Category: Everything Else

Everything Else,

Things I’ve been meaning to do

There’s a few posts I’ve been meaning to write, the following one for 3 months now. Since I’ve got some energy tonight, let’s roll:

Our Florida Trip – November 2006

In November the family and I took a trip to Florida to visit my sister and her husband. We went over the Veteran’s Day weekend.

We scheduled the trip pretty far in advance, and took the dates/times because I had gobs of U.S. Airways frequent flyer miles built-up.

It was an absolutely great trip. My sister and her husband rolled out the red carpet. We had no worries, no car to rent, no room to check into, no meals to worry about. Simply the best.

My sister has a beautiful house in a gated community in Land ‘O Lakes (Greater Tampa) right on a golf course. The house has a lanai with a pool. Florida living at its best.

We set up a schedule for the three days we were there. Sunday was Church, swimming, and hanging out. Monday was Busch Gardens, Tuesday hanging out, shopping, and our flight back.

We started off Sunday with a light breakfast and we headed off to Holy Mass at St. Mary’s PNCC in St. Petersburg. It was about a 40 minute drive from my sister’s house. When we arrived we found that the schedule had changed and that Holy Mass wouldn’t be offered until 11am. Since we had about two hours to kill we headed over to a beach on the bay. The kids had a great time beach combing and watching the birds. There was a pelican that was great entertainment.

We headed back to the church after getting a grand tour of the area. The pastor at St. Mary’s is the Rev. Dr. John Sielchan. He greeted us warmly and introduced us to his parish family. On the plus side the parish is practically bay-side. On the down side it’s a bit removed from most parishioners who appear to live toward the Tarpon Springs area. We met a parishioner that travels about two hours every week from Orlando to attend Holy Mass – fantastic dedication.

After Holy Mass we headed over to Frenchy’s Rockaway Grill and Beach Club. The restaurant/bar is right on Clearwater Beach. The place is consistently packed and I can see why. Great food and a great atmosphere. We had a lot of fun and headed down to the beach after lunch.

It was a little cool that afternoon, but the kids, auntie, and I had a change to plant our feet in the bay.

As we headed back to the car we stumbled upon an Evangelical Community Church (you can’t help but trip over them everywhere in Florida) with this out front:

turtle angel

It’s a turtle angel. What a hoot! The very people who accuse Catholics of worshiping Mary and statues have a statue of a turtle angel in their front yard. What’s next, Mary on the half-shell? A kneeler and a few votive candles and they’ll have a shrine.

We headed back to my sister’s house for an afternoon of swimming and relaxing before dinner.

For dinner my sister introduced us to Lee Roy Selmon’s – BBQ and nothing but BBQ. I was in heaven.

Back at my sister’s we enjoyed a bottle or two from her great selection of wine. I’ve never been so relaxed on a vacation. I even slept great.

On Monday we went to Busch Gardens. My sister and I had been there when it was a fairly new park back in the early 1970’s. Whet I remember from that trip was that the park was impeccably clean, there were animals, and beer (I too young at the time :().

The place was amazing. Still tidy and with the perfect mix of entertainment, nature, and fun. Best of all the place was empty. There were no lines and there was no waiting. We were on the three top notch coasters as soon as we reached the cars. Of all the coasters the SheiKra drop coaster was the best. The Montu was ok, but a little rough (don’t try that one if you have back/neck problems). My youngest at 4 years old went on the Gwazi wooden coaster. She was the daredevil, my son was a little more reticent.

Other highlights included the Rhino Rally and of course the BrewMasters Club at the Hospitality House. The Clydesdale’s were a hit for the kids as were the other animals and the kiddy rides.

We were there from opening to closing – an absolutely fantastic time.

My sister took us to a great Cuban restaurant for dinner. I can’t remember the name right now, but it was fantastic. An ultra small place in a plaza – but a favorite of the locals.

On Tuesday we headed over to International Plaza and Bay Street for shopping and lunch before our departure.

In conclusion a big shout out to my sister Andrea and her husband Ken. Thank you, thank you. It was great!

Everything Else

Did the upgrade

I just finished upgrading this blog to Word Press 2.0.7 It was effortless.

The greatest amount of time was spent backing up the old structure, files, and data (and no, one should never, ever, skip this).

I had two errors in the process.

  1. When I ran the upgrade script it gave me an error message on adding the post_status field to the posts table. Most likely because it was already there. The error message told me that my username did not have sufficient permissions in MySQL.
  2. When I attempted to re-activate the Flickr widget it brought down the whole site. I’m guessing that was due to the fact that I hadn’t re-activated the widgets plugin yet (hey I was being linear and alphabetical).

The thing that pushed me to upgrade?

I’m hosted by Yahoo. Yahoo web hosting makes a big deal about automatically upgrading people’s Word Press blogs to the latest version. My version was sitting at 2.0.2 for the longest time. The Word Press support forums answered that one… service not as advertised.

I’m of the opinion that any upgraded software version with security issue improvements should be installed, but hey, I don’t run multi-million dollar server farms.

Everything Else,

Kindnesses

One of my cousin’s cousins from the Kolek side of the family, Stasia Czarnik Owczarczak presented me with a lovely gift after the funeral. It is a CD copy of two albums which were recorded by the Czarnik Quartet.

The Czarnik Quartet consisted of Stasia’s mother Victoria and her three daughters, Stasia, Jania (Jane), and Maria.

The two albums, which I have on vinyl, were recently transferred to CD. Glenn Gramigna of the Am-Pol Eagle featured the re-release in Czarnik Quartet re-releases Koledy, Ave Maria

It was over 40 years ago when Victoria Czarnik along with her three daughters, Stasia, Jania, and Maria, became singing sensations in the Buffalo area, performing many traditional Polish songs in the Polish language. Starting out at their own parish, SS. Peter and Paul, the Czarnik Quartet went on to entertain audiences on WXRL radio, at St. Stanislaus Church, and on the Father Justin Rosary Hour, among many other prestigious venues.

“It was at that time that we made two albums,” recalls Stasia Owczarczak, one of the quartet. “They were ‘Ave Maria’ and ‘Koledy.’

Now these two collections have been re-released on one CD which is for sale at Ruda’s Record Shop, 2445 William St., in Cheektowaga. We are very excited about this and hope that all of those who liked our singing in the past will take advantage of this opportunity to enjoy it once again after so many years.”

This 30-song collection includes all of the renditions which made the Czarnik Quartet a favorite of local audiences in the past.

“Among the songs that our fans can hear on this CD are ‘Cicha Noc’ or ‘Silent Night’ sung in Polish, of course,” Stasia said. “Others include the popular religious song, ‘Jezus Nalusienki’ or ‘Tiny Jesus’ and ‘Lullaby to Baby Jesus’ or ‘Lulajze Jezuniu’ in Polish. I know that hearing us sing these songs again will bring back a lot of wonderful memories for many people. I know that it has for us.”

Of course, the Czarniks had never set out to become singing stars. They had started out singing strictly for the sheer love of doing it as well as because of their strong religious faith…

My mother’s family were parishioners of SS. Peter and Paul. That parish was established as an outpost mission of Buffalo Polonia’s Mother Church, St. Stanislaus. My grandparents were among the founding families.

My mother and Stasia Czarnik went to school together and sang together in various stage plays at SS. Peter and Paul.

I still have an original program from the play Stryjek Fonsio, (an operatic farce in two acts written by Stefania Tucholkowa) which was presented by the Holy Apostles Drama Club on February 27, 1949. My mother and Stasia were ‘guests’ in the play and made up part of the chorus. Each had a soprano solo as well.

Interestingly, the part of Stryjek* Fonsio was played by Daniel J. Myszka, the now Rev. Msgr. Daniel Myszka of the Buffalo, New York Roman Catholic Diocese.

*Stryjek is ‘old Polish’ meaning paternal uncle. Wujek was one’s maternal uncle. Wujek is current standard usage for all uncles.

Everything Else,

Back again

I arrived home late yesterday.

The drive home was miserable from a weather perspective. It was made better by my iPod and good thoughts.

The funeral went as expected. I appreciate the generosity of the Rev. Robert Wardenski of Immaculate Conception R.C. Church in East Aurora, NY who allowed me to sit in the sanctuary for the funeral liturgy. My cousin’s family appreciated me being there and participating in that way.

My cousin’s friend Eleanor did indeed pass while still at the funeral home. I was blessed to be with her to pray and give her a blessing in her last moments. Her husband subsequently asked me if I gave her last rites. I was factually honest with him and told him that as a deacon I could not do that, but that I did what was in my authority. He was comforted by this.

Regarding Immaculate Conception R.C. Church, the most interesting thing I observed was – prominently displayed in the sacristy and apparently ready for use, an Altar card containing the Canon in Latin, pre-Vatican II.

Everything Else,

Be prepared

Besides the normal sadness at wakes, and the normal greeting of people, family members who are only seen at such events, an unexpected tragedy occurred at my cousin’s wake today. A woman who stood up for my cousins at their wedding passed out, and may have died.

The funeral director handled everything pretty well. The police and paramedics were there within 5 minutes. Everyone was moved to another room. While we waited for the emergency crew, I stayed with the woman, her husband, and another of the mourners who was a retired nurse practioner. I held her hand, prayed for her, and blessed her. Once the paramedics arrived I went into the next room and led family and friends in prayer for this woman, Eleanor.

Eleanor’s husband then asked that I go back and stay with her. Things did not look good. It was tragedy upon tragedy for my cousin’s family. Please keep them and Eleanor’s family in your prayers.

Everything Else

More on reform, not of the reform

In other words, you need to do it correctly at least once.

This is a follow-up to my earlier comments on Bishop Trautman in Since we messed it up.

Anthony Esolen susses out Bishop Trautman’s statement in opposition to the corrected English translation of the Mass in By the Waters of Babylon at Mere Comments.

A flash from the Religious News Service today — stop the presses! Catholic liturgical tsars and tsarinas are angry that for the first time since the Novus Ordo was instituted in the 1960’s, the Mass will be translated into English. For those of you who aren’t Roman Catholic, the Latin text had been folded, spindled, and mutilated, stretched like bubble gum, amputated here and there, diluted everywhere, phrases lopped off, others twisted out of joint, in general to bring the Father down to earth where he belongs. Italians say that every traduttore is a traditore, meaning that every translator is a traitor; but that treachery can never be laid to the charge of the people who brought us the Novus Ordo in Anguish, because they never really bothered to translate in the first place.

The funniest line was:

Bishop Trautman, who it is said does not like to be called Bishop Trautperson, has been one of the two or three bishops most responsible for the desacralized language of the liturgy.

Whadda matter wit inklusiv language?

Everything Else, ,

Will be away

One of my cousins passed away yesterday and I’ll be going out to Buffalo for couple of days for the wake and funeral.

I’m going to take the laptop with me, but don’t know what connectivity will be like. I expect blogging will be lite.

Please say a prayer for the repose of my cousin Joan and for her husband, children, grandchildren, family and friends.

Krzyz.gif

Eternal rest grant unto her O Lord and may the perpetual light shine upon her.
May her soul and the souls of all the faithful departed rest in peace.

Wieczne odpoczynek racz jej dać Panie, a światłość wiekuista niechaj jej świeci.
Niech odpoczywają w pokoju. Amen

Everything Else

Since we messed it up

The infamous Bishop Trautman, long in the forefront of liturgical sloppiness, is taking on corrections proposed for the liturgy.

From the Religion News Service: U.S. CATHOLIC BISHOPS’ LITURGY CHAIR RAISES CONCERNS OVER NEW WORSHIP TEXTS

The Catholic Academy of Liturgy met on January 4, 2007 in Toronto, Canada, prior to the annual meeting of the North American Academy of Liturgy. The keynote speaker was Bishop Donald Trautman of Erie, Pennsylvania and chair of the Bishops’ Committee on the Liturgy of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). In his address entitled —When Should Liturgists Be Prophetic?— Trautman raised concerns about current directions in the revision now underway of the English edition of the Roman Missal being prepared by the International Commission on English in the Liturgy (ICEL).

Their prophecy has been false so far, and you know what they say about false prophets.

The first edition in English of the Roman Missal was issued in 1973. Drawing on biblical scholarship, historical theology, and his many years of pastoral experience as a bishop, he contended that the new translations do not adequately meet the liturgical needs of the average Catholic…

Because lifting the people up, focusing them on God, helping them to overcome the averageness of their lives, would be the mission of Christ’s Church, not the church of what’s-happening-now.

…and expressed fears that the significant changes in the texts no longer reflect understandable English usage. Trautman argued that the proposed changes of the people’s parts during the Mass will confuse the faithful and predicted that the new texts will contribute to a greater number of departures from the Catholic Church.

Can’t get much lower than the current 20-30% attendance rates.

The Bishop cited various problematic texts, criticizing their awkward structure and arcane vocabulary that would be very difficult for the priest to pray aloud and for the people to follow.

Not as difficult as it will be to recapture their Latin Language skills.

Just as problematic for Trautman was the recent decision to change the words of consecration that refer to Christ’s blood being shed —for all— to —for many.— That change could be easily misinterpreted as denying the faith of the Roman Catholic Church that Christ died for all people.

And he’s a bishop… A JP II Bishop at that.

Everything Else,

Apple does it again

I’m a pig when it comes to acquiring new technology. The new Apple iPhone looks phenomenal and I want one. It’s thin, does the work of my iPod nano, phone, and Palm and all managed through the ITunes interface… and takes care of the problems people typically experience in using such devices. Intelligent design. Nice!

The AppleTV box looks nice as well.