PHOTO: Noel Pangilinan
   Ellis Island: From an immigration screening center to    a museum.

American Family Immigration History Center

American Immigrant Wall of Honor

Ellis Island Immigration Museum

Ellis Island Records

Jewishgen.org - Ellis Island Database

Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island Ferry

Statue of Liberty National Monument

Statue of Liberty Photo Tour


Ellis Workers Honor Immigrant Ancestors
By Noel Pangilinan

very morning for the past 19 years, Jeffrey Dosik has reenacted his grandparents' passage to America - sailing past the Statue of Liberty and setting foot on Ellis Island.

On some of these trips, Dosik finds himself wondering what his forebears thought upon entering the New York Harbor and seeing the 151-foot-tall statue on their way to the Ellis Island immigration screening
center. "They must have been overwhelmed by the sight of the New Colossus," he said.

As a librarian for Ellis Island, Dosik, 44, gets to retrace his grandparents' footsteps five days a week on his way to work aboard the staffboat of the National Park Service.

About one-third of the people who work on Ellis Island come from immigrant families who passed through it, said Janet Levine, an oral historian at the island's library. At the library alone, at least four workers trace their roots to European immigrants who crossed the Atlantic Ocean and landed on the island from the early 1900s to the late 1920s.

As descendants of immigrants, they are happy to work on the island where their families' American history began. By participating in the preservation of the nation's immigration history, the librarians feel they maintain a link with their ancestors.

Dosik's grandparents on both sides of his family were immigrants who came to the United States through Ellis Island. His paternal grandfather, Moses Dosik, a hat maker originally from Shetuma, Russia, traveled from the Netherlands in the steer of a ship and arrived on Ellis Island in 1906. His grandmother, Yetta Dosik, also from Russia, arrived aboard the same ship with her siblings one year later.

Dosik's grandfather on his mother's side, Alexander Rogersin, passed through Ellis Island in 1913; while his grandmother, Anna Sadleck, came from Slovakia in 1924.

Dosik was able to piece together his family's history when he found their arrival records on the electronic archive of the American Family Immigration History Center. The center, which allows visitors to search for their ancestors' names on the passenger manifests of ships that docked on the island, is one of the museum's main attractions.

"When the center opened in 2001, park employees were used to testing it. We were the first to try it; we were the guinea pigs," said Dosik.

Other Ellis Island employees were not as lucky in their search as Dosik. Levine, whose work involves interviewing Ellis Island immigrants who are still alive, could not find her grandparents' records. "There were so many Levines on the ship manifests, but I could not find my grandfather, "she said.

Her grandparents from her father's side, Abraham Levine and Celia Eig, were Russians from Minsk. On her mother's side, it was her great-grandmother who crossed the Atlantic from England and started a family in America.

PHOTO: Noel Pangilinan
Byron: Immigrants "were too busy being Americanized."

George Tselos, the library's chief archivist, has another story. Eighty-eight years ago, his Greek father set foot on the island after a week-long transatlantic journey. But his search for his immigration record yielded no result. "Probably a matter of spelling," he said with a shrug.

Eric Byron, an exhibit technician at the library, said he was not interested in searching for his grandparents' records. Everything he knows about his grandfather, Isaacs Fleischman, a Jew from Lithuania, and his grandmother, Rose Levine (no relation to Janet Levine) from modern-day Belarus, he learned from his mother. "That's enough for me. That's all I need to know," he said.

But aside from their ancestors' country of origin and the approximate year of their arrival in the United States, the descendants often know little about their forebears' former life.
"There was a time when immigrants did not want to talk about their past," said Levine, because in those days, they were often stigmatized. "Newly arrived immigrants were looked down upon even by other immigrant groups who came earlier."

One woman Levine interviewed said she has never told anybody about her life in her native country.

Most of the immigrants from Russia and Southern and Eastern Europe were driven away from their countries by economic hardship and religious persecution. "They were escaping anti-Jewish pogroms and the anti-Semitic drives taking place in Tsarist Russia," said Dosik. "Those were very painful memories, perhaps too painful to recall."

For Byron, immigrants were simply too busy adjusting to their new life and finding ways to make it in America. "They came here lured by the American dream. They were too busy being Americanized. They want their kids to grow up as Americans," said Byron. "For most immigrants, it's no longer about the past; it's all about the present and the future."

Levine has noticed that many of the surviving Ellis Island immigrants she has interviewed care a lot about being American. "Especially those who suffered religious persecution in their old countries," she said.

PHOTO: Noel Pangilinan    
Dosik: "Immigrants were escaping from anti-Jewish
pogroms and anti-Semitic drives of Tsarist Russia."

Levine, Dosik, Byron and Tselos said that their forebearers' passage through Ellis Island had nothing to do with their decision to seek out the job there.

“I just wanted a job,” said Dosik.

“I just wanted a job related to my interest,” said Byron, who was into anthropology and art archaeology.

But all four said that their immigrant roots have made them interested in U.S. immigration history. “Ellis Island is thenational monument to immigrants,” said Levine. ”I feel privileged working here, meeting Ellis Island immigrants and seeing the Statue of Liberty everyday.” <Click here for a video tour of Ellis and Liberty islands>

Eventually, after a few years, it finally dawned on them that there was s
omething special about working in the island gateway where their grandparents and parents passed through.

“My father had died by the time I started working in Ellis Island in 1999,” said Tselos. “I have always wished he’d live long enough to see me working here. It would have pleased him.”

Dosik stood in the reading room of the Ellis island library, reviewing historical photographs of immigrants in Ellis Island. He realized that he might as well have been looking at pictures of his own grandparents.

“Working in a place where my family began its history in the U.S., that means something to me,” he said. “I have come full circle.”.

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