|
Behind The Camera:
Videographer Dave Geck
Reprinted by permission
Glen Ullin Times, Glen Ullin, ND, February 10,
1999
By Lori Clark
If you missed the Prairie Public documentary last night
[February 9, 1999] on Germans from Russia, you missed a big
piece of who we are in this area. The documentary, "The
Germans from Russia: Children of the Steppe, Children of the
Prairie", tells of the story of Germans from Russia as the
agricultural pioneers on several continents. It traced these
people from their native homes in Germany into Russia and
finally as they migrated to North America.
If you did watch it, you saw the work of Glen Ullin
resident, Dave Geck. Geck is a cameraman for Prairie Public
and you could see his work in the video throughout the
documentary.
Geck
said the documentary tells the history of Germans from
Russia. Currently, all kinds of documentaries are being done
on other ethnic groups and Prairie Public thought it was
important to do one on this ethnic group. He added, over 30
percent of North Dakotans can trace their roots to Odessa.
The film addresses both the Ukrainian/Russian and the
Great Plains experience of Germans from Russia. It is based
on both written history and oral histories collected from
Germans from Russia living today. It draws on the expertise
of Dr. Timothy Kloberdanz, Fr. William Sherman and Michael
Miller of NDSU, Ron Vossler of UND, Dr. Shirley Fischer
Arends and Dr. Dona Reeves-Marquardt.
North Dakota State University originally approached
Prairie Public about doing the documentary many years ago,
but Prairie Public could not fund the production at that
time. Since then, donations from several individuals and the
North Dakota Humanities Council made the project possible.
Geck said they started shooting the documentary over four
years ago. Filming included two trips to Europe. The first,
three years ago to Germany and Ukraine, including Odessa,
and a second trip a year later which also include St.
Petersburg.
In an effort to fully illuminate the story, crews also filmed in California,
Nebraska, South Dakota and North Dakota. The documentary also showed,
"the simple things we take for granted," Geck said, "like food."
He said as part of the documentary, they filmed an
elderly lady in Wishek making strudel. "When I see her, I
see grandma."
The filming was definitely low-budget compared to other
productions. Geck said he and the producer, Bob Dambach,
were a "one-man band. I swung my camera over my shoulder and
jumped on the plane." He added he carried the camera
wherever he went for the next two weeks.
Geck said traveling to
Ukraine is like "traveling back into time." He said the area
is full of small villages. Each home has a big back yard
with big garden and maybe some livestock. The area is then
farmed collectively by the residents. A lot of the homes had
three generations residing together. The residents were
living in extremely economic oppression and were very
self-sufficient, he said.
The city of Odessa was beautiful, he added. The
architecture was amazing, but time was taking its toll. The
city is 200 years old, he added, and many of the buildings
are literally falling apart. He said they were sitting at a
sidewalk cafe the day following a storm and a large chunk of
a building fell on the concrete beside them.
The lack of repairs is typical for a region in a terrible
economic situation, he said. He said the tips they would
give for a driver who accompanied them, $20, is equal to a
month's wages.
As we drove through villages, he added, we would see
people tending cows and sheep in fields without fences. In
one village, a man was taking a nap while watching sheep. A
moment much like a Norman Rockwell print.
He said it was a slow, easy pace. "What would it be to
live that type of lifestyle," he asked, compared to the
fast-pace society of ours.
Very few of the ethnic Germans in the villages still
spoke the German language, he said. Many were trying to get
back to their native Germany as a way of escaping the
oppressed economics of the region.
After filming in southern Ukraine, Geck said, "It was
very interesting talking to people who do genealogy. I
stayed in the village their forefathers came from."
Geck is a firm believer in documenting history, He said,
"It is important that our generation know where we came
from." By understanding, he added, we can appreciate what
our grandparents and great-grandparents went through to make
new homes on the prairies. "We can appreciate what these
people went through to settle this area."
He adds it is also important to document the stories
told. If these stories are not saved they disappear. He said
while filming the documentary, they heard terrible stories
about what happened to some of the German settlers in Russia
before World War I.
Geck has worked for Prairie Public for over eight years.
He said he gets to travel to some pretty interesting places
filming for Prairie Public. "It's a great job."
The stories he can tell about his travels could fill
volumes and he loves to talk about them. He added he is
always willing to talk to others about his job over a cup of
coffee.
Prior to working for Prairie Public, Geck was a body man
for four or five years, but had allergy problems with the
job. "I wanted a job I could wear jeans and stay clean." He
went to Denver, Colorado for some training, but most of his
knowledge has come from on the job training.
And the rest they say is history, as his passport will
proclaim.
Reprinted with permission
of "Glen Ullin Times", Glen Ullin, North Dakota.
|