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| Chronicler: Interviewer: Location: Date: |
Anastacio Arriaga Mikel Chertudi and Julian Achabal Gooding, ID 29 May 2002 |
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Anastacio was born on 4 July 1929 to Jose Maria Arriaga and
Manuela Gandiaga, on the baserri Arlaban in Bolivar, Bizkaia. The
Spanish Civil War was raging during his childhood, interrupting education,
work, and eating habits. Anastacio recalls bomb raids and looting by
soldiers, as well as punishments the townspeople sustained for speaking
their native tongue. When he finished school at age 13, he farmed a
little before learning to make beautiful shotguns in Eibar, which, after his
mandatory service in the Spanish army, he did for 13 years. Anastacio wed Miren Arriaga (also her maiden name), and had 2 daughters before moving to the US in 1968 to work as a sheepherder. His wife and children soon joined him, and the family very much enjoyed life in America, learning English and adjusting quickly. Anastacio tried his hand at several jobs--at one point even running a restaurant in Gooding--but settled on employment for the Idaho School for the Deaf and Blind for 13 years before his retirement. Even after all these years in Idaho, Anastacio considers himself to be "99.9% Basque." His daughters have both married American men, and yet have not become US citizens! The Arriaga family loves to return to the Basque country, and Anastacio actively participates in the Gooding Basque Association. The family maintains a home in Bolivar. |
| Anastacio Arriaga | Read the interview summary |
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Growing Up During Civil War (5:29) |
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Anastacio's wedding portrait (1958) |
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Basque Museum & Cultural Center, Boise, Idaho USA All rights reserved. Webpage designed by Lisa Corcostegui, Center for Basque Studies, Reno, Nevada USA |