14 June, 2014
A Macedonian story
‘When my son was in London’, Bill Bozinoski tells me, ‘he went
to where the Aussies were. Here in Newcastle, I go where the Macedonians are’.
For Bill, whose Macedonian name is Blagoja, that place is Beaumont Street, Hamilton. He explains :
‘I feel comfortable here, secure. When I walk along the street, I’m sure to bump into someone I know for a chat.’
Bill no longer lives in Hamilton, but he is ‘at home’ in Beaumont Street. Yet he is as far as one could imagine from the stereotype of the migrant who has struggled with a new language, and clings to the past. Educated and articulate, Bill has thought deeply about the forces that led his forefathers to emigrate, the burden they brought with them as they left a divided country, and their endeavours to restore a Macedonian identity based on language, traditions and culture. He’s even written a book about this with long time friend and Hamilton artist, Vlado Krstevski.
‘The Fourth
Generation’ by Blagoja Bozinoski and Vlado Krstevski
Cover design by Vlado
Krstevski
Bill and Vlado came to Australia as young men in their
twenties. In 1967, they’d attended the same high school in the cultural,
educational and commercial city of Bitola, in the Republic of Macedonia. Until
they bumped into each other at a function in the hall at the Macedonian
Orthodox Church of St Mary’s, Broadmeadow, each had no idea the other was here.
Thus began a friendship that continues to this day.
The two men were part of the third and largest wave of Macedonian
emigration from what was the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Fleeing
economic stagnation and a Communist regime, more than 4000 Macedonians settled in
Newcastle between the 1950s and the 1970s. Mayfield, Tighes Hill and Hamilton
were popular choices to live as they were close to jobs in heavy industry.
It was not until the end of WWII that the Macedonian
population in Newcastle was large enough to support a more organised community
life. A committee was formed in the 1960s to help newcomers and to raise funds
to build a church. Meetings were held in the Transport Workers Recreation
Centre, in Hamilton.
The consecration and opening of St Mary’s Church in August,
1970 was a critical milestone, providing a point of focus for the community.
Special celebrations at Christmas, Easter, and other religious feast days, as
well as weddings and christenings brought the community together. A sports club
was formed, and bus trips and picnics were organised.
In 1984 Bill and Vlado published the first non English
publication in Newcastle, a Macedonian magazine called Kopnez.[1]
Generously supported by local businesses, it was sent to 570 addresses, most of
these in Hamilton.
Around this time, Bill was appointed as an Ethnic Health
Worker in the NSW Department of Health. This was his opportunity to develop the
capacity of the Macedonian community through establishing groups that would
bring Macedonians together around shared interests and cultural traditions.
One of Bill’s first tasks was to find a venue for BHP
retirees who gathered afternoons in Gregson Park, Hamilton. ‘Sometimes it’s too
hot, or too cold’, they told him. ‘Sometimes it rains.’ They were following the
age old European custom of men gathering in the village or town square.
‘In any village back home’, Bill tells me, ‘there will be
three or four spots where people will gather. You can always find someone to
talk to. And there will always be a good story teller in the group.’
First Bill found a room for the men in the Migrant Resource
Centre; when the group expanded he found a larger venue in the Madecodian
church community centre.
Over time, an array of groups have flourished around the
Macedonian community centre at the Church – there is a Pensioners Group, a Day
Care Centre for ageing Macedonians, and a Women’s Group. There is the Magic
Football Club, the Suns Football Club and a cricket group. Special interest
activities include dancing, music, and chess.
Vlado began work in the coke ovens department at the BHP
steelworks, but was quickly singled out for his artistic ability and put to
work illustrating safety messages with cartoons.
Vlado
Krstevski working on a characterisation (1980)
Clipping from BHP
News, August 1980, from the personal collection of Vlado Krstevski
His caricatures, often of work mates, helped engage the men in safety issues. Dozens of his cartoons have been published in newspapers.
Cartoon reproductions from the personal collection of
Vlado
Krstevski
Vlado studied art as a mature age student, and has been a practising artist ever since.
Hunter Wetlands Centre: hand-carved totem poles designed
by Vlado Krstevski are an attraction for walker
(Photograph from the
personal collection of Vlado Krstevski)
Beaumont Street, Hamilton
Oil on canvas by Vlado Krstevski
In their different ways, both Bill Bozinoski and Vlado Krstevski are making unique contributions - to a mature Macedonian community that is affirming its identity in a new homeland, and to a richer multicultural Hamilton.
Bill Bozinoski and Vlado Krstevski (2014)
Beaumont Street, Hamilton
Oil on canvas by Vlado Krstevski
Acknowledgements
My thanks to Bill Bozinoski and Vlado Krstevski for lively conversations, and to Lynn Mangovski for introductions. Unattributed photographs by Ruth Cotton.
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