+ Jaialdi 2025 +
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+ Jaialdi 2025 +
#boise#idaho #jaialdi #kalimotxo #arraun #act #euskaldntzak #diaspora #drawing #mixedmedia #paper #doodles #fanart #funart #contemporaryart #comic #manga #anime #japan #cartoon #joker #gotham #dc #cartoonetwork #over #vibra #fujiofujiko #shizuka #popeye #murder https://www.instagram.com/p/CC8BlSQKDPJ/?igshid=gxzj6t59d8nw
Show your Basque pride with a Lauburu shank button in fine pewter. #basque #lauburu #jaialdi #buttons #sewing #knitting #buttoncollector #pewter #treasurecast #boise #idaho #madeinidaho #buylocal (at Treasure Cast) https://www.instagram.com/p/CAWK2e2HXoM/?igshid=1d00geoz4cdvl
Another brooch for the Basque ladies. It has a small Lauburu suspended in a heart. All made with fine pewter. . . #basque #heart #lauburu #basquejewelry #jaialdi #boise #idaho #pewter #madeinboise #madeinidaho #brooch #pin #jewelry #pewterjewelry (at Treasure Cast) https://www.instagram.com/p/B9z29QcJwRX/?igshid=61f8e9blen9c
A Taste of Basque Paella Amid Idaho’s Potatoes
By Kirk Johnson, NY Times, Aug. 4, 2015
BOISE, Idaho--When the president of the Basques arrived here in Idaho’s capital from Europe late last month, the mayor stepped in to interpret for him into English from Basque, one of the world’s most ancient and difficult languages.
“Boise is part of Basque Country,” said the mayor, David H. Bieter, in an interview, explaining his role.
Mr. Bieter’s brother, John, a professor of history at Boise State University who was at the time running an academic conference across town about all things Basque--coordinated with the weeklong festival that had drawn the president, Iñigo Urkullu--said he could not agree more.
“If you’re into Basque studies,” he said, “this is Christmas.”
Many Americans might think of Idaho as potato country, so successfully has the agriculture industry branded the place, right down to the license plates. It is also one of the least ethnically diverse states, with more than 93 percent of its population classified as white, according to the census.
But every five years, a wild and often hidden streak in its history and culture steps up to shout, “Ongi Etorri!” (That’s Basque for “Welcome!”)
A Basque street party called Jaialdi takes over downtown Boise, celebrating the roots that were sunk deep by a wave of Basque immigrants who mostly came as shepherds in the early 20th century. The Bieter brothers, (pronounced BEE-ter), the unofficial first family of the local Basque world, dust off their chops in speaking the language. The taps open to a tide of kalimotxo, a Basque cocktail of red wine and cola. And people eat black beans and paella.
With an estimated 35,000 or more attendees--this year’s was the seventh Jaialdi (Basque for “festival time”) since the first one in 1987--it is one of the biggest Basque festivals outside Europe.
A century ago, Basques also came to other corners of the American West, like Bakersfield, Calif., and Elko, Nev. Thousands more went to Argentina and Chile. And in some places, those old roots withered to memory.
What happened to keep the story and heritage alive in Idaho was partly that in a state with a small population--1.6 million now, and far smaller when the Basque wave broke--the immigrants stood out. Idaho’s Basques also mostly came from one province in Spain, Bizkaia, which created a cohesive web of interconnected families. California’s Basque community, by contrast, is much more heavily from the French side of the border.
But it is also at least partly a family story, in how John and David Bieter’s father, Pat, fell in love with Basque life and pulled his family in with him, starting in the mid-1970s. Pat Bieter married into a Basque family (John and David’s mother, Eloise, was the daughter of Basque immigrants), and in 1974, as a professor of education at Boise State University, he led its first yearlong study-abroad foray to the Basque region in Spain, taking his family with him.
John was 12 that year, and David, now 55, was 14. Spain’s leader, Gen. Francisco Franco, who died in 1975, was still actively suppressing Basque traditions and language, which in turn led to an even deeper connection, the brothers said, as the Boise Basques and the Spanish Basques reached out to one another.
The trip became a university tradition and eventually an anchor of its Basque studies program, of which John Bieter, 53, is now the associate director.
“It completely transformed our lives,” he said of the 1974 trip.
David Bieter, who served in the State Legislature as a Democrat before being elected mayor in 2003, said that after his parents were killed in a car accident in 1999--Pat was 68 and Eloise 73--their father’s Basque dream seemed more important than ever to fulfill. “He saw something that ought to be done, and he was the one crazy enough to do it,” David Bieter said.
At the Basque Museum and Cultural Center, which has the only preschool Basque-language immersion program outside Europe, Shamilee Ybarguen-Adams was telling her two daughters one afternoon last week about the lonely lives of the immigrant sheepherders, and how once upon a time, Idaho had three million sheep that needed tending.
Ms. Ybarguen-Adams, 34, who lives in Boise and is the granddaughter of a Basque herder, said that for her, Jaialdi was partly about picking up where past Idaho Basques left off and making sure the next generation did not forget.
“The second generation tried to get away from it; the third is trying to bring it back,” she said. Her girls, Joanna, 6, and Isabella, 4, will start Basque dance lessons this fall, she said.
I've got my bestie, sangria, and Basque dancing - what more could a girl want? #Jaialdi
Hay bale toss. #Basque #Boise #Jaialdi