Names don't have nationalities, people do. Names travel when people travel, so the name isn't tied so much to a country as people think.
If you know that your father came from Croatia, then that's the end of the argument with your cousin. Yes, there are people who emigrated from Poland who had the same surname. But that doesn't mean they were related...at least not within several generations.
In this case, of the people immigrating to the US with the name Sekula, 4 were Prussian/Polish, 4 were German, 2 were Austrian (or from one of the lands of the former empire of Austria-Hungary, which is probably your dad's family) and 1 was from Norway.
If your dad and/or grandparents came over after 1900 and were naturalized after 1906, then their Declarations of Intent and Naturalization petitions will settle all questions for you. They'll tell you where everyone was born, where everyone's parents were born, when they came to the US (including the name of the ship, the port of entry, the date they left and port they left, the date they arrived) and you'll find out every address they had after coming to the US and all family members who also came over. If you find out from those records that they claimed kinship with someone who declared they were Polish, then there might be more to the story. But never let anyone push you into assuming anything without having proof that it's really true.
2007-03-12 08:06:53
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answer #1
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answered by GenevievesMom 7
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Hey Nevada,
Ellis Island has many immigrants with this last name. Sekula, over 230. Polish makes sense because the Ellis Island records indicate Residence prior to coming to the USA. Also Russia. There are Genealogy sites to go beyond this cursory information, you can get records. Polish records keeping goes by town, and are in most cases better than American records.
Anyway, here are some sites that might help you if you decide to look deeper.
2007-03-12 14:43:38
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answer #2
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answered by BuyTheSeaProperty 7
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It's Hungarian.
The name Sekula can be traced to a village Turja Poljana [Polians'ka huta] in an area which was made Ung county 1913. Hungary.
2007-03-12 16:10:05
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answer #3
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answered by murkglider 5
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My father's family is Polish and as soon as I saw your posting, it jumped out at me as a Polish name.
2007-03-12 23:20:12
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answer #4
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answered by Petite Mama 2
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sekula
1. Jewish (from Poland): habitational name from the village of Sekula in eastern Poland.
2. Polish (Sekula): apparently from Latin saecula ‘centuries’, ‘ages’, perhaps a nickname for someone who constantly repeated the Latin religious incantation saecula saeculorum ‘for ever and ever’ (literally ‘for centuries of centuries’).
Dictionary of American Family Names, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-508137-4
This should help you and the source site could help you and others. Pass it on.
2007-03-12 14:50:29
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answer #5
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answered by dr 7 5
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try houseofnames.com
2007-03-12 19:27:28
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answer #6
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answered by KAT. 2
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