Category: Poland – Polish – Polonia

Christian Witness, Poland - Polish - Polonia

A Buffalo News profile of Father Anzelm Chałupka

From the Buffalo News: The Rev. Anzelm Chalupka: An unconventional clergyman

When the Rev. Anzelm Chalupka landed at Corpus Christi Church in January 2004, he was determined to understand his new city. Along the way, he helped resurrect one historic church, and gave energy to a very tired East Side neighborhood. At age 39, he is like fresh air.

Fr. Chałupka, along with Fr. Marek and Brother Peter, is getting it done in a hard scrabble neighborhood many, including the Franciscans, had given up on. May the Lord bless his work and his outreach.

Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, Political,

Arlen Specter – wait, a member of the Know Nothing Party?

I hereby nominate Arlen Specter, Senator from Pennsylvania, and nominal Republican, as the new Chairman of the Know Nothing PartyThe Senator has a record of changing parties for the sake of convenience.

From Newsmax: Arlen Specter’s Polish Jokes ‘Offensive’

When Pennsylvania Congressman Jack Murtha recently said many of his home staters are “racist” and “rednecks,” he may have been referring to the state’s longtime U.S. senator.

The New York Post’s Page 6 reports that Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., used the occasion of a public luncheon Friday to lighten up the crowd by telling Polish jokes.

Specter was speaking before the influential Commonwealth Club, a Pennsylvania Republican group meeting in New York’s Rainbow Room, when he began his opening act.

The senator queried his audience if anyone present was Polish. Reportedly, about 10 people raised their hands.

Apparently callous to their feelings, Specter let loose with a stream of Polish jokes. The Post said he recounted the old one about a person who tells another person that he knows a good Polish joke. The man responds, “Hey careful, I’m Polish!” Specter delivered the punchline: “That’s OK, I’ll tell it more slowly.”

A member of the stunned audience told the Post that Specter’s jokes were “insensitive.”

“I was offended, and I’m not Polish,” the source said.

Also at the Huffington Post: Specter Polish Jokes At Luncheon Deemed “Tasteless”.

The Republican Party of Pennsylvania, which sponsored the meeting at which Sen. Specter spoke, says in its principals statement:

diversity is a source of strength, not a sign of weakness, and so we welcome into our ranks all who may hold differing positions. We commit to resolve our differences with civility, trust, and mutual respect, and to affirm the common goals and beliefs that unite us.

Do you think they will censure him for violating their principals?

Of course he later apologized as is de rigueur for such politicians. In Yiddish or Polish — Paskudnik. Interestingly, his Wikipedia bio states that his parents were Jewish immigrants from Russia; more than likely from the Russian controlled portion of Poland. There is a very good chance that his parents were Polish!

Poland - Polish - Polonia,

Caring for homeless animals in Poland

From the city of فódź, promoting the adoption of homeless animals. Folks also dropped off food, blankets, and other care items to support the local shelter, The effort ties in to the tradition of animals talking on Christmas Eve, welcoming the Christ child. Polish families include their pets in their Christmas vigil meal through the sharing of a special piece of the opłatek (typically pink in color).

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Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, ,

Arts, the tour, and understanding

From The Brooklyn Rail: Poland here, and Poland now

While it may be possible to view Poland strictly in its current, robust guise, it’s perhaps more instructive and accurate to see it through the layers and ambiguities that resonate everywhere in a nation where such an important portion of its history was annihilated so recently…

The author, Alan Lockwood, is invited to tour Poland and attend the concerts and recitals of the Warsaw Autumn Festival. He comments on interpersonal and cultural understanding, complexity, and history over the course of his tour. The article is lengthy, and well worth the time.

Christian Witness, Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia

On heaven and forgiveness

Two great articles from John Guzlowski: Christmas and Forgiveness

A while ago, I gave a talk to a high school class about my parents and their experiences under the Nazis. I talked about my father’s four years in Buchenwald and my mothers two and half years in various slave labor camps in Germany.

During the Q & A after my talk, a young man asked me a question. I’m sure it was in part sparked by the Christmas season, the talk that you hear at this time of year about —Peace on Earth and Good Will to all Men.— He asked me whether or not I forgave the Germans for what they did to my parents.

The question stopped me. I haven’t thought about it before…

…and

Heaven

When our daughter Lillian was about five years old, she started thinking about the natural end of all the things she knew. She started thinking about dying and death.

I don’t know why she did, but she did, and it made her sad and worried. She didn’t want to lose her mother and me and her grandparents to death, and she was frightened that she would.

Because she was a bright kid and a problem solver, she tried to think of a solution, some way around death, and the solution she thought out was her own personal vision of heaven.

Heaven, she figured, would be a place where she and her parents and all the people she loved would live in some perfect place, interacting with all her favorite characters from all her favorite books.

It sounded great, and I used to love to hear her talk about it. She and Linda and I would be in the same perfect place as the characters in Laura Ingalls Wilder and C. S. Lewis. We would have lunch in a park with Laura and Lucy and Edmund and Susie and Peter and Aslan, the compassionate, kind, loving God of this Heaven…

Consider these two posts and their relationship, one to the other. Does God forgive, and to what extent? Beyond metaphysical and theological ramblings can we see a God Whose love is the ultimate victor? Who accepts all who present themselves? Who cannot help but run after those who purposefully turn away from Him in an everlasting series of overtures?

Our forgiveness is limited and human. Our concept of heaven too adult. We need more of the heaven of Laura and Lucy and Edmund and Susie and Peter and Aslan and less of our prosaic vision[less] concept. Perhaps Saint Exupéry was right:

Grown-ups never understand anything by themselves, and it is tiresome for children to have to explain things to them always and forever. — The Little Prince, Chapter 1.

Something to ponder as we approach our celebration of the Incarnation.

Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, ,

Poland: Living up to its multicultural past

From Russia Today: Muslims prosper in Catholic Poland

Poland’s Muslim community makes up only a tiny fraction of the country’s population. But with immigration from places like Turkey and Pakistan on the rise, the numbers can only grow. And Muslims are intent on gaining understanding and respect, whether they’ve been there for centuries or just a few years.

An estimated 30,000 Muslims live in Poland —“ that’s less than 0.1 per cent of a population that is 96 per cent Catholic. But the Islamic community is a thriving religious minority in Poland.

The first Muslim settlements date back to the 14th century when Tatars settled in the eastern villages of Bohoniki and Kruszyniany.

Their communities once numbered about 17,000 people, and they were able to practice Islam freely in exchange for military service. But now only a few families remain.

A visitors’ book in Kruszyniany’s mosque – the oldest of the three in the country – contains messages from Israel, Bosnia and Afghanistan. But while Muslims from abroad are welcome there, there are some slight differences in the way Tatars and Muslims practice Islam.

Usuf, a Muslim Tatar, says there are —very strong religious connections between the Tatars and other Muslims living in Poland, but as for the ethnical issues – the attitude is quite different, because we have different traditions.—

In relation to gender, Usuf says —Muslim Tatar women do not have to wear the hijab, while Arab Muslim women cannot go outside unless they put a hijab on.—

Also it seems that the Tatars are the most active in terms of presenting Islam to the Polish Christians —“ and a traditional Tatar hotel and restaurant in Kruszyniany is a vivid example. It has been open for five years, offering villagers and tourists a taste of Tatar life.

Hotel owner Dzenneta Bogdanowicz said that when he moved to Poland he thought it was —such a pity that there was nothing to display the Tatar traditions. So I wanted to give people an opportunity to experience Tatar life,— she said.

And it proved successful, with the restaurant gaining national recognition for its service to Polish tourism.

Warsaw’s only mosque is a converted family home and attracts up to 300 people for Friday prayers.

The President of the Muslim League in Poland, Samir Ismail, says most of Warsaw’s 5,000 Muslims are academics who came to study in the 1980s and stayed.

And although they are a minority religion in the country, they ensure there is no conflict by working alongside Polish Catholics.

—We’re trying to explain to people that stereotypes about women, Islam and terrorism. We’re trying to do what we can and people need time and more information,— Samir Ismail says.

History teaches that Poland was heterogeneous for most of its history. It was home to Muslim Tartars, Jews, Armenian merchants, Scots, Roman Catholics, Orthodox, and Protestants. It encompassed an enormous land mass and was, in principal, a republic of three or more states. Poland did not become largely homogeneous until its borders were decided following the Second World War.

Poland’s multicultural tradition remains alive and well — and this article points to a manifestation of that tradition. Pluralism is as much a part of Polish tradition as the pierogi.

It has been said that a Pole will forsake his own customs to adopt the customs and usages of other cultures. This “borrowing,” in everything from dress, to food, to the arts, has significantly enriched Poland, and the world is all the better for it.

Media, Poland - Polish - Polonia, ,

Polonian events in Portland Oregon

St Stanislaus Choir at The Grotto — Sunday, December 7th at 6pm

Once again, the St. Stanislaus choir will sing Polish carols at the Grotto. This is a great opportunity to hear Polish carols in the beautiful scenery of the Grotto’s Festival of Lights. The Festival, featuring over 150 choral concerts, it is the largest music festival of its kind in the world. Tickets: $7.50 ($3 children), The Grotto, NE 85th and Sandy Blvd, Portland, Oregon, More information:

The following is a recording of the St. Stanislaus Choir at the Grotto in 2006:

New Owner of the Koffeehouse Kraków

Longtime Polish Festival volunteer Mark Ziaja Kirchmeier has now become the sole owner of Krakow Koffeehouse & Deli, immediately north of the St. Stanislaus rectory. Mark looks forward to offering Krakow as a resource for any Polonia groups needing meeting space, or to borrow kitchen equipment chairs or tables. “I am happy to say that 95% of our hours, will compliment our good neighborhood, Grandpa’s Cafe’s schedule, and not overlap with them,” Mark says. Krakow’s hours are Mon-Fri, 6:45am to 6:30pm; Sat 8am to 6:30pm, and Sunday 9am to 6:30pm.

Mark and his wife, Jane, are also interested in organizing a meeting with interested Polonia, and East Indian, Afro-American and Polish-American-owned eateries such as Fire on the Mountain on Interstate Avenue, to better market and improve the historic Interstate area. For more information, contact Mark.

Polish cellist Asia Grzesik will play at Krakow Koffeehouse

Noon, Thursday, Dec. 11
Noon, Thursday, Dec. 18
Noon, Sunday, Dec. 21

Grzesik performed last year with the touring Cirque du Soleil. Krakow admission is free.

Polish Library Association New Year Eve Party

The Polish Library Association would like to invite you to the New year Eve Party. The theme of this year party is “The Phantom of the Opera”. Tickets: $75.00 ($65.00, for PLBA members) available in the Polish Library every Sunday, 12:00-1:00pm (ask for Grzegorz Traczyk).

Looking forward to 2009

Some of the events which have already been scheduled for next year include:

  • Dance Party at Polish Hall – Saturday, Jan 31, 2009
  • Valentine’s evening with Cabaret “Vivat Amore!” – Saturday, February 14, 2009
  • Film Festival featuring the films of Andrzej Wajda – March, 2009