Category: PNCC

Christian Witness, Perspective, PNCC, , , , , ,

Ethnic Marketing – alive and well

From friends at the CapturaGroup: Are Hispanics Really More Social?

Getting to the bottom of this question is critical because there seems to be a disconnect among Hispanic marketers when it comes to social media. On one hand, there are countless studies indicating that Hispanics are extremely engaged with social media. On the other hand, few marketers are proactively leveraging social media to reach online Hispanics…

…answerng the question in: Hispanics are really more social

In addition to being highly social, Hispanics consume a ton of media. I came across statistics that indicate that Hispanics teens spend 13 hours per day with media, more than any other ethnic group.

I then took a look at technology usage and showed that Hispanics are leapfrogging to the latest and greatest technologies, including mobile. What’s more, Hispanics have an extremely positive view of the technology and once they get their hands on it, the use it and love it…

When you combine the highly social Hispanic culture with strong technology usage, you get a perfect storm. I argued that social media is the perfect avenue to unleash the Hispanic culture. For the most part, every day Hispanic culture is confined to neighborhoods throughout America. Social media changes that. It gives every day Hispanics a voice and provides a global, viral platform for spreading the culture.

Answering the question goes to more than just selling widgets.

As Bishop Hodur pointed out, each culture brings its unique gifts and attributes together in the most social of all setting, the Church. Honoring culture is more than just window dressing and getting down with quaint traditions. It involves understanding people where they are at, blessing what they offer, and being increased and blessed by the gifts they bring. The Gospel message is beyond nation and place, yet grows in the world God created, because of the talents and gifts every nation and people offers.

Is the PNCC just the Church of one nation, one people? No, but it fully honors, respects, and works to build upon and maintain the gifts each nation and people bring. You do not have to stop being American, Polish, Hispanic, Italian, or any aspect of your nature because God honors it in using what you bring for the promotion of the everlasting message that is beyond any border or boundary.

What we can understand from the above is that Church needs to go out and meet people where they are, drawing them in, not by a few “ethnic” parishes, but by fully honoring their self determination and identity in a Catholic and democratic Church.

Christian Witness, PNCC, , ,

Around the PNCC and PNU

Some old news, some upcoming…

Polish National Union of America, District 3, 2010 Children’s Day

Saturday —“ June 19, 2010, 3 P.M. —“ Tail Gate Party at Holy Cross Parish in Central Falls, RI (with hot dogs, hamburgers, kielbasa, chips & soda provided) followed by the Pawtucket Red Sox vs. Columbus Clippers at McCoy Stadium, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The game begins at 6:05 P.M. District 3 has procured box seats. PNU District 3 Children are free of charge. Adults and non-Spojnia members at $14 per person. A limited number of tickets are available on a first come first serve basis. For additional information and/or reservations please contact either:

Fr. Rob Nemkovich
37 Winthrop Street
Fall River, MA 02721
(508) 672-4854

or

Dorothy Stahelski
280 Valley View Drive
Westfield, MA 01085
(413) 562-9297


From The Day: Church site blessed with new mission: Help homeless. Sts. Peter and Paul in NL to become emergency shelter

New London – Sometime in the coming months, the handful of parishioners at Sts. Peter and Paul Polish National Catholic Church will celebrate the final Mass in their modest white church on a hill.

But as much as it will be an ending for the 88-year-old church, it will also be a beginning.

The congregation has plans to sell the church, the rectory next door and its half-acre of land on State Pier Road to the Homeless Hospitality Center, which will use the property for its emergency shelter and offices.

“It is a continuation of the church’s mission,” the Rev. Stanley Kaszubski, the church’s priest for the past 10 years, said. “It will help people who are in need.”

Colleen Rzepniewski Pinckney, whose grandparents helped found the church, was pleased that the building will going to an organization that “is doing God’s work.”

Pinckney’s husband Richard, the parish’s chairman who maintains the buildings, said it’s hard to continue running the church with the five or six people out of 30-member congregation who regularly attend services.

But they aren’t a meek lot.

The six members in the pews Sunday, sang “How Great Thou Art,” at full volume, and got an enthusiastic ceremony from Kaszubski who travels to St. Peter and Paul from Manchester to say Mass.

“He’s very devoted,” June Gula, a lifelong parishioner, said.

Kaszubski will be seeking homes for St. Peter and Paul’s treasures, including its ornate white peaked altar with statues of Jesus and the church’s namesake saints, holding keys and a sword.

The fate of the church’s three crystal chandeliers, installed by Colleen Pinckney’s grandfather, whose demolition company recovered them from an old New London mansion, hasn’t been decided.

The church is a last vestige of old East New London, once home to many of the city’s Polish immigrants, who were dispersed in the early 1970s when the second span of the Gold Star Memorial Bridge rammed through the neighborhood.

Kaszubski is glad the property will be going to a community service organization.

“It’s not going to a company,’ he said. “It’s not going to be condominiums.”

The Homeless Hospitality Center, which currently operates an emergency shelter at St. James Episcopal Church on Federal Street, will need to install modern bathrooms and sprinkler systems before it can occupy the buildings.

After the shelter opens, the church will relocate to a small parlor in the rectory.

“There’s plenty of room for our books and the Stations of the Cross,” Richard Pinckney said.

Christian Witness, PNCC,

June Is Sacred Vocations Month

Each year during the month of June, the PNCC observes Sacred Vocations month. During this month, the Church reminds all of her faithful of the urgent need to pray for the gift of vocations to the Holy Orders. The Church asks all of us to offer special prayers to bless our Church with new vocations.

The purpose of this month of Sacred Vocations is to petition God, the Author of every vocation, to bless our Church with new priests and deacons who are blessed with strong faith, broad vision and solid academic background. PLEASE, PRAY FOR AN INCREASE VOCATIONS TO THE HOLY PRIESTHOOD of the Polish National Catholic Church.

Those interested may contact me and I will provide you with the appropriate information.

Christian Witness, PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , ,

With deepest sadness…

I was informed of the passing into eternal life of friend, mentor, guide, an personal hero, Ś+P Mr. Walter Lasinski, yesterday evening.

Ś.P. Mr. Lasinski was a prominent PNCC historian, contributor to PNCC Studies, author, researcher, member of the Polish American Historical Association and recipient of its 1991 Distinguished Service Award, as well as a member of the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America. He was also an avid lover of music and contributed to the work of the Polish Music Reference Center at the University of Southern California.

The first time I met Ś.P. Mr. Lasinski, and his wife Florence, was at PolishFest when I was assigned to the Blessed Virgin Mary of Częstochowa Parish in Latham, New York. He walked in, resolute, and told me that he had made the trip to meet me. Needless to say, I didn’t get it.

He went on to explain that he was a big advocate of this blog and of what I was doing to advance knowledge of the PNCC. The next thing he told me was that he was proud to reply, when asked, Kto jesteś? “Narodowiec!” Who are you? “[A] National!” With a few words he captivated me, helping me to understand what I was a part of. It was not just church, but Church in its fullest sense, a community of believers joined in every aspect of their lives, and joined with history.

Beyond his work in the PNCC, Ś.P. Mr. Lasinski contributed greatly to Polonia. He understood our ethnic community as only a historian could. He saw the deep connection the PNCC holds with the Orthodox, being a subscriber to the events and activities at St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Seminary in Crestwood, New York, frequently encouraging me to “go there.” His research led him down many interesting paths, particularly to the out of the ordinary threads in Polonian history – the Polish Methodists of Greenpoint, Polish Baptists in Buffalo, the lesser known closed parishes of the PNCC, the kind of things lost to history but for fine researchers like himself.

I am deeply saddened by this loss, but with faith know that Ś.P. Walter is now standing with Ś.P. Bishop Hodur, looking down over the children of the PNCC, as we continue to work and struggle always in truth. The victory is now his.

A wake will be held at Fryczynski & Sons Funeral Home, 32-34 22nd Street, Bayonne, NJ 07002 on Tuesday, June 1st from 2-4 pm & 7-9 pm

A Funeral Holy Mass will be held at Sacred Heart of Jesus PNCC, 290 Avenue E, Bayonne, NJ 07002 on Wednesday, June 2nd at 10am. Internment at Heart of Jesus Cemetery immediately following Holy Mass.

I beg of you, my readers, your prayers for Ś.P. Walter’s eternal rest, and for comfort for his wife, sons, larger family, friends, and colleagues.

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

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

[audio:https://www.konicki.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/07-tyle-lat.mp3]
PNCC,

CONVO 2010 – Governed by God

CONVO 2010 is nearing; 5 days on the theme Governed by God: 10 Commandments and the 2 Commandments of Love for the youth of the PNCC ages 12 to 21. Applications are available from your Pastor, through the CONVO site, or here [pdf]. The CONVO Facebook Page has tons of additional info.

CONVO 2010 will be held July 26-30, 2010 at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, NJ, one mile from the beaches along the Atlantic shore and one hour from NYC and Philadelphia. There will be a trip to Liberty and Ellis Island as well as a beach bonfire.

Cost will be $285. All payments must be postmarked no later than June 1st. After June 1st, a $25 late fee will be required to be paid in addition to the initial $285. All late payments must be in by June 25th. Many Parishes help financially with the cost of attendance, so check with your Parish.

Events, PNCC, , , ,

65TH Annual PNCC/YMS of R Bowling Tournament

The 65th Annual PNCC/YMS of R Bowling Tournament is being held in Scranton, Pa. May 21st, 22nd and 23rd, 2010. The host parish will be Saint Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Cathedral. The Rt. Rev. Dr. Anthony A. Mikovsky will be the honorary chairman.

The tournament committee has established the Comfort Suites —“ Scranton as the official hotel of the bowling tournament.

If you desire any additional information concerning the Bowling Tournament, please contact:

Joseph E. Ross —“ General Chairman
613 Willow St.
Scranton, PA 18505
P: 570-241-2772

or

Artie Golembeski Jr.
1208 S. Irving Ave.
Scranton, PA 18505
P: 570-575-5231

The tournament also has a Facebook page. There is still time to sign up, so, save the dates of May 21st, 22nd and 23rd and get your application packet in.

Schedule
Application
Award Banquet Reservations
Rules
Lodging
Directions

Christian Witness, Perspective, PNCC, Political, ,

Honor Immigrant Workers in Your Congregation this weekend

Every day, millions of immigrant workers in the U.S. are not only picking our vegetables and cleaning our office buildings, but are an integral part of the fabric of our congregations and communities. On May 1st, people of faith will join marches, prayer vigils and other events across the country to call on our Congressional leaders to pass a comprehensive immigration reform bill that will bring millions of immigrant workers and their families out of the shadows, secure our borders and provide labor protections that will benefit all low-wage workers.

Interfaith Worker Justice is calling on people of faith to stand in support of all low-wage workers, regardless of immigration status. They have invited us to join with them and other national organizations, denominations and faith communities to participate in a National Weekend of Prayer and Action for Immigrant Rights on May 1st and 2nd.

Among the ways our congregations can lift up the voices of immigrant workers during this weekend:

  • Invite an immigrant worker to share his or her story during a worship service
  • Incorporate prayers and liturgies lifting up our immigrant brothers and sisters into your services
  • Provide bulletin inserts, informational materials and other action items for your congregation
  • Initiate a study group using IWJ’s resource For You Were Once A Stranger

IWJ has many resources available for congregations to educate, advocate, and mobilize for our immigrant brothers and sisters. You can find IWJ’s board of directors’ statement on immigration reform here and other materials on their website.

Christian Witness, Current Events, PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , ,

Capital District Memorial Service

A Memorial Service for the deceased Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and Polish delegation that perished in the plane crash in Smolensk, Russia will be held at Albany’s Polish Community Center, 225 Washington Ave Ext., Albany, NY 12205 on Friday, April 16, 2010. Doors will open at 7pm and the Service will begin at 7:30pm. This event is open to the entire Capital District community. Please join us.

Christian Witness, Current Events, PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia

More PNCC Reflections on Poland’s Tragedy

Edwardsville, PA

From WBRE-TV: Polish Church Honors Those Lost in Plane Crash

Sadness over the tragic plan crash that killed Poland’s President and nearly 100 other people is reaching around the globe, even to our area.

The Polish National Catholic Church Resurrection of the Lord Parish in Edwardsville remembered the crash victims Sunday.

Reverend Pawel Filip and his family arrived at church wearing black clothes and black ribbons.They’re in mourning for the people of their native Poland.

He led the congregation in a prayer for the families they left behind and for the people of Poland. He said, I think all the polish nation lost the light of the Polish people.”

The pastor heard about the crash from a family member in Poland. It was night here. And the terrible phone call woke him up. He recalled,”I couldn’t believe that it happened.”

He left his home country just two years ago – and still feels strong ties to his homeland – it’s people and it’s leaders. He sighed,”It’s very hard to replace these kinds of people – especially the president.”

Even parishioners who never lived in Poland say this tragedy impacts them. Margaret Garvin of Edwardsville said,”It just brings everything right to you. Right to your heart.” Her grandparents came to the United States from Poland. She explained,”When it is your family like – polish it really means a lot.”

The reverend said the Polish are strong. And they will recover from this tragedy. Thanks in part to strong support from around the world. He said, “When something like this happens all the nations join together – we have the same spirit – the same thinking – we are very close.”

Frackville and Shenandoah, PA

Local Polish Pastor Remembers Friend Killed in Crash

FRACKVILLE, SCHUYLKILL COUNTY — A special memorial sits in front of St. John the Baptist Church in Frackville. It pays tribute to victims of a plane crash in Russia that killed the Polish President and Maciej Plazynski, a friend of St. John’s Pastor Robert Plichta.

“He was very dedicated man to his family, to the church and of course, to the country,” he said.

Pastor Plichta moved to the states 7 years ago. He’s responsible for polish catholic congregations in Frackville and Shenandoah.

Before Plichta moved to America, Plazynski was a parishoner of Plichta’s church in his hometown of Gdansk, Poland.

The former chief of Poland’s parliament, Plazynski was as friendly as they come says Plictha. “It was a blessing for me to know him personally,” he said.

But now Pastor Plichta, like the rest of his home country of Poland, is mourning a terrible tragedy. Plazynski was on a plane with several high ranking polish officials including the country’s president when it crashed.

Plichta hopes to help Polish-American communities in Schuylkill County cope with the loss. “The first question could appear, why. And there is no answer,” he said.

A special Monday mass is scheduled in honor of the crash victims. “Gods message, maybe for the Polish community, maybe for this entire world, Eastern Europe, Western Europe to live together and we have to realize that we are not masters of this earth, we are merely passing through,” he added.

Brooklyn, NY

From the AP: Polish immigrants worldwide mourn crash victims

Polish immigrants and their descendants around the world shared the anguish of their mother country on Sunday, mourning the 96 victims of a devastating plane crash as they crowded into Polish-language Masses.

Millions of Poles have emigrated over nearly two centuries, establishing large communities in the United States and Britain. They coped with Saturday’s death of Polish President Lech Kaczynski and dozens of other military, church and government officials through vigils, prayer and writing…

Maria Balcer, 65, a recent immigrant, sat in a pew at Polish National Catholic Church in Brooklyn and cried. She had been up until 2 a.m. watching television coverage of the crash, she said.

“The tragedy is terrible, a horrible feeling in my heart,” she said…

Hamtramck, MI

From Freep.com: Poles in metro Detroit share their shock, hurt

The death of Polish President Lech Kaczynski in a plane crash Saturday stunned metro Detroit’s Polish community.

At the Polish Market on Jos Campau in Hamtramck, all shoppers wanted to talk about was the crash. Overhead, loud speakers piped in a news broadcast from a Polish language radio station.

“Basically, that’s all we talk about all day,” said Sebastian Poweska, an employee and an immigrant who came to the United States five years ago from Stalowa Wola, Poland.

“It’s been really slow — only half the people who normally come in,” said Poweska, 24, of Sterling Heights. “It’s the same thing as 9/11. People just sitting around at home watching TV all day.”

He learned about the crash when his father woke him at 6 a.m. Saturday and told him.

“I couldn’t believe it,” Poweska said.

On Pulaski Street in Hamtramck at the Holy Cross Polish National Catholic Church, three women were cleaning up after serving a meal at the congregation’s soup kitchen.

They said they expected the priest would say special prayers during mass today for Poland and those who died in the plane crash.

Jolanta Nowak, 38, of Hamtramck, who emigrated 10 years ago from Katowice, Poland, a town an hour west of Kraków, said she was praying “for healing. For the future of the people because they will be thinking about what happened.”

Stephanie Marsh, 71, of Shelby Township said, “I was thinking what would happen to us if something like this were to happen in the United States. It’s just going to rip everything apart for them.”

Rochester, NY

From the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: Local Polish community grieves after tragedy that killed Poland’s president

The plane crash Saturday that killed Poland’s president and several members of his country’s elite was a tragedy not only for Poles, but for their relatives and descendants here in the United States.

During services today at St. Casimir Polish National Catholic Church in Irondequoit, the Rev. Melvin Walczak will lead congregants in prayers for those who have suffered.

—We will be praying for all of the people in Poland,— Walczak said. —We will be praying for the members of our congregation who have family members that are connected to Poland.—

Walczak, whose grandparents emigrated from Poland, was saddened by the loss of President Lech Kaczynski and other leaders.

—I can only imagine what we would feel if Air Force One crashed,— Walczak said. —That’s the parallel for American people to try to look at.—

The Polish leaders were heading to a ceremony to mark the 70th anniversary of the slaughter of Polish military officers by Soviet secret police.

The massacre in the Katyn forest —is a very, very important moment historically for every single Pole, wherever we are,— said Maria Weldy of Irondequoit, a native of the Krakow area. —It’s just so, so sad.—

Adam Urbanski, president of the Rochester Teachers Association, added that the timing of the crash was —so tragic and so ironic.—

—The impact of this is really felt in Poland,— said Urbanski, who grew up in Nowa Huta, Poland.

Despite the tragedy, Urbanski said he believes Poland will recover.

—I think the country will survive this tragedy,— he said. —The Poles, like the Irish, are used to tragedy.—

Christian Witness, Current Events, PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia

Albany area Poles in mourning

Updated News: There will be a service of memory held at Albany’s Polish Community Center, 225 Washington Ave. Ext., Albany, NY on Friday, April 16th at 7pm. All are invited to attend.

From the Albany Times Union: Stunning news from homeland: Plane crash in which leaders die shakes local Polish community

COLONIE — Saturday’s fatal plane crash jolted members of the Capital Region’s Polish community, some of whom follow politics there and are lamenting the loss of a substantial part of that nation’s leadership.

“I was devastated,” said Wojciech Adamus of Albany, who came to Saturday evening Mass at the Blessed Virgin Mary of Czestochowa Polish National Catholic Church.

Adamus, 63, grew up in Poland. He came to the U.S. in 1984 when the Reagan administration allowed in Poles who had been arrested in crackdowns against the anti-Soviet Solidarity movement.

Adamus has never been back, but has watched Poland develop into a democracy from afar, occasionally watching Polish language broadcasts on friends’ satellite stations.

The Siena College graduate, who worked as a teacher, said that like many emigres he supported President Lech Kaczynski’s hard-line stand against Russia.

He compared Kaczynski’s conservative and nationalistic Law and Justice Party to the Republicans here in the U.S. That party is in an ongoing tug of war with another major party, the Civic Platform.

“I am very sad. I liked his politics,” added the Rev. Adam Czarnecki, the priest at Amsterdam’s Good Shepherd [PNCC] church.

Both men said they wondered why so many top officials would be on the same plane, a Soviet-designed aircraft that was two decades old.

“In every country there is a move to save money,” Adamus said.

From WRGB-TV: Poland Plane Crash Reaction