I am going to break up Finland into several parts. For those readers who don't know Finland is the country of one line of my ancestry. My great-grandparents emigrated to the United States at the turn of the century. They both came come a part of Finland called Swedish Ostrobothnia. This part of Finland is located on the west coast of the country on the Baltic Sea. Finland was a part of Sweden until 1808 when Russia invaded. Sweden lost the war and Russia took one of the arms, Finland. Finland remained a part of Russia until after 1918; Finland then was granted independence. Many of my relatives, well, all that I have met, speak Swedish as their main language and Finnish as a secondary language. Both my great-grandparents came over for the same reason, to help support their families in Finland, which was currently occupied by Russia. Many of those who came from Swedish Ostrobothnia ended up working in the mines in America. My great-grandfather; Eric Albert Lassus as bookkeeper for the mines. When he passed through Ellis Island his name was changed to Larson. He worked in different states and after marrying my great-grandmother Johanna Finne they lived in Telluride, Colorado. They had four children: Linnea, Roy, Agnes and Hazel. My grandmother is Hazel. They moved to Phoenix when my grandmother was around four years old because Johanna had crippling arthritis and the doctor recommended it. After they moved, Albert went back to Colorado to finish up business but became sick and died never seeing his family again. Their eldest daughter Linnea (whom my mother is named for) died shortly later on Christmas Eve. Roy began working to support the family as a very young teenager. Even though they were very poor, they sent packages of food and clothing to Finland to further support the family. They always were giving back. I have always been interested in my family roots and the stories that accompany them. I have been in contact with family members in Finland for many years and when Facebook came along I was able to connect to so many of these family members. It was an incredible, humbling and extraordinary experience. I am grateful to all who took time to meet me and tell their stories and share their lives with me.
I was met at the train station in Bennas (I am sorry Finnish relatives, I do not have any of your fancy letters with the dots on my keyboard...so just pretend they are there when I spell different Swedish words ) by Anna-Lena and Ann-Cathrin along with another Anna-Lena and her husband Kenneth. Their welcome was warm and sincere and made me feel at home in this foreign land. Anna-Lena had offered me to stay in her home and she, her sister Ann-Cathrin and her mother (my grandmother Hazel’s first cousin) escorted me
home and had a wonderful dinner of homemade meatballs, lingon berries, potatoes
and sauce waiting for me. It was a
wonderful welcome. After dinner we took
a walk around Anna-Lena’s house and saw a true Finnish countryside complete
with fields, flowers, trees and more trees and more trees, lots of red barns,
wooden houses. The Finnish Army attacked
(also known as the gigantically, enormous mosquitoes) but we were able to wage
war against them them…that time. We had
a lovely walk and the company was delightful.
It is always nerve-racking to go to the home to stay with people you
have never met, and in a different country and culture…but, I was welcomed so
well and made to feel comfortable and at home.
We returned home and had some Finnish treats including what they call “pig”. Now I am not always comfortable with new,
different foods, but pig I could handle since it was dough that is fried with
jam in it covered with sugar. Ya, no
problem.
On Friday, Mid-Summer, we went to Oravais to the graveyard
where my great-great-grandparents are buried.
My great grandfather came over to America in 1900 to help support his
family. With me were Anna-Lena, Ann-Cathrin, their mother and her cousin Birgitta, who is also a first cousin
to my grandmother and knew their grandparents well. It was interesting to be there and see the
grave other gravestones with the family names that I have read and researched
for so long. We went up to Oravais
church and looked over the land that my family had lived in for so long. We then traveled to Karvat where my
great-grandfather Albert left when he traveled to America. We visited another cousin of my grandmother,
Anna-Lisa at one of her summer homes, which was also her childhood home. The walls were filled with pictures of my
great-grandfather’s family and to my surprise a picture of my mom when she was
17. We had a wonderful time full of food
and stories. I shared the pictures and
letters that I had brought. I was once
again attacked by the Finnish army, and this time they succeeded leaving me
with over 100 bites. We drove down the
road to where the farm of my great-great grandparents had been. The house had been torn down and a new one
built, but the yard was lined with rocks that were formally the foundation of
the house. Birgitta shared her memories
of where things were when she was living there and the memories that she had of
this special place. The owners of the
house shared with us some of the things that were leftover from the old house
and were very kind to us.
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my great-grandparents grave marker
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It says something along the lines of they are gone and will be missed but not forgotten
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my dear cousins at the memorial for the men who dies in the 1808 battle with Russia. I later found out that my great-grandfather Wilhelm Finne was the stonecutter that created the memorial.
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View from the memorial...petty much this beautiful site was what I saw all through Finland |
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Oravais church, the church my great-grandparents on all sides would have visited |
We went to Anna-Lisa’s main summer home on the sea in
Kassminni. It was a wonderful little place
filled with summer flowers, birds, boaters and kids playing in the sea. There was a little old wooden boat house that
I also had a picture of that had been sent to my great-grandmother over 80
years ago. The best find, however, was
Linnea flowers. My mother was named
after her mother’s sister Linnea and my sister’s middle name is Lynnea
also. Sheila had wanted pictures of this
flower, and here they were. They are
small, shiny, pink bell shaped flowers with a sweet, fresh perfume that filled
the air with their sweetness. It was a
very special moment for me. The sea was
lovely and they got me to put my feet in and walk around. There was a full moon and a beautiful sunset
at the same time. However, that was not
the end of my day! Anna-Lisa told us
there was hedgehogs that visited her at her house, so Anna-Lena and
Ann-Catherin took me there, because they knew how excited I would be, and I
was! It was so fun to see a hedgehog
running around!!
What an amazing day it was!
A Perfect Mid-Summer celebration!
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summer flowers
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summer home of Anna-Lisa and the childhood home of my grandmothers first cousins
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My great-grandparents Erik and Brita Lisa Lassus
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Cousins and sisters looking through the memories I brought |
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Finnish coffee break (though I had chamomile tea)
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Erik and Brita Lisa Lassus and daughters |
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my great-grandparents Albert Erik Lassus and Johanna Finne in the wedding photo mailed to their parents |
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Albert Erik Lassus |
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Erik, Brita Lisa Lassus and daughters...the child is Birgitta |
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piece of farming equipment left over from the Lassus farm |
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the Lassus farm |
We celebrated Mid-summer at Kastminne at a summer home. It was a beautiful view and a happy place to be. We relaxed, walked in the water and enjoyed the sights and atmosphere.
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the view of the sea from Kassmini |
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Linnea flowers. My mother was named after these flowers. They have a sweet fragrance and the small, pink bells dotted the landscape were intoxicating. |
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sauna...everyone wanted me to try one...but as I told them..."that is called Arizona in July" |
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super moon in mid summer |
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hedgehogs!!! |
Saturday we headed out to an island called Tankar. We took the ferry out on a blustery Baltic Sea. The island was a fishing area where men and their families would spend their summer fishing and living to make their living. A lighthouse was also built there in the 1800’s. Ann-Cathrin invited a friend Eva, to guide me on the island. She was an amazing guide and we all learned so much. She may have started off warning me about ticks, and so I was wary, but still enjoyed. The landscape was much like Lapland we were informed. It was rather rugged and wild. There was thick shrubbery and big rocks to climb over. We saw the old wooden fish houses, and church. On the benches the people had carved their signs since they didn’t know how to write, to reserve their seating. I wonder if my dad has carved our name in the bench we always sit at at church…hmmm…The weather was perfect while we were there, which is a blessing. It is amazing to see how other people live and work in other parts of the world. We take so much for granted in America. Even some of the poorest among us have essentials that others see as luxuries, yet we see fit to constantly complain, way more than I have seen and heard elsewhere. It was a great experience to be in a place and see there that make me remember, that we can do so much more with so much less.
That evening we had our Mid-summer dinner a day late. It consisted of new potatoes dipped in butter, chives and potato water, pickled fish, smoked fish, eggs with Swedish caviar and strawberries for dessert. Even though some of those things were really out in left field, I gave it a chance and my relatives were very, very patient and kind to me about it and since they knew I loved meatballs, they threw those in also even though they aren't traditionally a Mid-Summer meal (but since I had been eating them for breakfast I guess they figured they would keep 'em coming). I also wrote down the recipe as it as being made so I could attempt to replicate this treat at home.
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On Sunday I had the opportunity to meet many of my grandmother's first cousins on the Lassus side of the family. I shared pictures and letters that had been sent to my great-grandparents and they shared pictures with me of times that were past. It was a wonderful experience to see how much they loved Finland and they experiences that they had had and their willingness to share those with me.