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Basque in Glory
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Secretary of State Pete Cenarrusa would claim that he is not so different from many second-generation Idaho Basquesjust luckier. He was born in Carey, Idaho, in 1918, to immigrants from Gernika who met four years earlier in Shoshone. Like many of their generation, they left Spains poor economy to seek work on ranches in the western United States. Pete grew up speaking Basque and got to know many Basque sheepherders. As I listened to them talk about herding sheep and the sheep business, he says, I absorbed a lot of knowledge about the range sheep operation, and how they grazed and raised their lambs, and how the dogs worked with the sheep. After attending Blaine County schools, he studied animal husbandry and agricultural education at the University of Idaho, graduating in 1940. His first job was teaching agricultural sciences and coaching in Cambridge, Idaho. After a year, he jumped at a $10 per month raise (to $115) to return home to Carey High School where he also taught and coached. With some pride, he notes, I started the team, and found used uniforms for all of them in Hailey for just $25. During World War II, Cenarrusa enlisted in the Navy, taught aviation cadets and was trained as a close-air support fighter pilot in preparation for the invasion of Japan. Just as he was ready to see action, the United States bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, abruptly ending the war. Upon returning to Idaho, Petes classroom experience again proved invaluable. He found work teaching farming methods to veterans. Since I had the background of teaching agriculture and a university degree in agriculture, I was hired as teacher for the whole of Blaine County for the Veterans Administration, and Idaho Vocational Education. I did that for three years and got acquainted with everyone in Blaine County because I visited all their farms. In 1948, Republican Party members approached the handsome, affable Basque and encouraged him to run for office. Eventually he agreed and was elected to the House of Representatives in 1950. Since the legislature met every two years, Cenarrusa could continue teaching while joining in the operation of his familys farming and sheep business. Although he eventually left teaching because of time constraints, he remains active in ranching today. His operation pioneered the transporting of bands of sheep to California winter range, and has cooperated with the UI at the U. S. Sheep Experiment Station at Dubois to test melatonin, a hormone that increases ovulation in ewes so they can produce more early-season twins. Our country
is so far ahead of other countries in agriculture because of the land-grant
system, he maintains. Here we have the University of Idaho,
and the UI extension and ag research all over the state. Dr. (Marie S.)
Bulgin at the Caine Veterinary Teaching Center is very good. She knows
more about sheep than almost anyone in this or any other state.
You cant imagine how important the agriculture sector is in the state of Idaho, he says. Thats how I get elected, because I understand it and know how to deal with it on the land board. I get criticism from environmentalists sometimes that Im too good to the farmers and ranchers, but youve got to have some compassion for people. Im not about to take opportunities away from people to better themselves. This compassion extends
to the Basques in Spain, with whom Cenarrusa has been in close contact
for years. At his urging, in 1972 the Idaho Legislature sent a petition
to Congress asking the government of Spain to extend human rights principles
to all Basques and Spaniards and allow amnesty for those imprisoned or
exiled for political activities. Idaho Senator Frank Church read the petition
into the Congressional Record on April 6. Cenarrusa also has fostered
dialogue between Basque nationalists and the Basque people to work out
a compromise to stop terrorism. For his efforts, Pete was inducted into
the Basque Hall of Fame and, in January this year, was honored as a Basque
of the World in ceremonies in the Basque Country. |
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