The article researches the subjective perception of migration, the reasons for emigration and the conditions for return, and the perception of homeland by recent emigrants from Slovenia. Since the ...2008–2015 economic crisis, there has been a strong stream of net emigration and brain drain from Slovenia. By means of semi-structured interviews with recent emigrants, we found out that their prevailing reasons for migration were economic, their view of the selected location pragmatic, and their subjective perception of homeland mostly reduced to the narrow social network and world of everyday life. Only a smaller part of the interviewees identifies itself with Slovenia as an organised cultural and political space. Therefore, under the condition of the free movement of labour within the EU and a semi-peripheral position of the Slovene economy, new waves of net emigration from Slovenia can be expected in the future, especially in periods of economic crises.
Članek raziskuje subjektivno percepcijo lastnega migrantstva, razloge za odselitev in pogoje za vrnitev ter pojmovanje domovine pri nedavnih izseljencih iz Slovenije. Zlasti od gospodarske krize ...2008-2015 beležimo močan neto izselitveni tok in beg možganov. S polstrUkturiranimi intervjuji z nedavnimi izseljenci smo ugotovili, da pri njih prevladujejo ekonomski razlogi za migriranje in pragmatično stališče do lokacije bivanja ter da je v njihovi subjektivni konstrukciji domovina večinoma skrčena na najožji socialni krog in svet vsakdanjega življenja, le manjši del pa se jih identificira s Slovenijo kot organiziranim kulturnim in političnim prostorom. V razmerah prostega pretoka delovne sile v EU in polperifernosti slovenskega gospodarstva lahko zato pričakujemo nadaljnje valove neto izseljevanja, ki bodo intenzívnejší v obdobjih gospodarskih kriz.
The article discusses activities of the Slovenian diplomat Dr. Izidor Cankar at the diplomatic representation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in Buenos Aires in the period 1936-1942. The research of his ...activities is based on sources from the archives in Ljubljana and Belgrade, with a particular focus on his correspondence with leading Slovene politicians on the eve of the Second World War and during the War itself. Cankar asserted himself as a self-confident diplomat, while at the same time being the first Yugoslav envoy to set as a priority concern for the Slovene emigrants from the Primorska region. Adapted from the source document.
Ludovik Osterc lived in his early youth in Bezigrad, a northern section of the town of Ljubljana. Here he completed primary school. In 1938, after the completion, also in Ljubljana, of the secondary ...school (Vegova gimnazija), he enrolled at the Ljubljana Faculty of Philosophy to study Romance philology. This he concluded in 1941 with a diploma in French language and literature as his main subject.
The first Slovenian emigrants realized soon after their arrival to the USA that in the event of work accidents or disease they depended solely on themselves. For this reason they started to found ...their own benefit societies, following the example of other nationalities (e.g. the Czechs, the Finns). At first these were of a local character with a limited number of members, which did not guarantee enough financial safety. In order to decrease the possibility of a financial break down, they started to found benefit societies which united members of the same ethnical group throughout the whole country. The first Slovenian fraternal benefit society called the Carniolian Slovenian Catholic Society (“Kranjsko slovenska katoliška jednota” in Slovene, abbrev. KSKJ) was founded in Joliet (Illinois) in 1894. It was founded by Slovenian Catholic priests in the USA, who often encountered the misery and helplessness of victims of accidents and their families. The society functioned according to strict Catholic principles. Its ideological orientation was expressed in the name itself, and St. Joseph was chosen as its patron saint. All the local societies were also mostly named after saints. The basic aim of the fraternal benefit society was to help the members or their families in the event of death, while the additional activity was to provide health insurance. However, the organization also cultivated other important values, such as the Slovenian cultural tradition, the Slovenian language, and close contacts with “the old country”. The basis of fraternal benefit organizations was represented by local societies, which were active throughout all of the USA. The local society of the Carniolian Slovenian Catholic Society called St. Francis de Sales Society No. 29 was founded in Joliet (Illinois) on February 2, 1896. It was already the fourth local society of the KSKJ in the town of Joliet. The reasons for the setting up of a new society came from the dissatisfaction of important members of imigrant communities with the work of the existing societies in the town. In their opinion they were not represented high enough in the hierarchy of these societies. The fact was that the highest positions in local societies, expecially on the main board, brought not only respect, but also financial benefits. Thus it is not surprising that the presidency of the society was taken over by the undertaker Anton Nemanich, one of the town's wealthiest Slovenian imigrants and cofounder of the KSKJ. Nemanich's rise in the KSKJ started in 1896, the same year when he was, at the third convention, elected to the position of the chief president of the KSKJ. This started a period of more than 20 years in which the members of this local society held the most important positions in the KSKJ. The duties of the members of the KSKJ included the rules of both their local society and the rules of the main organization. They had to attend the society meetings, particularly when there were elections for the members of the board, and regularly pay assessment. According to the rules, the society had to provide for a respectable funeral of their members, including escort by men in uniform and society banners. In addition to this, their members had to visit their sick colleagues. An important way of raising money for the local societies was through the organization of dances. If the members failed to fulfill their duties, they were fined. The societies often recieved invitations to various ceremonies organized by Slovene imigrants, which they gladly accepted. The regular monthly meetings of the local societies started with a Mass, while the daily meetings were opened and closed by the presiding member with a prayer. The members of the KSKJ had to go to confession and receive Holy Communion at least once a year. The society was in general closely connected with the Slovenian parish of St. Joseph. Local societies had a very important charity function. They received pleas for help by various empoverished Slovenian imigrants, not rarely by other local societies. They were very successful in attaining new members, since their monthly meetings regularly brought the inclusion of new members. St. Francis de Sales Society No. 29 was among the most successful in this activity. The society was among the winners of the competition for attracting new members more than 10 times. St. Francis de Sales Society No. 29 was neither the oldest nor the largest local society of the KSKJ, but it was one of the most influential. Its members held the highest positions in the main organization. In this way they had a significant influence on the politics of the KSKJ in the most important phase of its existence, when it developed from a small and financially unstable fraternal benefit organization into a modern insurance company. The society has over a hundred years successfully continued to carry out its uniting mission in the areas of religion, politics and culture.
Anton Füster, originally by profession a Catholic priest and a leading figure in the Vienna Revolution of 1848/49, lived the early part of his life- from 1808 till 1847 - in his native Slovenia. A ...few months before the outbreak of the revolution he was nominated Professor at Vienna University. After the suppression of the revolution in spring 1849 he emigrated by way of Germany and London to the United States. After the first three years in Boston he lived in New York until his return to Austria in 1876. He died in Vienna in 1881.
Leposlovno delo slovenskih izseljencev lahko razvrščamo v različne sklope glede na specifiko njihovih "skupnih" tematik ali glede na njihove značilne literarne smeri in oblike, navezanost ali ...izoliranost od sočasno nastajajoče "domače" književnosti ter njuno medsebojno primerljivost, stopnjo literarnoestetske dognanosti itd. Prihodnje analize naj z zanesljivimi literarnoestetskimi merili izpostavijo vse tisto leposlovno delo slovenskih izseljencev, ki ima trajnejšo vrednost, in ga ustrezno umestijo v osrednja dela slovenske literarne zgodovine (sintetične preglede, leksikone, tudi komentirane zbirke klasičnih del) in v osnovnošolske, srednješolske in visokošolske učne vsebine, njihova najboljša dela pa v obvezna šolska berila.
Frederick M. Rener Stanonik, Janez
Acta neophilologica,
12/1993, Volume:
26, Issue:
1
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Open access
The editors of Acta Neophilologica announce deeply grieved the demise of one of their major coworkers, Professor Frederick M. Rener. He was one of those intellectuals who after the Second World War ...emigrated from Slovenia to America where they made distinguished scholarly careers at the universities of Canada and United States.
The Eagle and the Roots is Louis Adamic's last book and, in his own opinion, his most important one. The printed version of that work is an expurgated version of the author's typescript which is ...preserved in several incomplete copies, kept in various public and private archives in Yugoslavia and in the United States. The work was written on the basis of the author's personal impressions during his second visit to his native land in 1949. The published version of The Eagle and the Roots discusses the political and economic conditions in Yugoslavia in 1949, the moods of the Yugoslav people, their top politicians and intellectuals at the time of the first five-year plan (Book One), including a biography of Josip Broz Tito until 1945 with an outline of the most important events in the country before and during World War II (Book Two). In various passages scattered in both books, it describes the selfsacrifice and the resistance of the Yugoslav people during the Liberation War. An important subject is the dissention between Tito and Stalin which had its germs in the prewar period. The author follows its development through the war and during the first years after the liberation until the Cominform resolution in June 1948.