July / 2001
The View from Plum Lick

Badge of freedom
by: David Dick

In 1968, Geza Desi became an American citizen. A native of Hungary, he fled the 1956 Communist invasion of Budapest. He was only 15 years old back then, but he knew what he wanted-freedom. The idea came to him as naturally as breathing.
"When I made up my mind to leave, I told my father and he said, 'Son, it's your decision. Go, if that's what you want to do, and go with God's blessing.' "
The son never saw his parents again. But he always remembered them.
Geza Desi became a refugee to Austria, then Portugal, then Austria again. Along the way, he was detained by soldiers, questioned and released. Finally in February of 1958, the boy of 17 arrived on a plane in New York. He couldn't speak any English. He didn't know anybody.
Geza was a determined immigrant to a New World of promise. "They pinned a badge on me and gave me five dollars. They put me on a bus, and it took me to the train station. They put me on a train, and I arrived in East St. Louis, where I had some relatives."
The Hungarian youth saw a bright future ahead. He intuitively understood the importance of recognizing opportunities and making the most of them. He knew the value of work and sacrifice. He wasn't angry and he didn't blame others. He taught himself to speak English after a teacher told him, "If you're going to be here you're going to have to learn English." Now, at age 59, Geza still has problems writing, but despite an 8th-grade education and a pronounced accent, his spoken words and thoughts are crystal clear.
As a young man, he migrated to Wolfe County, Kentucky, right above Sky Ridge, where he worked in a home for children. Three years later he married Wilma, and they realized if they were going to raise a family it was time to earn more money.
Geza moved to Jackson in Breathitt County where he worked as a plumber and air conditioner repairman. He inherited a tradition of sheet-metal work from his father back in Hungary. Repairing pots and pans was an important part of the job, a place to begin.
Next stop: Clark County, where Geza found his home of homes in the community of Ford above the Kentucky River. For the past 19 years, Geza Desi has been the heating and maintenance man at St. Joseph's Hospital in Lexington. Wilma and Geza's four children have flourished in their native America: a teacher who is a graduate of Berea College; a tree trimmer; a secretary; and a pharmacy technician.
Ask Geza Desi about the 4th of July, and what you receive is a quiet, careful lesson about the responsibility that goes with living in a free country.
"First of all, we should think about why we have this holiday. We ought to realize that the 4th of July was created because people fought for freedom.
"Freedom is something that we all have to work for and appreciate. I was trying to get free. I took a chance at it. Freedom is a commodity that is very precious and, sometimes, we have to give everything we have for that freedom."
Freedom is a hard commodity to pin down.
"The 4th of July means a lot of people gave their lives for us to have freedom and to have the kind of life we choose to live. Everybody ought to appreciate it. It's more than just a holiday."
Geza Desi is an unusually quiet-spoken and mannered individual who doesn't take his country or his freedom for granted. He chooses his thoughts carefully and doesn't rush to be judgmental. In his own words, "We ought to be tolerant of each other."
Truly, it might be said of Geza Desi, every day is his 4th of July.

David Dick was a retired news correspondent and University of Kentucky professor emeritus, and a farmer and shepherd. Read more about him at www.kyauthors.com.