Month: August 2010

Events, PNCC, ,

Cathedral events – block party and flea market

Giant Indoor Flea Market at St. Stanislaus PNCC Center from Friday, August 20th to Sunday, August 22nd. Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m., 530 E. Elm St., Scranton. The market features antiques, collectibles, furniture, toys, jewelry, tools, clothing, household items; and of course, homemade Polish food.

St. Stanislaus Polish National Catholic Cathedral will hold a Block Party, August 27th and 28th from 5-10 p.m., Pittston Avenue and East Elm Street featuring kielbasa, potato pancakes, pierogies, noodles and cabbage, pizza, steak and cheese sandwiches, clams, drinks, games and music. Call 570-961-9231 for more information.

Christian Witness, Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia,

Family, everywhere

From the Abington Journal: Overflowing with family fun: Relatives from 17 states attend Borek-Pendrak reunion

RANSOM TWP. – A downpour of rain did not put a damper on one family reunion Sunday, July 25. At 10 a.m., the Borek-Pendrak Biennial Reunion commenced with registration. But by 1 p.m., heavy rain had already begun to fall as more guests arrived to find a soggy parking area behind the home of Edward Edwin Borek in the Milwaukee section of Ransom Township. Some guests brought food and desserts to share and other kin such as Paul and Dorothy Kwiatkowski of Old Forge prepared favorites such as sausage and peppers and rigatoni with homemade meat sauce

—Another thing I like about our reunion is that we never, ever, ask anybody coming to the reunion for money. It’s all free will. If they want to give, fine, and if they don’t want to give, that’s fine. But we don’t request anyone to make a contribution. Since 1945, we never ran short of money. I use the two —G— words: the family is very generous and gracious,— said Roman Borek,— a native of Milwaukee who resides in Pasadena, Ca.

This year, relatives made the trek from states such as California, Indiana, Florida, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Colorado and Virginia.

According to Ed Borek, Borek-Pendrak family reunions started at the end of World War II in 1945. He said, —The reunions started in 1945 to honor WWII Veterans from both the European and Pacific theaters. My mother and father had the desire to honor the veterans and it was a very, very memorable event. Throughout the years, we’ve had periodic reunions, but in 1990, we re-established the Borek-Pendrak reunion committee. For the last 10 years, we’ve had the reunions at my house because it was the perfect location in the country.—

As guests trickled in under the huge tent erected to the rear of the family homestead, Roman Borek gave each family member a nametag. The twin brothers, Ed and Roman Borek, along with a reunion committee, have been planning since February 2010 when Roman sent invitations to 246 head-of-household families scattered throughout the United States.

Every two years for as long as Roman Borek remembers, on the last Sunday in July on even-numbered years, rain or shine, the Borek-Pendrak family has gathered.

In the program booklet that each guest received are words that summarize perhaps why family from 17 states made their way to this reunion:

—What it means to be Family? Being Family means sharing celebrations when good times abound, and having arms to hold you when tears fall.

Being Family means you belong somewhere special, where you are known and loved just as you are, and where you are encouraged to become the person you still hope to be.

Being Family means that every season of the year you have a place to call home, a place of your own, where they hold you forever close to their hearts…—

What family is all about. Also, check out the pic of Fr. Jason, assistant priest at St. Stanislaus cathedral.

Current Events, Perspective, PNCC, , , ,

More on church closings

From the Los Angeles Times: Cleveland’s Catholic Church closures leave ethnic enclaves dispirited
Proud Eastern European communities fight to save what they see as a cultural heritage.

On a back street in urban Cleveland, Hungarian immigrants built St. Emeric Catholic Church, where a dozen stained glass windows recall their history and a mural of their first king, St. Stephen, overlooks the altar.

For more than 100 years, waves of Hungarians swept into Cleveland from the wars and upheavals in Europe, finding work in the area’s steel mills and auto plants. They were part of a tide of Eastern Europeans who became a backbone of the industrial economy here.

But the factories have been closing in recent decades, and now the churches are closing too.

Under orders of Cleveland Bishop Richard Gerard Lennon, St. Emeric parish will be eliminated and the church, along with an adjoining Hungarian Boy Scout center and a cultural school, will be closed.

In one of the largest retrenchments of the Roman Catholic Church in America, Lennon ordered the closure of 50 parishes in his diocese, more than half of them with ethnic congregations —” largely Eastern European.

The final closures are occurring this month, fueling sadness and anger among parishioners.

“I pray every day to keep St. Emeric open,” said Joseph Balint, who immigrated to Cleveland and worked at a naval weapons factory after he fought in the Hungarian revolution. “It is really a sad story, but I believe in miracles.”

The communities are not going down without a fight. They have marched on the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in downtown Cleveland and petitioned the church courts in Rome. Each Sunday, a group of Poles gathers outside the closed St. Casimir Church on the northeastern side of the city, praying and singing the Polish national anthem.

“These tough men came to this country and built churches for themselves,” said Malgosia Feckanin, who left Poland during the Cold War and prays outside St. Casimir. “Now this man, Richard Lennon, wants to take them away. It reminds me so much of communism.”

So far, Lennon has not backed off. On many Sundays, he personally says a final Mass at the churches scheduled for closure, though he is sometimes unwelcome.

Plainclothes Cleveland police sit in the pews and uniformed officers have a heavy presence outside. Protest signs refer to the diocese as “Lennongrad.”

“I am not without sensitivity,” a beleaguered Lennon told a congregation being closed in Akron this year. Howls of laughter erupted from the pews.

The problems in Cleveland are affecting much of the industrial Midwest, where ethnic enclaves have been hit hard during the long industrial decline. Dioceses in Scranton, Pa., Buffalo, N.Y., and Detroit have gone through similar shrinkages but without the public clash that has occurred in Cleveland.

Robert Tayek, a diocese spokesman, said Lennon was being blamed unfairly for a process that began before he arrived. Lennon took over on May 15, 2006, when it was already clear that Cleveland had too many parishes in its urban core.

The closures have been driven by monetary losses in many of the parishes, migration to the suburbs and a shortage of priests, Tayek said.

That explanation is sharply disputed by some of the parishes, which contend they are financially healthy and have recruited foreign-born priests to conduct services in native languages. The closures are pushing them into what they call impersonal suburban churches.

“Lennon wants a homogenized product,” said Stanislav Zadnik, an electrician unemployed since November 2008. On June 20, Zadnik’s Slovene parish, St. Lawrence, is scheduled to close.

Lennon supports the ethnic role the Catholic Church plays in Cleveland, Tayek said, but at some of those churches, “you can throw a baseball and not hit anybody.” In many cases, he said, the parishioners drive into the urban neighborhoods only for church services, and then often only on holidays.

A former television news reporter, Tayek identifies himself as a Bohemian —” half Slovak and half Czech. His grandfather worked in a steel mill, he said.

The sharp reaction has surprised the bishop, Tayek acknowledged. The diocese has received e-mailed threats of violence, he said.

About 10 parishes have filed formal appeals with Catholic courts in Rome. Even while those appeals are under review, the diocese has put some church properties up for sale, another sore point with the closed congregations.

In another effort to stop the closures, Nancy McGrath sued Lennon and the diocese, challenging their legal authority to move without the consent of the parishes. The diocese countersued, charging her with trespassing after a church service.

McGrath, who formed the Code Purple protest group, claims the diocese has a hidden agenda of grabbing parish bank accounts to pay off confidential settlements involving allegations of sexual abuse by priests.

St. Wendelin had $1.2 million in its account, St. Emeric $1.3 million and St. Lawrence $990,000, according to figures compiled by Endangered Catholics, a group formed to protest the church closures.

Tayek acknowledged that the diocese had made confidential legal settlements for sexual abuse claims, but he said the cost was covered by special reserves and that none of the church closings was based on a need to pay such claims.

The diocese, rather than seizing parish assets, will transfer money with the congregations when parishes are merged, Tayek said.

The bishop’s explanations fail to ring true in many of the tidy churches where closings are tearing apart friendships that go back a lifetime and threatening to loosen people’s grips on their cultural identities.

“We built these churches on the sweat and money of our ancestors who came here,” said John Juhasz, a member of St. Emeric. “The closings are an assault on the ethnic component of the church…”

From The Times: Voice grows louder for Save the Parishes
Frustration continues to grow from Save the Catholic Parishes of Streator

Sixty-five people in support of the organization met Monday at Polish National Alliance Hall to discuss the fate of their Catholic parishes. The group discussed the engineering report by Healy, Bender and Associates, a possible protest at the steps of St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception in Peoria, and limiting donations to the parishes.

Organizer Melissa Peters invited members of the Vision 21 Board and Rev. Monsignor John Prendergast to the meeting. None attended.

Their absence stirred up a crowd looking for answers.

“Interest is starting to build as we hear about possible demolitions of the convent at St. Anthony and rectory at St. Stephen,” said Siobhan Elias, parishioner at St. Stephen. “Like I said, it’s rumors now but considering what happened with St. Stephen School (demolition). It happened so quickly, it wouldn’t surprise me if (those buildings) were slated to come down very soon. If people want to stop it, they have to stop giving or get involved.”

At the meeting, the group discussed busing people to Peoria to protest in front of Bishop Daniel Jenky’s church.

Others found it difficult to cut their donations. Karen Ricca, a St. Anthony parishioner, suggested only donating three out of the four weeks with a dollar, then on the fourth week, giving a regular donation. She said to set that money aside and give it only if the parishes decide to stay open.

“That is one of the few ways we can get the diocese to listen to us,” Elias said. “I called three people at their office and Ihaven’t heard back from any of them…”

Of course, I would invite these folks to do what the people of Scranton, Buffalo, Chicago, Toledo, and other locales have been doing since 1897, explore the faith, history, claims, governance, and polity of the Polish National Catholic Church. Do this in a positive way; you may be far more comfortable in a Church where you actually do have a voice and a vote.

Christian Witness, Events, PNCC, , ,

XXIII General Synod of the Polish National Catholic Church

The XXIII General Synod of the Polish National Catholic Church will be held from Monday, October 4th to Friday, October 8th, 2010 at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, 5685 Falls Ave., Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada. The XXIII General Synod is being hosted by the Canadian Diocese of the Polish National Catholic Church.

The Synod registration fee is C$750. Hotel reservations may be made directly with the hotel by calling 1-800-519-9911. Guests should request the special convention rate for the Polish National Catholic Church which is separate from the Synod registration fee.

Synod Registration will take place Sunday, October 3rd from 5-9pm and Monday, October 4th from 8am to noon. Opening Holy Mass will take place on Monday, October 4th at 1pm. Synod banquets will be held on Monday and Thursday evening. Dinning vouchers will be provided to cover Tuesday and Wednesday evening. The Synod will close with lunch on Friday, October 8th.

Elections will be held for the Office of the Prime Bishop of the Polish National Catholic Church. Two candidates for the Office of Bishop will also be elected. As more details become available I will offer them here.

Additional information may also be obtained from the Pre-Synod Committee, Holy Trinity Parish, 880 Barton Street East, Hamilton, Ontario, L8L 3B7, Canada. Telephone the Parish at 905-549-0470 or contact Mr. Anthony Jasinski at 416-543-8910 or by E-mail.

Events, PNCC, , , ,

PNCC – Upcoming National Events

National United Women’s Societies for the Adoration of the Most Blessed Sacrament – Women’s Retreat

The Heart of a Woman – The National United Women’s Societies for the Adoration of the Most Blessed Sacrament 2010 retreat at the Bishop Hodur Retreat and Recreation Center, 596 Honesdale Road, Waymart, PA 18472 – August 12 – 14, 2010. Please download a copy of the 2010 Retreat Registration Form or contact Jean Macionus for registration information and forms.

YMS of R Track & Field Meet (Zlot)

The 82nd Annual YMS of R Track and Field Meet – Zlot – will be held Saturday, September 4, 2010 at the YMS of R Park on Kane Street in Scranton, PA. The rain date is Sunday, September 5, 2010. For further information, contact Nick Kazinetz.

70th Bi-Annual Convention of the National Young Men’s Society of the Resurrection

The 70th Bi-Annual Convention of the YMS of R will be held October 23rd and 24th, 2010 at Holy Mother of Sorrows Polish National Catholic Church, 212 Wyoming Avenue, Dupont, PA. The convention theme is to unite the youth of the PNCC in God’s name and in the name of the endeavor for the perfection of life. For further information, please contact Nick Kazinetz.

Christian Witness, PNCC, Saints and Martyrs, , , , , , ,

Get your flowers and herbs ready

Many PNCC Parishes will bless flowers and herbs on the Solemnity of the Dormition and Assumption of the Blessed Virgin on Sunday, August 15th. For instance:

St. Mary’s Polish National Catholic Church will have a blessing of the harvest in honor of the Dormition-Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Sunday, August 15th before the 8:30 and 11 a.m. Masses at the church, 200 Stephenson St., Duryea, PA. The parishioners and public are encouraged to bring an item from their garden (vegetables, flowers, and herbs) as a way of giving thanks to God for the bounty of the Earth. For more information please call the Rev. Carmen Bolock, pastor, at 570-457-2291.

Check with a parish near you for details.

Christian Witness, Poetry, ,

Have you ever met a writer?

John Guzlowski has a new poem about the first writer he ever met, Paul Carroll, in Ode to Paul Carroll. The piece discusses Mr. Carroll’s influence on John’s writing and life. A great question – Who is the first writer you met (or the first person of significant influence on your life choices)?

Here’s Paul Carroll discussing history and human dignity in light of Catholic faith:

You, Gulls, Three Ghosts by Paul Carroll

Hard
spring
here. Sun seldom
sleet &
the rawboned winds.

But I see you in Paris, dear,
rummaging around the Flea Market
as if you’re searching for that Russian petticoat
embroidered by your mother for her wedding-day.

Or in a café,
sketching: trying to catch
the flip and sneer,
and the quick grace
Of the Paris rhetoric
around you.
Or in the Luxembourg-
a mild breeze crinkling through the tufts of buds
& your dark hair.

But seven months of separation
can turn affection to a photograph-
no flesh and blood
to it. Like the dream I had two nights ago
which I cant seem to shake:
Somehow I was hooting in my highschool stadium.
Clammy. Drizzly. Almost spring.
Beneath the hometeam goal post
six men in stovepipe hats
drew bead with dueling pistols.
But they shot blanks. Puffs of smoke
became a flock of frantic birds
scooping above me as I waded through alfalfa
somewhere in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia.
My arm
(or was it yours?)
bound in a sling
flung around
the shoulder of my friend
Frank Guest.
I think I felt ecstatic. But a tractor,
chugging, muffled what I had to say to him.
Arm became
an empty
flapping sleeve.
Or ghost.
Or bird maybe.

On the way to work this morning
I walked along the Oak St. beach
a wedge of fog
obscured the traffic
& the lake. Suddenly
dead friends began to flutter at the margin of my thoughts
just like the gulls above, sweet,
invisible
but for the swoosh
of wings. That handful:

a girl named Ruth I knew in college,
the sleet-bit look about her eyes
so like this spring hard,
uncompromising in the knowledge of
how niggardly are our attempts to touch.
Or try to talk
Together,

And Frank. Now a photograph like her.
How stubbornly he would insist
the age we live in is corrupt, lacking
(as perhaps it does)
any traffic with the preternatural.
Still. His love was ingrown, too
fiercely reticent. As if,
despite the good soil his intellect was rooted in,
he secretly believed the God he got from Plato & Augustine
was ignorant and stunted as his alcoholic father.

Kit Carney, too:
lost in the multiplication of his public self
frightened by the silence in his heart.

And you, Junie. Last & most.
Sometimes I think you are the blood
circulating in my arm. But even as I write, dear,
I cannot help but wonder if
even at our best
we too don’t cultivate
that curious corruption
I sought for in the others:

the unspoken guarantee that
regardless of how firm this present love
it will become a gull abandoned in the fog.

PNCC,

Sad news at St. Francis of Assisi Parish

From The Denver Post: Statue of St. Francis stolen from Denver parish

A brilliant white statue of St. Francis —” the Patron Saint of Animals —” was taken sometime Friday night from the front of the St. Francis National Catholic Church in southeast Denver.

Father John Kalabokes said that St. Francis had stood in front of the small church, which is near Leetsdale Drive, for 18 years.

“My reaction was one of a great deal of disappointment,” said Kalabokes. “I’ve had a lot of mixed emotions. I just got the feeling that they (the thieves) felt they needed him more and may have put him in their yard.”

Kalabokes said St. Francis National Catholic Church is a very small parish of mostly fixed income people.

“It is a big hit,” he said. “We struggle to make ends meet.”

A similar staute will cost about $3,500, he said.

Kalabokes said the thief or thieves tore the statue, located in front of the church at 556 S. Jersey St., off its base. It had been securely bolted to the ground, he said.

They then lifted it over the railing that surrounded the statue, leaving white scrapes on the railing. Kalabokes believes the statue was damaged.

“It had to be a pretty big guy or a bunch of them,” he said.

He said the parish landscaping is such that the thieves could have backed a vehicle up to the railing and loaded the statue into the back of the vehicle, possibly a pickup.

The statue includes a small bird which St. Francis is holding. Kalabokes said that thieves have taken the small bird several times in the past and each time the tiny bird was replaced.

The theft occurred sometime between 6 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m Saturday, when a woman who arranges flowers at the church arrived and discovered St. Francis missing.

Kalabokes said he has filed a police report. He said that police responded and he believed they lifted fingerprints of the culprits off the railing that surrounded St. Francis.

“I cannot understand the cruelty and thinking of those who did this despicable act,” said Kalabokes. “This symbol is a great loss to this small parish.”

The Parish is asking for help to defray the cost of replacing the statue. You may make a donation online via PayPal. I also ask of your prayers for those who took the statute, that their hearts be moved to return it and make amends.

O Savior of the World, Whose love embraces all mankind; we hear Thy prayer from the Cross: “Father forgive them.” In the name of universal pardon, we beseech the Heavenly Father to have mercy upon our enemies; and deliver us from their snares. May our prayer be for them a ministry of reconciliation. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. —” A Prayer for our Enemies from A Book of Devotions and Prayers According to the Use of the Polish National Catholic Church.