Day: November 6, 2011

Art,

Art for the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time

Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins, Hieronymus Francken II, ca. 1616

“Then the kingdom of heaven shall be compared to ten maidens who took their lamps and went to meet the bridegroom. Five of them were foolish, and five were wise. For when the foolish took their lamps, they took no oil with them; but the wise took flasks of oil with their lamps. As the bridegroom was delayed, they all slumbered and slept. But at midnight there was a cry, `Behold, the bridegroom! Come out to meet him.’ Then all those maidens rose and trimmed their lamps. And the foolish said to the wise, `Give us some of your oil, for our lamps are going out.’ But the wise replied, `Perhaps there will not be enough for us and for you; go rather to the dealers and buy for yourselves.’ And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came, and those who were ready went in with him to the marriage feast; and the door was shut. Afterward the other maidens came also, saying, `Lord, lord, open to us.’ But he replied, `Truly, I say to you, I do not know you.’ Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor the hour. — Matthew 25:1-13

Poland - Polish - Polonia, , , , , ,

Poland’s Emigration Museum and the story of immigration

Maritime Station at 1 Polska Street in Gdynia was a port building commissioned in 1933. It served passenger traffic, including thousands of emigres who left Poland to resettle in distant lands. Because of the building’s strong relationship to the history of emigration, and its location at the hub of emigration routes, the building has been revitalized and now houses the Emigration Museum.

The Museum is seeking input for its Portrait Of An Emigrant Collection. This Collection of emigration stories will assist in recreating the history of Polish emigration through family albums, memoirs, and diaries. The collection seeks: Stories of emigrants; Recollections of departures, homesickness, home, family, and work; News of the new world, new people, new habits, and new motherlands; Reports of family life, children, education, learning a foreign language, us and them; Photos of farewells in the old country; Family stories about those who left and those who stayed; and The tales of relatives, acquaintances, and old friends.

Each of these is a start of a new history; the stories and illustrations that make up the collective portrait of the emigration epic. This history composed of individual fate –- ordinary, stormy, and sometimes dramatic is compelling. The Museum is compiling the collection of emigration from the stories of individuals and their archival photos.

Contact the Museum or Mr. Aleksander Gosk by E-mail for more information.

Events, Poland - Polish - Polonia

Safe Landing in Warsawa

Flight # 16 out of Newark Makes Safe Belly Landing at Warsaw Chopin Airport
LOT Polish Airlines, Captain and Crew Hailed as Heroes
By Raymond Rolak

WARSAW — Flying from Newark’s Liberty Airport with 231 passengers and crew on board, a LOT Airlines Boeing 767 made an emergency landing at Warsaw’s Frederic Chopin International Airport. This happened Tuesday afternoon after trouble was reported with the landing gear. Captain Tadeusz Wrona along with the flight attendants was hailed heroes, as no reported injuries occurred in the emergency evacuation. Passengers were seen fleeing from the airplane after it came to a stop in the foam.

The skill of the captain was heralded as sensational as he struggled to keep the nose up. “All safety procedures worked perfectly fine and, thanks to this, nobody was injured,” said Leszek Chorzewski, spokesman for the Polish air carrier LOT.

LOT Flight # 16 could not extend its landing gears at 3,000 feet while approaching runway 33 and Wrona requested clearance for an emergency landing. Visual verification by fighter aircraft showed none of the gear struts (three) were down.

The pilot knew four hours out that he would not have hydraulics for landing. Many on board had thought the problem had been corrected because Captain Wrona handled the descent and landing so smoothly. They thought that the plane had landed on its wheels.

There was no visible fire but rescue personnel dosed the plane with water and foam as a precautionary measure. Passengers were evacuated from the plane, which had circled and dumped fuel before the wheels up landing. Later it was determined that the plane had experienced a central hydraulic system failure. “They circled the 767 above the airport for about one hour before descending without lowering the wheels,” said Przemyslaw Przybylski, a spokesman for the Warsaw Chopin airport.

Live Polish television footage showed the plane landing on its belly. The runway had been covered with flame retardant foam and some sparks were seen as the aircraft met the runway. Formerly called Warsaw-Okecie International Airport, it remained closed for all other flights until Thursday morning.

He had said a small fire occurred and throughout the ordeal he remained confident he could keep everyone safe.

“I was praying for the pilot not to lose control because we started to make circles over the airport. It was terrible,” passenger Teresa Kowalik told the assembled reporters at the airport. “We owe everything to the pilot. He really did a great job.”

LOT airlines president, Marcin Pirog, told reporters that Captain Wrona and co-pilot Jerzy Szwartz carried out a “perfect emergency landing,” which prevented anyone from being injured. There were 11 crew total and 220 passengers.

“It is the first time a LOT plane had to land without the landing gear out,” Pirog said, adding that such landings do not always end well. Flights which had been scheduled to land in Warsaw had been diverted to Lodz, Gdansk and Krakow.

“When I stopped on the runway, I still was not sure that everyone was safe because smoke and some burning from friction appeared on the ground,”’ Wrona told news media at a press conference Wednesday morning. “I felt huge relief when the lead purser reported that the plane was safely evacuated. They did a wonderful job.”

“Talk of heroes is an exaggeration,” Wrona added at the press conference. “I’m convinced that any pilot would have done the same as I did.”

Wrona tried to extend the landing gear numerous times after an on-board computer indicated a hydraulic fault. He had flown the same plane some 500 times and had “never had any difficulty” with the wheels, he said.

Pirog said that Wrona was one of LOT’s most experienced pilots and had been flying Boeings for 20 years. He is also skilled in flying gliders, and it was suggested that may have helped him make such a successful emergency landing. LOT handles about 400 flights and transports 25,000 passengers daily through Warsaw.

A grateful passenger, Tadeusz Karasinski said, “Everyone remained calm and practiced emergency landing positions after being notified by the flight attendants that we would crash land some 35 minutes ahead of time. “There was no hysteria,” he added.

The belly landing was reminiscent of the January 15, 2009 “Miracle on the Hudson” ditching of U.S. Air Flight # 15409 with Captain Chesley Sullenberger. ‘Sully’ was also an experienced glider pilot. The entire crew of Flight 1549 was later awarded the Master’s Medal of the Guild of Air Pilots and Air Navigators. The award citation read, “This emergency ditching and evacuation, with the loss of no lives, is a heroic and unique aviation achievement.” …From the City of London, England.

“All the television video will make for a great safety training aid,” Bruce Heiss, a retired DTW Northwest Airlines pilot added. “Incidents of total landing gear failure involving modern airliners are extremely rare, given the number of backup systems that should kick in when a particular component fails,” he continued. “At the very least, the gear doors should open so the wheels descend by gravity or free fall,” he concluded.

Jacek Urbanski, Jacek Urbanczk, and Marc Moraniec contributed.