Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Thanks Be to Tom

I just handed in this final essay to my elderly teacher with a virtually nonexistent sense of humor. My grade rides on this. Wish me luck! 

          I visited Ellis Island for the first time on a warm Saturday in March. The sun was shining, the birds were chirping, and the smog was seeping into my car’s ventilation system as I sat in traffic on the New Jersey Turnpike. With a faulty GPS in tow, I set out, accompanied by friend and classmate, Brooke Girard, to visit the prestigious checkpoint in our respective family histories. Sugar-Free Redbulls in our hands and hopes in our hearts, we set out on a factory-lined path towards self-discovery.
            After having missed three consecutive exits, we tired of hearing my GPS’s voice – that of a mechanized British woman I like to call Sally – and decided to wing it with the directions. Following signs for Liberty State Park, we somehow ended up here:



With no ferries in sight, we pondered the correctness of our location while staring at the majestic Hudson River and the Statue of Liberty’s backside. Ten minutes and three mosquito bites later, we realized that we were nowhere near where we needed to be. I approached a seemly looking woman on a park bench to ask for directions. She responded, “no hablo ingles”. We were screwed. Quickly dissuaded and visibly disillusioned, we were almost instantly ready to pack up, hop in my Mazda, and throw in the towel on the entire experience. With one last look at Lady Liberty’s butt, it dawned on us: if it weren’t for our forefathers, Thomas Masterson in 1850 and Carl Girard in 1856, we wouldn’t even have the privilege of shirking our American pride and driving home to watch Jersey Shore in an imported Japanese SUV. We owed it to our impossibly brave, inimitably selfless relatives to take a first-hand look at what had brought us here: a little island I like to call “Ellie”.
A short while later, we arrived at the correct port of Liberty State Park. In the distance, we saw the ferry, filled to the brim with patriotic Americans and non-Americans alike, who had come to see the sight out of the goodness of their hearts, rather than the wagering of their final grade in American Civilization II. As we approached the ferry, we heard the solemn “TOOT, TOOT” of the engine, as it prepared to pull out and begin its venture to Ellis Island. We sprinted past the New Jersey 9/11 memorial and the Liberty State Park Railroad station, limbs flailing as we attempted to board the ferry before it departed. Just short of the chain-linked gates, a policeman halted our embarrassing display of hurried desperation and told us we’d need to buy tickets and pass through security before we could approach an American landmark. Who would’ve guessed? Certainly not us. We bought our tickets, and looked around the lobby while waiting for security. There was an interesting display highlighting cool facts about Alcatraz, and many tourists wearing dumb foam hats which mimicked the Statue of Liberty’s crown. I bought one, then we successfully passed through security after setting off the metal detectors three times. The guards were not amused.
We went outside, reunited with the policeman (we never learned his name, but he looked like a Rick), and waited to board. We chatted with a few people in line, and a low-flying bird almost hit me in the face. Brooke accidentally littered at a national monument as a gust of wind pulled the plastic bag from Wawa out of her hands and into the Hudson. Rick chastised us, but ultimately said it was okay. We were off to a great start!
We were the first ones on the ferry, and sat outside in the midday sun on the top deck. We admired the view of the New York City skyline as a troupe of Spanish-speaking children cried and ate apples. Or, as they would call them, manzanas. A short while later, we arrived, and took this glorious picture which I will cherish forever:
We attempted to look up the origin of our relatives’ respective journeys, but were told that the center to do so had been closed. We were given pamphlets with information, and a website in which we could look up the information by ourselves at home. How cool! I vowed to do it as soon as I got home. I then lost the pamphlet.
We perused the museum downstairs, and read a ton of information about immigration statistics and cultural norms that were shed, and born, in the very lobby in which we stood. Having just learned about immigration in class three days earlier, the visit to the museum reinforced all of the information, and added even more substance to the material. As we walked, we discussed the logistics of the journey westward, and expressed our gratitude for having been so lucky to have had the brave relatives who secured our way of life and its liberties. We took a few photos with the exhibits about what we had discussed in class, forced removal (push and pull factors):
as well as negative reactions to immigration:
            Brooke and I discussed the universality of the struggle to become an American. No matter where immigrants were from - mine from Ireland, hers from Armenia – they all had the same fears, worries, and hopes during their treacherous journey to Ellis Island. Looking around at the other people in the museum – people of all different races, religions, ethnicities, etc. – we had the deep understanding that all people are inherently comprised of the same 46 chromosomes and DNA and organs and junk. (Junk meaning "stuff", not the colloquialism for "genitals".) Regardless of our external differences and multiculturalism, human beings are all capable of feeling the same emotions and accomplishing the same feats. This belief was cemented by the fact that each person in the museum – black, white, male, female, Jewish, Muslim, what have you, - was staring at us like we were crazed as we smiled and posed for pictures with displays entitled Horrific Conditions and Heartbreak. 
            We looked upstairs as we traveled through the very rooms in which our relatives had been processed. We saw the dormitories for the detained, and saw the hospital from a balcony. We read about the health factors that prevented certain people from attaining citizenship, as well as the literacy tests which determined a person’s mental capacity before admitting them to the United States. We read more statistics, and looked at artifacts from the time, in awe of how such a small place could process so many hopeful people.
            As we boarded the homeward ferry at the end of the day, Brooke and I were both quiet. It may have been because our Redbulls had worn off, but I choose to believe it was because we were both internalizing what we had just experienced. The small, aesthetically unimpressive island that we had previously trivialized as a requirement for a passing grade, had become much more than just that. A six-hour blip on the timeline of our lives, for others, for our own flesh and blood, the voyage to Ellis Island had been a triumph. It had been a selfless sacrifice – a gamble by Thomas Masterson, my great great great great Grandfather, to improve the quality of life for his family. Five generations later, as I sit typing in a college library on American soil, with a dream in my heart and the ability to achieve it, I am unabashedly indebted to him, and eternally grateful.