Day: July 15, 2009

Poetry

July 15 – The Street Urchin by Ada Negri

When in the muddy street, I see him running,
     His little shoes all worn,
His trousers ragged and his jacket torn,
His handsome face most mischievous and cunning;

And when I see him ‘mid the surging eddy
     Of carts, he steals or begs,
Now deftly throwing stones at poor curs’ legs,
Bold and corrupt, a youthful thief already;

And when I see him laugh, I can’t help thinking :
     “His mother is all day
There in the mill; in prison his father —” nay,
Poor flower he of thorns!” —”My heart is sinking

Within me, with anxiety I wonder:
     “What will become of thee,
Without a guide on this tempestuous sea
Of life, forlorn and ignorant? I wonder

What thou wilt be and what will be thy station
     Some twenty years from now;
An honest workman with a sunburnt brow?
A useful member of our struggling nation?

The labourer’s honest shirt shall thou be wearing
     Or convict’s garb! Or shall
I see thee wretched at the hospital,
At work, in prison, a vagabond wayfaring?”

And lo! Across the street I would run over
     And in supreme distress,
In agony, in pity I would press
Him to my heart; with kisses I would cover

His mouth, his forehead; close beside him kneeling,
     Would whisper in his ears,
Choked by compassion’s quickly rising tears,
These sacred words, full of a sister’s feeling:

“I too was born ‘mong thorns, the sky above me,
     My mother too for me
Was working hard there in the factory,
I know what want and suffering mean —” I love thee.”

Translated by A.M. Von Blomberg

Street urchins in 19th-century Lambeth

Quando lo vedo per la via fangosa
     Passar sucido e bello,
Colla giacchetta tutta in un brandello,
Le scarpe rotte e l’aria capricciosa,

Quando il vedo fra i carri o sul selciato
     Coi calzoncini a brani,
Gettare i sassi nelle gambe ai cani,
Gií  ladro, gií  corrotto e gií  sfrontato;

Quando lo vedo ridere e saltare,
     Povero fior di spina,
E penso che sua madre è all’officina,
Vuoto il tugurio e il padre al cellulare,

Un’angoscia per lui dentro mi serra;
     E dico: “Che farai
Tu che stracciato ed ignorante vai
Senz’appoggio ne guida sulla terra?…

De la capanna garrulo usignolo,
     Che sarai fra vent’anni?
Vile e perverso spacciator d’inganni,
Operaio solerte, o borsaiuolo?

L’onesta blusa avrai del manovale,
     O quella del forzato?
Ti rivedrò bracciante o condannato,
Sul lavoro, in prigione, o all’ospedale?…,,

… Ed ecco, vorrei scender ne la via
     E stringerlo sul core,
In un supremo abbraccio di dolore,
Di pietí , di tristezza e d’agonia;

Tutti i miei baci dargli in un istante
     Sulla bocca e sul petto,
E singhiozzargli con fraterno affetto
Queste parole soffocate e sante:

“Anch’io vissi nel lutto e nelle pene,
     Anch’io son fior di spina;
E l’ebbi anch’io la madre all’officina,
E anch’io seppi il dolor… ti voglio bene.,,

Christian Witness, Perspective, ,

Where hope is found

Eminem’s new video draws parallels between his career and the economic state of his hometown, Detroit.

Having grown up in a declining rust belt city I see the parallels. The struggle is to continuously recognize your inner beauty and that of your neighbor in the midst of decay, neglect, and abuse. Faith is that lifeline. The call of our Lord and Savior breaks through the walls and the depression. He tells you that beauty does exist — right there in your humanity and that of your neighbor.

Christian Witness, Perspective, Political

Catholic when convenient

Anthony Stevens-Arroyo dissects Roman Catholic pundits who love the Bishop of Rome when he speaks their creed and who cast him into a corner when they disagree. True, the Pope can and does err, and Roman Catholic dogmas never declared the Pope infallible in his personal pronouncements, his personal political views, or even his personal theological perspective. That said, he does speak for the Church and is charged with teaching things consistent with the Catholic faith. Sometimes he teaches things people just don’t like. A person’s personal likes and dislikes matter little in the face of such teaching.

From Mr. Stevens-Arroyo’s Washington Post column: Vatican Insiders and Outsiders

Like most large organizations, the Catholic Church experiences both insiders and outsiders… The insider role to the Vatican has been played for more than a decade by George Weigel, the official biographer of Pope John Paul II and a trusted spokesperson for the conservative right-wing in U.S. politics. But in the law of political changes, today’s insider can become tomorrow’s outsider. That, I think, has been the turnaround for Weigel.

Named official biographer for Pope John Paul II, Wiegel was given unparalleled access to the Vatican and to the persons and places surrounding the pontiff. But Weigel was not content in producing a quality biography (Witness to Hope, 1999): he decided to parlay his access with the church into an influential role among neo-conservatives. His insider status with the Vatican allowed him to wax expansively in the conservative media about “what the pope really meant.” Almost without exception, Weigel considered the pope’s thinking to be in line with Republican Party politics.

Weigel then set up shop at Washington’s Ethics and Public Policy Center, one of many “think tanks” within the Beltway. His opinions were regularly posted by the National Review, the birthplace of “Mater, Sí­; Magistra, No!” While no doubt his political job paid the bills, it also aligned him with the authors of the classic Cafeteria Catholic dismissal of papal authority in matters of social justice. The compromise was painfully evident when first John Paul II and then his successor, Benedict XVI, condemned the invasion of Iraq. Weigel voiced the line that “abortion was an intrinsic evil” which meant no deviation was possible, but that waging an unjust war or supporting the death penalty were areas where good Catholics like himself could openly differ with papal teaching. Weigel’s postings became more ideological and less insightful, I think. Clearly, with the majority of Catholic voters supporting Barack Obama for president in 2008, Weigel had been turned into an outsider in Washington. Then Weigel’s response to Pope Benedict’s social justice encyclical, Caritas in Veritate, revealed that he had been turned into an outsider for Vatican goings-on as well.

Weigel apparently believed that he could accept the parts of the encyclical with which he agreed politically and dismiss the rest of the pope’s teaching. He inferred that Pope Benedict had not been honest with the world’s Catholics but instead had succumbed to ideas foisted on him by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace According to Weigel, Pope Benedict produced a document in which certain passages were “golden” (as in GOP) and others were “red” (as in Communist). When discussing the pope’s call to lessen world poverty through international cooperation, Weigel opined that “it may mean something naïve or dumb.” Weigel concluded that rather than an expression of the Ordinary Magisterium of the Church, Caritas in Veritate was “an encyclical that resembles a duck-billed platypus.” One wonders if the inability to find coherence in a papal document is the fault of the pope or of prejudgments from analysts like George Weigel…

The mixing of politics and faith leads to an internal dichotomy and eventually to self-serving philosophies and theologies. Perhaps Mr. Weigel and those similarly situated should reconsider what it means to be Catholic, and particularly Roman Catholic. Catholicism often entails hard choices and a reordering of perspectives.

LifeStream

Daily Digest for July 15th

twitter (feed #4)
New blog post: New York Mills PNCC Parish continues to support its community http://bit.ly/14SrTl [#]
twitter (feed #4)
New blog post: July 13 – Lessons in religion from Fr. Twardowski by Tomasz Jastrun http://bit.ly/7XtRx [#]
twitter (feed #4)
New blog post: July 14 – A Prayer and a Remonstation by Andrzej Bursa http://bit.ly/17EDnV [#]
twitter (feed #4)
New blog post: Catholic when convenient http://bit.ly/G9mOQ [#]
twitter (feed #4)
New blog post: Pierogi sale – July 26th in Plymouth, Pennsylvania http://bit.ly/8QuHJ [#]
twitter (feed #4)
New blog post: Where hope is found http://bit.ly/5sBT9 [#]
twitter (feed #4)
New blog post: July 15 – The Street Urchin by Ada Negri http://bit.ly/K7Wb6 [#]
PNCC, ,

New York Mills PNCC Parish continues to support its community

From the Utica Observer Dispatch: Bell Festival kicks off in New York Mills

When the Floyd Band invited its audience to dance Friday, only one couple was brave enough to accept the offer.

Beverly Floyd of New Hartford and Anthony Ricci of Schuyler cut the rug to a lively polka during the 7 p.m. concert in New York Mills’ Pulaski Park.

The concert was one of the first events held as part of the 10th Annual Bell Festival. The festival continues today with a chicken barbecue, a parade and fireworks.

The village also will present its annual Citizen of the Year award during a 6 p.m. ceremony.

Mayor Robert Maciol said the Bell Festival is a way to —honor the community’s heritage.— It’s held on Boilermaker weekend because many people who have moved away come back to the area for that event.

—It’s an opportunity for the whole community to come together,— he said. —…an old-fashioned, family-oriented, fun weekend.—

Event co-chairwoman Doreen Czupryna said the event began 10 years ago when the Sacred Heart of Jesus Holy Cross Polish National Catholic Church donated a bell from one of the former mills to the village. The bell is now part of a monument in the park, inscribed: —To the mill workers, with gratitude.—

The festival, which has drawn crowds of more than 2,000 people in previous year, also serves as an annual fundraiser for several local community groups including the fire department, the Lions Club and the VFW, Maciol and Czupryna said.

—The support is always great,— Czupryna said. —It varies every year with the weather and everything else, but we have good support. We really do.—

On Friday, kids with cotton candy walked past older couples on park benches, and families gathered at picnic tables to enjoy fair foods like fried fish, hotdogs, lemonade and strawberry shortcake.

The food booths were one of the first stops for Tammy Hall, her son Evan, 12, and her parents, Robert and Selma Mickel of Clinton. Hall said she and her son were attending for the first time after moving to the village recently.

—We’re starting a tradition,— she said.

Chris Jarosz, 30, said he’s lived in New York Mills for 23 years and hasn’t missed a Bell Festival since the event started in 2000. For the last two years, he’s been accompanied by his girlfriend, Renee Palumbo of New York Mills, and his nephew Jaedon Jarosz, 8, of New Hartford.

Palumbo said they primarily come for the food and to hang out, but that the festival’s location on Main Street is part of its appeal as well.

—It’s quiet,— she said. —It’s a good community. It’s good for kids. It’s good for adults.—

Jaedon had nothing but good things to say about the fish fry dinners sold by the church, and said he had enjoyed playing carnival games earlier in the evening.

—I just love the festival,— he said. —I love the food. I love everything.—