Chapter
Changing Times
Standing close to the bonfire made wiry little Joe Posnikoff hot and itchy, but the seven-year-old didnt back away. Something was going to happen, and he didnt want to miss it. The Posnikoffs had made the long journey from their farm near Arran, Saskatchewan, to a village called Veregin, mingling with more people than Joe had ever seen in one place. Wagons and buggies had rolled out from Pelly, Buchanan and nearby Kamsack, too. These people were just like the PosnikoffsDoukhobors.
Burning of Arms
In the language of Joes people, Doukhobor means spirit wrestlers. Joe wasnt sure exactly what that meant, but he knew it wasnt good. At school, the English-speaking kids said Doukhobor with their noses wrinkled, as if they smelled cow shit on his boots. When he and his parents went to Arran to buy supplies, some grown-up English-speakers looked at them the same way the kids at school did.
It made Joe wonder. Canada had so badly wanted the Doukhobors to start farms that it gave them the landhis father told himso why did people shun them? Was it because his mother and other Doukhobor women dressed in long handmade skirts behind colourful zanaveski (aprons) and wore white platki (kerchiefs) that covered their close-cropped hair? Little Joe wasnt sure.
The day before, Joe had asked his father why they were travelling so far. To celebrate the burning of arms, his father answered. Joes brothers, Fred and Harry, had their big ears hanging out, as usual. That night, when the boys were close to sleep, Fred wondered why people would want to burn their arms. Wouldnt it hurt? Joe chuckled. Arms meant guns, he whispered. His answer satisfied Fred and Harry, but it only got Joe wondering again. The only people he had seen carrying guns were those red-uniformed policemen. When the Posnikoffs visited Pelly, Joe had sneaked a look at the brown holster riding high on a policemans broad belt. What would that gun feel like in his hand? What would it feel like to actually shoot it?
After the Posnikoffs wagon rattled out of the barnyard, another question popped into Joes head. Why did Spirit Wrestlers burn their guns? His father glanced back with a funny look. Not just guns, George Posnikoff said, turning back to the team, but swords too. In the days before his grandparents had come to Canada, the Russian leader had been the czar. Doukhobors were soldiers in the czars army. They burned their arms because they didnt want to fight and kill. Many Doukhobors believed God lived inside every person. Killing someone was like killing God.
Joe considered this. If God lived somewhere inside him, He was sure quiet. Joe never felt Him moving, never heard His voice. Maybe Hed never been there, or maybe Hed left. Maybe God didnt want to live inside Joe, after all.
Maybe this czar had been like Canadas king, Joe decided. Joes teacher had told them about rulers. No, the king lived in England, he reminded himself. The Canadian ruler was the Prime-something-or-other. The teachers English words confused Joe and that made him angry. To make himself feel better, Joe silently recited words that other kids didnt know, like edinolichniki. Thats what the Posnikoffs and other Doukhobor families who owned their own land called themselves.
When Joes parents had been kids, the edinolichniki had left prairie Doukhobor villages like Vosnesinia and Osvobozhdeniye (let the teacher try to say those names!). It was the only way each family could own its own land. Most edinolichniki still had their farms, but those old villages20 of them alone around nearby Pelly and Arranwere almost all gone. Times changed, and the land the villagers had worked so hard to make into productive farms was snatched away by the government and sold off, simply because the villagers refused to swear an oath of allegiance to the king.
Following other wagons, the Posnikoffs turned into a field close to the ornate, two-storey house of Doukhobor leader Peter P. Verigin. They parked their wagon among the dozens of others and walked over to a large fire. What Joe saw reminded him of a Sunday sobranie, the weekly meeting of the people. Around the fire, men formed one ring and the women formed another behind them. Everyone said the Otchie Nash (the Lords Prayer, the teacher called it), the women sang psalms, and then one of the old men spoke about long-ago days in Russia, about Doukhobor soldiers who didnt want to kill anyone.
Branches and logs were heaped onto the bonfire, and the flames leaped higher. Men walked up and threw pieces of wood carved in the shape of guns into the blaze. Joe was disappointedit was all make-believe! Another man stepped up. Joe knew instinctively he was no Doukhobor, but what caught Joes eye was what the man was holding: real guns! Silently, the stranger began tossing those guns onto the fire, one after the other. Joe stood transfixed. Flames crept across the wooden stocks and flickered around the metal barrels. Joe wanted to reach out and touch those guns, but there was no way he could do that with everyone watching. Besides, those guns would soon be too hot to touch. One day, maybe...
Black Thursday
Perspiring under the hot lights, 17-year-old Gray Campbell was chalking the latest quotes on the wall-mounted blackboards in the customer room of an Ottawa stock brokerage. New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) clerks typed the latest prices and trade volumes into Thomas Edisons telegraphic gizmo, the stock ticker, and minutes later, in brokerage houses all over the US and Canada, little machines squatting on wooden pedestals spat those figures out on ribbons of ticker tape. If an investor wanted to watch his profits growing, he motored down to his broker, walked into the customers room, sat back, lit up and watched someone like Gray Campbell, ticker tape in hand, chalk the changes.
The investors sitting in their easy chairs behind Gray werent just rich tycoons anymore. As the market grew hot, banks and brokerages started making investment loans to people who had never stepped inside a boardroom or studied a balance sheet: stenographers, jazz musicians, mechanics, teachers and civil servants. Who cared if 20 percent interest was charged? Working stiffs bought stocks on margin (finance jargon that sounded nicer than loan), confident they would make thousands of dollars.
Damn, isnt this just the greatest time to be alive? the boys asked each other over brown-bag lunches. For young brokerage employees like Gray Campbell, whod been on the job a mere three weeks, the sky was the limit! But Gray didnt give a darn about getting in on the inside track of the market. Every day he went home hot, bored and irritable. Meanwhile, his father complained that Gray didnt give a darn about much of anything. He had finished school and had his future to consider. Gray was considering it, but he was as dead set against Kingstons Royal Military College as his father seemed dead set on his enrolment there.
However, on October 24, 1929, work was more interesting than usual. Even before the exchange opened, it was standing room only inside Grays customer room. The day before had been a shocker. In the final hour of trading, a stunning 2.6 million shares had changed hands, as many as usually traded in an entire day. Worse, prices had dropped. This Thursday morning, investors were nervous. Would the market rally? It always had done so before.
Eight hours drive south, the sight outside the NYSE rendered even the most blas New Yorker speechless. Hundreds of thousands of people stood before the six massive Corinthian columns, staring at the entrance doors. It wasnt the doors that captivated the crowd but a scarcely human sound coming from behind them. Inside, a thousand frantic men screamed one word, over and over: sell, sell, sell!
A few minutes after the exchanges opening gong, every customer watching Gray Campbell had lost money. By mid-afternoon, the ticker tape Gray held was useless. The latest figures were hours old, even with the ticker clicking away at the unprecedented speed of 500 characters a minute.
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