In relation to the story of Irena Sendler – no, she wasn’t a “sewer specialist.” Snopes has the breakdown of how this urban legend evolved. For factual information and more on Irena Sendler and her heroic witness during Word War II see the Irena Sendler film website.
From the Kosciuszko Society and the Huffington Post: Josef Stalin Must Not Be Honored At The National D-Day Memorial.
The National D-Day Memorial website notes:
At the eastern entrance of the walk leading to Elmon T. Gray Plaza, the action on the European Theater’s eastern front will be acknowledged with a portrait of Marshal Joseph Stalin, General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
The National D-Day Memorial in Virginia has, unfortunately, decided honor Josef Stalin by placing his bust on a pedestal at its museum.
Several Polish war veterans in New York, who fought against Stalin and Hitler asked Alex Storozynski, President & Executive Director of the Kosciuszko Foundation, to write something about this outrageous development. His father and grandfather both fought against Nazi and Soviet troops during WWII. His article appears on the Huffington Post. Feel free to add your own comments.
If you are as outraged as I am, please send a letter to the President of the D-Day Memorial, William McIntosh, at the National D-Day Memorial Foundation, P.O. Box 77, Bedford, VA 24523, or call 800-351-DDAY (toll free) or E-mail here. You may also feel free to contact the White House here.
Of note, the plaza where the bust will be placed is named after the Hon. Elmon T. Gray of Virginia, a former Virginia state senator. You can write to him at P.O. Box 82, Waverly VA 23890-0082.
From the NY Times: A History of 20th-Century Russia, Warts and All
A new two-volume history of Russia’s turbulent 20th century is being hailed inside and outside the country as a landmark contribution to the swirling debate over Russia’s past and national identity.
Written by 45 historians led by Andrei Zubov, a professor at the institute that serves as university to the Russian Foreign Ministry, the weighty history —” almost 1,000 pages per volume —” was published this year by AST Publishers and is already in its second printing of 10,000 copies.
Retailing at the rough equivalent of $20 a volume and titled —History of Russia. XX Century,— the books try to rise above ideologically charged clashes over Russia’s historical memory. They are critical both of czarist and Communist Russia, and incorporate the history of Russian emigration and the Russian Orthodox Church into the big picture of a chaotic, violent century. While written from a clearly Christian perspective —” one author is a Russian Orthodox priest…
Eminent historians in the United States and Poland who often take a critical view of Russia’s passionate, partisan discussion of history lauded its balance.
—Nothing like it has ever been published in Russia,— Richard Pipes, the Harvard University Sovietologist, wrote in an e-mail message, noting that he was trying to raise money for a translation and publication in English. —It is a remarkable work: remarkable not only for Russia but also for Western readers. For one, it has gotten away from the nationalism so common in Russian history books, according to which the Russians were always the victims of aggression, never aggressors.—
Mr. Pipes noted that it made extensive use of Western sources —” rare in Russia —” and praised its attention to often overlooked questions of the role of morals and religious beliefs…
From PolishSite, a history of Poles in Alaska from 1741 to the present day in: Polish Tracks in Alaska by Martin S. Nowak
Foreign crewmen have been common on the ships of most nations down through the centuries. Russia was no exception. Men of varied backgrounds manned her ships, including Poles.
Poles were among the crews of Vitus Bering, himself a Dane, and Alexei Chirikov, that discovered Alaska for the Russians in 1741. Research has identified the names of Poles in the ships’ logs. Translated from the Latinized Russian are surnames such as Wielkopolski (Velikopolski), Buczowski (Butzovski), and Kozmian (Kozmin). And Jan Kozyrewski was a consultant to the Bering expeditions. Before Bering, ships under the command of Dmitry Pawlecki, a Polish Russian, in 1732 sailed the strait between Siberia and America and supposedly saw the shores of Alaska…
From CentralJersey: Chinese auction helps keep church’s doors open
PERTH AMBOY —” SS Cyril & Methodius PNCC, 600 Jacques St., Perth Amboy, NJ will host a Chinese Auction on Sunday, November 29th. Doors will open at noon, and the auction will begin at 1:30 p.m.
Admission is $3. The Chinese Auction, along with support from parishioners, enables the church to pay its bills.
There will be five tables set up with approximately 70 different items approximately $5 each. The tickets for this table are given along with the entry fee. Additional tickets can be purchased for two sheets for $1.
In addition, there will be two tables with 24 items priced at $10 each. These tickets are six for $1. Another table will feature seasonal items for $5 to $10. These tickets are also six for $1. The last table will have 12 items that cost between $15 and $30. Those tickets are three for $1.
For more information, call 732-442-2090.
From the Times Leader: Pierogi Sale 5-6 p.m. Sunday, November 29th and Sunday, December 13th at Good Shepherd Polish National Catholic Church, 269 E. Main St., Plymouth, PA. Varieties include potato with cheese and potato with jalapeno peppers. Cost is $7 per dozen. Pickup orders at 5 p.m. in the church auditorium. Diners can earn a $1 discount by donating a new unwrapped toy on Sunday for the Toys for Tots program. Call 570-779-4781 to order.
On the National Day of Action to Stop Wage Theft:
- Interfaith Worker Justice (IWJ) raised $7,383 toward its efforts to stop wage theft;
- In Memphis, the Workers Interfaith Network released the results of a survey it conducted of local low-wage workers, 68 percent of whom reported not being paid for all the hours they’d worked;
- In Chicago, four Polish workers each owed over $10,000 by a contractor
The contractor is Walter Bochenek, a prominent Polish contractor. Bochenek owns three construction companies and has long hired Polish immigrants, many of whom don’t speak English. Since 2007, workers hired by Bochenek for a rehabilitation of the Sacred Heart School on the city’s north side have been shotchanged $70,000. Pan Bochenek, My dla ciebie – Ty z nami? , together with religious leaders and organizers with the Arise Chicago Worker Center, announced a lawsuit for back wages at one of the contractor’s current work sites; - A rally and press conference were held at the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison, workers and members of the clergy joined with the Workers’ Rights Center to demand both state and federal government measures to combat wage theft;
- IWJ, along with key allies (NDLON, NELP, AFL-CIO, Change to Win, SEIU), met with Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis and other top Department of Labor officials about increasing enforcement and outreach efforts in the department’s Wage and Hour Division and OSHA; and
- In New York, the Department of Labor announced the results of a sweep of restaurants in the tony Park Slope neighborhood in Brooklyn.
From The Brooklyn Paper: Slopers in guilt trap as restaurants shortchange deliverymen
First, Park Slope residents had to feel bad about eating non-organic food and having a high carbon footprint. Now, they even have to confront their liberal guilt when ordering in.
Last week, the state Labor Department claimed that 25 Slope restaurants underpaid their mostly immigrant workers as little as $2.75 per hour – a charge that has left Park Slope reeling, as customers struggle to reconcile their political sympathies with their appetites.
Much-loved stalwarts such as Aunt Suzie’s, and Taqueria, plus others including Bogota, Sette, Coco Roco, Olive Vine, Uncle Moe’s and Bagel World were caught in the dragnet, which included fines and negotiated settlements that stemmed from more than $910,000 in allegedly underpaid wages.
“Wage theft happens not only in dimly lit factories or grim depressed neighborhoods,” state Labor Commissioner Patricia Smith said in a statement. “Even our very nicest neighborhoods sometimes have sweatshops on their main streets.”
…
Still, all of the workers who spoke with The Brooklyn Paper bore no ill will toward their employers – in fact, they were grateful for the money.
“The boss looks for ways to help people, actually. Here we are fine,” one employee who wished to remain anonymous said in Spanish.
A typical response from undocumented workers. They are afraid to cry foul because the boss will immediately turn them over to Immigration. The workers live in fear and are thankful for the work. Their employers know the situations and purposefully exploit these folks. Its happened over and over, from Polish immigrants forced to visit the company stores of West Virginia and Pennsylvania to the well off neighborhoods in the cities and suburbs of today.
The workers weren’t upset, but in Park Slope, where buying a Fair Trade heirloom tomato that costs $2.50 is a badge of honor, many were shocked to find that they were benefitting from a system propped up on cheap labor.
“In this community, this happens?” said Sheri Saltzberg, a 35-year resident of the neighborhood. “It makes me question how those restaurants treat their staff.”
Others were disappointed that their favorite restaurants had been accused of such abuses.
“I was sad because those were places I had gone to,” said David Chorlian, a member of the Park Slope Food Co-Op. “One of them was Miriam’s and another was Aunt Susie’s. I was stupidly surprised that this happened.”
David, Wait till you see the two business owners responses at the end. They don’t give a **** for your sentiment or your country.
Most of the fines were the result of excessive workweeks at salaries below the minimum wage. But roughly half of the underpaid wages were allegedly at two restaurants: Coco Roco and Olive Vine.
The eateries were cited for underpaying their workers a whopping $587,000. In one example, food deliverymen were paid a meager $210 for a 70-hour workweek. The two restaurants’ abuses were so excessive, in fact, that the Labor Department expanded its search to two other locations of both eateries, a spokesperson said.
…
Still, owners who did agree to talk bristled at the notion that they were abusing their workers.
Martin Medina, the owner of Rachel’s on Fifth Avenue between Seventh and Eight streets, insisted he treated his workers fairly and that they did not work excessive hours. Instead, he likened Labor Department inspectors to “meter maids” who bully small business owners and never leave without levying a fine.
“They say I’m not paying overtime or giving lunch breaks, it’s a total lie!” said a fuming Medina. “If I was treating my workers bad, why would they stay with me?”
Because at a minimum they are your indentured servants and live in fear of what you will do if they speak up. Why don’t you point your indignation at the fact that you broke the law.
Indeed, some restaurants ended up on the list for seemingly minor infractions.
Melissa Murphy, owner of Sweet Melissa Patisserie said that her bakery cafe underpaid its workers by just $382 over two years. She attributed the mistake to clerical error.
Minor or not, even tiny amounts of money are a big deal to immigrant workers.
“A lot of people with low skill levels don’t have a lot of job options,” said Terri Gerstein, a deputy commissioner with the Department of Labor. “They’ll stay in a bad situation for fear of complaining or retaliation from the government.”
Exactly.
Some Slope residents are talking boycott, including, of course, workers at the Food Co-op.
“People are actively minded here,” Danielle Leon, who was shopping at the co-op said. “They [might] boycott these restaurants.”But most owners seem more concerned with their profit margins than their tarnished reputations. Irene LoRe, the owner of Aunt Suzie’s, which allegedly underpaid its workers $10,196, even testified against a bill requiring paid sick days for workers.
…
In the end, it’s unlikely that boycott talk will take hold, added renowned restaurateur Alan Harding, best known for the now-closed Patois and the still humming Pacifico. Despite all the righteous chatter, customers are just like the restaurant owners – always trying to save a buck, he said.
“There is this ‘Oh woe is the deliveryman’ idea, but God forbid the turkey burger goes up $2 to reflect the required worker’s insurance and fair wage,” Harding said.
And it’s not as though cheap, hard-working labor is just going to disappear. As such, Medina said he would fight the fines to the bitter end.
“The immigrants I love,” he said. “It’s the Americans I hate.”
Now for the irony… Mr. Medina who owns Rachel’s Taqueria is the son of immigrants, from Mexico. He’s livin’ the American dream by pushing down on immigrants (his own people – I looove you, but be my slave) and cursing the people of the country that’s given him every opportunity. Mr. Medina, return to Mexico and push your taco stand around Mexico City. We’ll see how far you get. The Mexican meter maids will put you away for a long time…
Trembling the Muslim comes to kiss the foot of your crags,
Mast on Crimea’s raft, towering Chatir Dah!
Minaret of the World! Mightiest Padishah Of Mountains!
From the plain Fugitive into the Clouds!As great Gabriel once stood over portals of Eden,
You at Heaven’s Gate watch, wrapped in your forest cloak,
And, in turban of clouds with lightning flashes bespangled,
On your forehead you wear janissaries of dread.Hot sun may roast our limbs, mountain mists blind our eyes,
Locusts may eat our grain, infidels burn our homes,
You, Chatir Dah, would still, unmindful of man’s fate,Rise between earth and sky, Dragoman of Creation;
Far spreads the plain at your feet, home of men and of thunder,
But you can only hear what God to nature speaks.
Translated by John Saly
Drżąc muślemin całuje stopy twéj opoki,
Maszcie Krymskiego statku, wieki Czatyrdachu!
O minarecie świata! o gór padyszachu!
Ty nad skały poziomu uciekłszy w obłoki,Siedzisz sobie pod bramą niebios, jak wysoki
Gabryel pilnujący edeńskiego gmachu.
Ciemny las twoim płaszczem, a janczary strachu
Twój turban z chmur haftują błyskawic potoki.Nam czy slońce dopieka, czyli mgła ocienia,
Czy sarańcza plon zetnie, czy gaur pali domy;
Czatyrdachu, ty zawsze głuchy, nieruchomy,Między światem i niebem jak drogman stworzenia,
Podesławszy pod nogi ziemie, ludzi, gromy,
Słuchasz tylko, co mówi Bóg do przyrodzenia.
From friend, Fr. Joseph R. Cyman at Holy Cross Parish.
Zawsze mialem problemy z opanowaniem 6-ciu strun.
Wreszcie ktos rozwiazal moj problem.
I’ve had the hardest time mastering a 6 string.
Finally, someone has solved my problem.
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New blog post: Daily Digest for November 26th https://www.konicki.com/2009/11/26/daily-digest-for-november-26th/ [deacon_jim]
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New blog post: Guitar mastery https://www.konicki.com/2009/11/27/guitar-mastery/ [deacon_jim]
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