto. Probably a bar tender or cannabis supplier.
Whartek
who cares what boob thinks. who gives a flying fuck about a disbarred attorney's "legal" opinion LOL
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