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Basque Diaspora
Igor Lansorena
eitb.com
Boise's Basque Museum & Cultural Center is putting together an exhibit on Basque immigration to the United States that will be on show on Ellis Island in New York between February and April 2010.
A brief video featuring a 104-year-old Basque lady from Lekeitio who arrived in New York at the age of 15 will welcome visitors to an exhibit on the history of Basque immigration to the United States, on display on Ellis Island in New York City from February to April 2010.
The exhibit, spearheaded by the Basque Museum &' || 'amp; Cultural Center of Boise, Idaho, is called "Hidden in Plain Sight: The Basques", and will also be partially available for viewing by the public during the international Basque culture festival, Jaialdi. In September, it will become the featured exhibit in the main gallery of the Basque Museum.
According to 2008 attendance figures, 4,000,000 individuals visited the Statue of Liberty and an estimated 2,000,000 traveled to Ellis Island. During the time that the exhibit is in New York, well over 300,000 people could potentially learn about the Basque people thanks to this opportunity.
"It would be difficult to find a location where you reach as many people from as many different places, so it makes sense to open the exhibit in New York, on Ellis Island, the place where so many of our ancestors traveled through to begin their new life so far from their native land", says Diana Echeverria, a member of the board of directors of the Basque Museum, in an interview for eitb.com.
Millions of immigrants, including the Basque immigrants arriving in the United States, were processed through the port of entry on Ellis Island after it opened in 1892. Nowadays, it is a national monument that includes Liberty Island where the Statue of Liberty is located.
Six rooms
The temporary exhibit will be held in six rooms that were once dormitories for immigrants waiting to enter the United States. Historical photographs will depict the place Basques left behind and the work that they did when they arrived. These will be contrasted with modern photographs of what the Basque Country is today and the extraordinary contributions the Basques have given and the accomplishments achieved in their new home, the United States.
The text has been developed by the Basque Museum''s Curator, Michael Vogt, with the assistance of scholars at Boise State University and other consultants from around the country.
Artifacts and photographs are from the collection at the Basque Museum and others will be on loan from the Museo Vasco in Bilbao.
The exhibit''s goal is that the visitor leave with a greater understanding of the Basque people. "We hope that visitors will leave with the knowledge that the Basques are the oldest people on the Iberian Peninsula, that their language is unique in the world and that that the Basque Country has maintained its history, but is also a very modern, progressive society", Diana Echeverria says.
It also seeks to recognize the role of the Basques in the US, who have prospered and continue to contribute to their communities both through the sharing of their heritage and through their economic successes.
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