Julian Malacko at Electro-technical Faculty worked till 1964. This time his job was far more peaceful, there were no more pressures from the worried parents, who wanted better notes or safe future for their off springs, to be enrolled in The Technical High School. Julian practically escaped from this sort of pressure to the Faculty! Even his salary was slightly higher; only, the human relations between the colleagues were not quite splendid. They have been treated him as the one belonging to some lower caste: what the language is this Ruthenian-Rusin, after all?! Better could learn some more useful language and not this one who was spoken by less then 40,000 people in, then, Yugoslavia... Julian have replied that this is his mother tongue, why they are so troubled by this fact, what if it would be gypsy, it does not matter, still Julian’s children are speaking one more language in comparison to their children! Yes, during their education they could feel they were different, not often but often enough to remember the difference. Julian was not nationalists, neither radical. He traveled a lot, he studied abroad, he was actually cosmopolitician but he truly respected his roots. He respected the other people’s nationalities, but he appreciated his people and loved them. He regularly watched each year’s Rusin’s national fest the “Red Rose”; nevertheless he had to travel almost 600 km to see it, in his age of over 80! In his room there were some framed photos, shot by him: his father and mother, “slajs” at Begelj canal (see this photo )... In Zagreb, he was regularly attending the meetings at the club of the‘Rusin-Ukraininan People’. When he died, the choir of the Rusin-Ukrainian people led by Mr. Krajcar was indeed nicely singing at the burial service, paying in this way the last respect to Julian, for which family thank to all those wonderful people, at their nice gesture, once more... The photography was the special chapter in Julian’s life. He loved it; he shot some wonderful photos, some of them were developed as the posters, by some family members. He had to sell his Leica camera getting for gal stone operation, and mentioning for several times with the bitterness in his voice, we recognized that he did not overcame it easy. Two the rolleiflex cameras one 12 x 9, the other 24x36 we could borrow but must promise to return undamaged. Natalia said he have even the microscope, but this went for sale the first when family run into need, that happened several times, but in times of his gal operation lasted the longest. He documented first days of his children and not only them, but as well the special events such as the partisan’s meetings after the ‘deliberation’, when the WW II ended. People were forced to attend, the partisans watched from the back who was missing or trying to leave prematurely... I used the quotation marks for the expression ‘deliberation’ while my grand mother Maria from the mother’s side, seeing The Red Army forces said: ”They did not come to free us but to rob us!” And indeed was so, they literally took all they only could, from bicycles to the wrist watches. The stories The Red Army soldiers drunk anything made of alcohol, including perfumes was not just the story, even those and far worse stories were true... He was not only shooting the photos, but he was processing them, still, in Ruski Kerestur he had installed his own photo lab. This appeared to be very useful when, after the communists rooted in, the official photographers dared not to shot the communion photo at the beginning of 50-es. Then the parish priest was dr. Joachim Segedi, who died few years ago in age of 99( 2004 ); the pope John Paul II waited his 100’s birthday to be promoted to cardinal, but he died the month earlier not receiving this birthday gift from Vatican. If receiving it, he would be the first Rusin cardinal! And the eldiest too. Lords will. When the new assistant, dipli. Ing. S., appeared at Electro-technical Faculty, the human relations at the faculty deteriorated. His knowledge was a bit weak, but he substituted it with his servility: each morning he was awaiting the professor at the entrance doors for taking his hand bag and carrying it to professor's Heim office, he was bringing coffee, newspapers, if something had to be done, his hand was always close to do it, he was always available... When Mr. S. thought he took the position he wanted, started to mistreat the other colleagues. Julian who was almost as twice old as Mr. S. did not think he had to stand it. The breaking point was when the specialization study was offered in the USA. Mr. S, although not speaking English competed and won, Julian who spoke English, failed. This was his the last drop; Julian took his documents and went to The Machine-Shipping Construction Faculty. Mr. S. never got back from the USA, he remained working there... Julian worked his quiet job until 1978, at the third floor of the Faculty, room 312; the windows of his room were turned towards the high way that leads to Ljubljana, busy and noisy each point of time, only by night the traffic noisy ceased. Julian was teaching the subject called “The Machine Elements” on The Machine-Shipping Construction Faculty, The Oil, Geology and Mine Faculty, The High Technical School' Djuro Djakovic' in Slavonski brod and The Shipping Construction Faculty, Split. Then, he was forced to retire, as after 71, he was not let to lecture, following the legislation norms of the former Yugoslavia. At this Faculty, Julian was in charge for even something that had nothing to do with his formal education. Due to knowledge of the foreign languages, he was in charge to teach the foreign students Croatian for which he was left 3-6 months time in the most cases. He was doing it by the way to his regular duties, for free, of course. If something he hated, it was it. The time estimated for learning was too short; it seemed they were not progressing at all... Many times he came home telling us the funny situations that occurred when students twisted the words or their meaning... Something similar to “The Faulty Towers” and situations with Manuel there... Now, this is done at Philosophy Faculty and takes longer. Professors there are paid for it. Then, in Split, Dalmatia province, the new The Shipping Construction Faculty was established. Julian was in charge to travel down there and lecture as the eminent professor, the same position he had in Slavonski Brod, Slavonia province at The High Technical School there, that was actually the faculty as well. Julian’s former students were producing trains, ships, tanks and the tramways as well. The factory called "Djuro Djakovic” for whose purposes this High School was established, made as well the first all Yugoslav made train, 1949, whose project led Dipl. Ing Sedlar, Julians colleague, professor at the same faculty. To the students of The Technology he was lecturing 'The Machine Elements' being beloved by female students due his alikeness to the film actor Gregory Peck. Mr. Sedlar was my teacher from the same subject, ’ 'The Machine Elements’. When I was at the exam, he was specially demanding to me, ‘sqeezing’ me, forced me to derive some equation we never heard of, but he thought that I, having a bit more background, have to be capable of it. In the same way he wanted to show off, to the other students, that the fact the relatives or family members are working there, was not offering any sort of the advantages to anyone, for only knowladge matters for notes. Then, the part of this faculty was located at the nice site, opposite to the national theatre, at the address The Marchal Tito's Square 5, only the ruin of the building for, as it's a sort of custom that universities are not having enough money to renew such facilities... The first building to it was 'Kavkaz' that had nothing to do with the geography of former SSSR but was shortage that meant Theatre Caffe, ( Kavana Kazaliste); there you could meet prominent actors, conductors, singers, writers, all 'creme de la creme' of Zagreb's cultural life. For then, with Ruza Pospis Baldani, the famous singer who sung with conductor Herbert von Karaja, Ruzdjak, Marijana Radev, Ljiljana Molnar Talajic, Nada Puttar Gold, Noni Zunec, composer Zlatko Pibernik, conductor Lovro Matacic, Zinka Kunc Milanov singing in The Met but having concert or two here and there in her native city, and many more, Zagreb was truly the cultural center of Yugoslavia. the state of 20 mil citizens. Julian played guitar having very good the Schneider's one, smashed by my half brother who showed his disagreement with the own father, and the violin, for this was his father's wish. Julian left an unfinished work. All his life he was collecting literature wanting to write the book from the machine constructions subject, but he was prevented of doing it by doing other matters ... When he got well after the gall stones operation, his colleague dipl. ing. G. got back from Brasil with all his family, there he worked on some construction project. But this was two years earlier as expected. “The Herald”( Vjesnik) has written that the representatives of the “Ingra” company were taking up to 30 pct commission from the value of the projects abroad, as their own, the ‘small pocket money’... It was the scandal on the state level. I do not know was Mr. G. involved in taking this high provision or not, or was he only collateral victim of the Brasil project, of all inolved in or not, a scape goat of the 'chistka', but in no time all the representatives of “Ingra” were recalled and withdrawn back home. Upon his return, Mr. G. was showing us, upon plea of JM, the raw diamonds he has brought with, they looked no special alike, just like the glass stones... For us, this coming back of family G. meant that we have to get out from their apartment. Julian's intention was to build up the own house, during the absence of the family G. from their apartment, for this purpose he has bought already some terrain, there was even a small cottage there, far too small for all of his family, while we had nothing else to move in to, then there. The plans were right, only the events played in the different direction. The telephone, tap water for inst. where the abstract nouns. Family jumped from the civilization of mid 20 century, the whole century back. The first shop was over a mile far away. In the first days there was no even the electricity, although the electric wires were drawn over his terrain to the neighbors. Only when he threatened to the neighbor that he is going to cut down the wires, this gentleman gave his consent to plough in. Instead of writing his book, Julian had to deal with the basic existential problems. For inst., there were no running water. There was only a well some three hundred meters away, each drop of water had to be carried in the bucket. The initiative for connecting of the all households to the official water supply system so as the sewage system was undertaken in the community, by the collecting the own money for paying the all costs, from digging the trenches, laying the pipelines to the connecting the households. For the small extra money Julian convinced the other people, the bulldozer and other machinery was borrowed by Julian’s colleague architect’s company( who also worked in the Zeljezara Sisak factory with Julian, some time ago, Mr. dipl. ing. S.) for free, only the operator had to be paid, while he was working after hours. But some people shared no Julian’s optimism; they thought that Julian might to earn the nice amount of money by tricking them, so they gave up of paying for machinery digging the trenches, saying they would rather dig it for themselves, by their own hands. Well, the problem appeared while exactly those suspicious ones were not finished their trenches on time. It was autumn over, soon we expected snow, when all the action was over, with the month and a half delay. We had the tap water, sewage system worked; the threat of hepatitis was removed. Of course, he paid his share. Julian ‘earned’ only organizing the all project, revoking the machinery while the hand digging was not finished in time, convincing those who did not finish it, to do so. You can bet, they had very firm reason why they did it not on time. I still recall the unbearable mud we had on the street, but the each day we had to attend our school neat. It was almost ‘the mission impossible’. People got the idea to change the muddy shoes when they reached the asphalts part of the street, hiding them in the bushes. No one wanted to still that muddy shoes, you can bet. We did the same. Julian applied for the building license, but he had to wait for it almost three years, while our northern neighbor sued us that the house to be had the windows turned towards her house. Although the project clearly showed that it was not so, she always found something to extent the case at the court and it lasted indeed a long time. When he finally got the license 1960, the Yugoslav state decided to carry out the big project of connecting the two biggest cities, Belgrade and Zagreb, by the highway. Basically, it was good idea, only, again against Julian’s plans. There was lack of the cement, the concrete iron, lime... All that material was delivered directly from the factories, from the production, to the building sites, for building the highway. Julian, with the loan for building the house could buy nothing. I recall how Julian was leaving our home at 4 AM to wait in turn at the factory that was selling the building material, waiting for nothing while again, against the promises, the selling company got no supply on that day, that week. month... while all the production was redirected to the highway building site. At 8 AM he was due to appear at work. Nevertheless, Julian was the only person called in, by the Commission for the Investigation of the Origins of Properties, to prove from where he got the money for building the house, from around Bukovac, the part of Maximir’s community his family was living in, although he, as all the other neighbors, took the building loan with the 30 years extension, and interests, of course, was 3 pct. At least, that was easy to check up; Julian was in possession of all the documents. If he might want to take anything he could not do it: he could not take and bring home any student, he needed no piece of choke, neither the toilet paper from the Faculty! The true reason for processing him were his ‘wrong blood particles’, again. The “Inform Bureau” was very fresh in my childhood, but I was small and did not know what was it, the politics. Many times my playing with the other children was interrupted while the parents did not let their children to play with me. I was very seriously asked by worried fathers, mothers, not to get back, EVER, to play with their daughters... While in these few years the “Inform Bureau” took place, people were put in prison for only knowing any person of the Russian origin, blaming them for spying. Many times Julian's family have heard from those afraid people it would be better for family to get back to Russia, what for they came to this country, just to take the other’s people bread and working place. Funny is that the person investigated the family roots and got the written documents that originated the four hundreds years back in Bacz-Ruski-Kerestur; he said that there is more documents to check up at parish house, but he could not do it any more, the lungs cancer made him too weak to do it, he died before he finished his task. Bacz-Ruski Kerestur is very much located in Backa province, Vojvodina, and Vojvodina was very much located in Yugoslavia. So much about the geography. The Julian's house is still unfinished, although from the death of Julian on July 21st 1997 is already nine years over( this was written 2006). But the loan with 3 pct interest was paid back to the last coin. When Julian retired, started the eye troubles. He underwent the cataract eye operation; his glaucoma was developing by his aging. I got back from Germany, where I was living at that time, for the vacation and visited him at the Stationary for Seniors. He complained of the breathing problems for what we have been told is just a sort of virus that was taken care of. I noticed that his pillow was too low, but there was no other so I used the blanket and put it below the pillow, while the mechanism for rising up this part of the bed was not working. By each next visit, the blanket was pulled out, his chest was lowered. Each time I was repeating the same operation, asking myself why someone wants him to suffer more than he need to. Why the person who only wanted to help to the other people, when needed the help for him, this help was denied to him? I must admit I did not realize how hard his condition was, moreover, we were told it’s just virus, he was taking the antibiotics. I expected him to recover soon. I took him even the birthday cake for his 89th birthday, on July 4th. After a week I went for vacation, while his son Miroslav Daniel remained in Zagreb, to take care about father. After ten days I got the message that Julian was taken to the hospital due to heart attack. Strange, but this message was traveling around for the day, finally it was taken to me by the person from the other place, 17 km away. When I have heard it, I grabbed the cell phone and tried to reach Miroslav. His wife told me that Julian passed away less then hour ago... Standing in the sea water to the knees, while there was the only place we could catch the signal from the power station, at two o’clock on a perfect, warm, sunny day I realized I must get back for funeral ceremony. I was surprised how many people attended the service, although only family obituary was announced. It was mid summer, people were in vacations. The flow of the people were expressing their condolescences, shaking hands just like in some soundless film. After the ceremony, the Rusin-Ruthenian-Ukrainian Society Choir sung the national Rusin songs giving that event the special respect for which family was grateful to all the singers led by Mr. Krajcar. On the doors of the Julian’s room in Senior’s Stationary at Xaver, was all the time his visiting card: Dipl. Ing. Prof. Julian Malacko Retired assistant of Faculty for Machine and Shipping Constructions University of Zagreb R U S I N | ||
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