Tag: History

Poland - Polish - Polonia, Political, , , ,

75th Anniversary of the Unemployment Insurance Program

This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Unemployment Insurance Program. On the afternoon of August 14, 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act into law. This groundbreaking piece of legislation marked the beginning of the federal-state Unemployment Insurance program. During the past 75 years, millions upon millions of workers who lost jobs through no fault of their own have received temporary unemployment benefits.

Unemployment continues to play a major role in supporting workers when layoffs occur. It is important to recognize the key role that the program plays in economic stabilization. For 75 years Unemployment Insurance has been there when times turn tough, not as a handout, but as a help in the form of weekly paychecks to workers who are ready, willing, and able to work; who are actively seeking employment. Today, with one job for every five people looking, it remains vital in ensuring economic stability for working families, allowing workers to continue to support their families while they get back to work.

The State of Wisconsin had long been known for its progressive attitude toward labor relations and its advocacy for improvement in the socio-political system of the early 1900’s. The state’s leadership embraced the “Wisconsin Idea,” a philosophy proposed by the University of Wisconsin, which holds that the boundaries of the university should be the boundaries of the state. It advocates for the application of research conducted in the University of Wisconsin System to improvements in health, quality of life, the environment, and agriculture for all citizens of the state. As part of these reforms, Wisconsin enacted the nation’s first unemployment insurance law in 1932, in the midst of the Great Depression. Six other states enacted UI laws prior to the Social Security Act of 1935 – California, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Utah, and Washington.

Wisconsin issued the first unemployment check in the amount of $15 to Neils B. Ruud of Madison, Wisconsin on August 17, 1936.

A close examination of the check reveals that among the 4 signatures authorizing payment was the signature of Peter Anthony Napiecinski, a member of the Industrial Commission of Wisconsin, and the son of Polish immigrants.

Peter A. Napiecinski (AKA Napieczinski) was born in Two Rivers, Wisconsin on May 21, 1892, the son of Thomas and Julia (nee Lewandowska) Napiecinski, Polish immigrants. He was one of eight children in his family, and one of two who went to college.

After graduating from high school, Peter was accepted to the University of Wisconsin — Madison. He worked as a telephone operator on campus to pay his tuition. He was later a starting forward for the University of Wisconsin Badgers basketball team and was also a member of the Phi Alpha Delta Fraternity.

Following graduation, Peter served as a Captain in the United States Army in Europe during World War I. Leading a platoon, he encountered a German contingent. He studied how his men looked at the enemy, and noted their fears. He knew that he needed to say something to prepare them, so he told them, “Work for a cause, but fight for your dreams.”

Following the war, Peter attended Law school. Upon graduation he practiced for 11 years during the Great Depression specializing in rescuing businesses on the verge of bankruptcy. One of the businesses that he was able to save was Acme Galvanizing, which upon re-opening provided jobs for 100 people.

Governor Albert George Schmedeman appointed him to the Industrial Commission of Wisconsin where he served from 1933 to 1937.

Peter lived to be 100 old. He credited his work in the Unemployment Insurance Program as among the greatest accomplishments of his life. He passed on December 26, 1992 in Milwaukee.

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SOLIDARNOŚĆ: Poland’s Struggle for Freedom at Wayne State

Lech Walesa to Visit Wayne State University In Detroit
By Raymond Rolak

DETROIT– The Walter P. Reuther Library of Labor and Urban Affairs at Wayne State University will be opening a new exhibit, SOLIDARNOŚĆ: Poland’s Struggle for Freedom.” The former President of Poland, Lech Wałęsa will be making an appearance to bring attention to the 30 year anniversary of the Solidarity labor movement.

The exhibit will open October 27, 2010 and run until July 1, 2011. The Reuther Library at 5401 Cass Ave. is across from the Main Detroit Public Library. “We are just the ambassador’s as so many people helped including the Office of the President, at Wayne State,” said Michael Smith.

Smith, Director of the Reuther Library at WSU and Marcin Chumiecki, Director of the ‘Polish Mission’ at St. Mary’s Schools in Orchard Lake got together last February and went to Miami to invite Lech Wałęsa to help kick off the exhibit.

October is also Polish Heritage Month in America. Smith added, “Wayne State invites the whole community to view the displays during the run. It is concise, informative and historical. The exhibit will be open to the public starting at 9:00 A.M. on Wednesday October 27.”

“The Reuther Library has a strong tradition of reaching out into the community to document our labor history,” Smith added. “We will have some very rare photos and artifacts from Soldiarnosc in the exhibit.”

The Walter P. Reuther Library of Labor and Urban Affairs at WSU is the largest labor archive in North America. Its mission is to collect, preserve and provide access to the heritage of the American labor movement. Reuther was the long time leader of the United Auto Workers and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously in 1995 by President Bill Clinton. In Metro Detroit the I-696 Freeway is named the Walter P. Reuther Freeway in his honor.

Reuther and his wife May were killed in a 1979 plane crash near Pellston, Michigan.

Smith and Chumiecki also travelled to Poland to research and document the background for the exhibit. There are first person accounts, which are the most valuable in a history account. Some items are on loan from the Polish Mission. Smith added, “Wałęsa said he was honored to come to Detroit to announce the opening of this exhibit. He was genuinely enthused and of course added insights that only he could do. This is living history.”

Wałęsa was President of Poland from 1990-95. He was front and center for the “Solidarity” trade union movement that eventually changed Poland and led to the break of control from Russia. This was the catalyst for the political changing of the borders of the USSR.

A former welder at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdańsk, Poland, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1983 for his human rights efforts throughout Europe.
Wanda Strozyk, President of Fiat Solidarity Union in Poland will also be appearing in Detroit. Her visit just happens to coincide with a historic labor vote that will affect the aviation industry. Thru November 3, the Delta Airlines Flight Attendants and the former Northwest Airlines F/A’s are voting to determine if there is going to be representation by the Association of Flight Attendants-Communication Workers of America (AFL-CIO). Delta is now the largest commercial airline in the world.

Wałęsa, who will be on a restricted schedule during his Detroit visit, was the first democratically elected president in postwar Poland. During his area stay, he will meet privately with labor and community leaders. On October 28, he will travel to Chicago for a fundraiser.

Groups can make arrangements to view the Reuther Labor Library Detroit exhibit at 313-577-4024, starting October 27.

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

Can the East be the East?

From the National Catholic Reporter: Protests against ‘Roman imperialism’ at Middle East synod

While the Christians of the Middle East face a staggering variety of external challenges, from the Israeli/Palestinian problem to the rise of radical Islam, it was internal ecclesiastical questions which actually loomed largest during day two of the Oct. 10-24 Synod of Bishops for the Middle East.

Concretely, several representatives of the Eastern Churches of the region registered strong protests against what they almost seem to regard as a sort of “Roman imperialism” inside global Catholicism. Their basic argument is that reforms are required if the identity, authority and heritage of the 22 Eastern Churches in communion with Rome are to be preserved.

Six different Eastern churches from the Middle East are represented in the synod: Armenian, Chaldean, Coptic, Maronite, Melkite, and Syrian. Concretely, different prelates from those churches proposed:

  • Eastern Churches in Europe, North America, and elsewhere should be allowed to ordain married priests, not just in the “historical” territories of those churches;
  • Patriarchs and other heads of Eastern Churches should have authority over their communities all around the world, not just those back home;
  • Eastern Patriarchs should automatically have the right to cast votes in papal elections, and should take precedence over cardinals;
  • The process of papal approval of the election of bishops by the synods of Eastern Churches should be simplified and sped up.

Whether any of those ideas actually survives in the propositions which the Synod of Bishops will eventually deliver to the pope remains to be seen, but collectively they suggest a fairly widespread frustration with what leaders of the Eastern Churches sometimes perceive as a sort of second-class citizenship within Catholicism.

The proposal for married priests came from Archbishop Antonios Aziz Mina, a Coptic prelate from Egypt.

“Since the 1930s there has been a ban on the ordination of and the practice of the ministry by married priests outside the territories of the Patriarchy and the ‘Historically Eastern regions,’ Mina said.

“I think, in line with whatever the Holy Father decides, that the time has come to take this step in favor of the pastoral care of the Eastern faithful throughout the diaspora,” he said.

Historically, the Vatican has been reluctant to countenance the ordination of married priests for communities of Eastern faithful outside their home regions, partly on the grounds that it might call into question the practice of mandatory celibacy for Latin rite priests as well.

Bishop Vartan Waldir Boghossian, responsible for Armenian Catholics in Latin American and Mexico, delivered the most forceful argument in favor of extending the authority of Eastern patriarchs and other church leaders over their faithful who have emigrated outside the traditional territories of that church.

“It is difficult to understand why the activities of the patriarchs, the bishops and the synods of the Eastern Churches should be limited to their territory,” he said. “Of the 23 Churches that today in their own right make up the Catholic Church, only one, the Latin Church, is not subject to this limitation.”

“This paternity and jurisdiction must not be limited to a territory,” Boghossian said. “Limiting it to its faithful is perfectly logical, but not limiting them to a territory, especially if there are no longer members of the Church in that territory!”

The same point was made indirectly by American Monsignor Robert Stern of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association, which said that limiting the power of Eastern structures makes sense given an older “geographic” model of the church, but not so much in light of a more personal approach.

“The limitation of the jurisdiction of Eastern heads of churches ‘outside’ their homelands presumes a geographic model,” Stern said. “ If a personal network, this is not appropriate.”

Mina, the Coptic bishop from Egypt, echoed the argument in favor of extending the jurisdiction of Eastern patriarchs.

Boghossian was also the prelate who insisted that Eastern patriarchs should vote for the pope and trump cardinals, since a patriarch is actually the head of a church in its own right.

“The Patriarchs of the Eastern Catholic Churches, because of their identity as fathers and leaders of ‘sui iuris’ churches that go to make up the Catholicism of the Catholic Church, should be ipso facto members of the college that elects the pontiff without the need for the Latin title of ‘cardinal’,” he said.

“For the same reason, they should also take precedence over [the cardinals],” Boghossian argued.

Mina also offered several practical suggestions for streamlining and expediting papal approval of the election of bishops in the Eastern Churches, which is typically done by the body of bishops meeting in a synod. In effect, he suggested that the pope be regarded as a member of each synod even if he’s not physically present, and that his consent to an election generally be presumed.

Finally, one additional “outside the box” idea was floated in the synod this morning: the creation of a bank of priests ready to give three months to a year in service to a community in the Middle East or some other exceptionally priest-starved region of the world…

The best comment on the whole thing which points out the one major obstacle to Church unity:

Eastern rite Catholics have always been treated by Rome as second class citizens. They’d be better off seeking union with their Eastern Orthodox counterparts until such time as Rome sees the light and ends it’s attempts to exercise direct control of the universal church, both east and west.

The imperial or Caesarian papacy always was fictional and the sooner it dies the better. The pope has no authority beyond his own diocese and the Petrine primacy is meaningless outside a synodical or conciliar structure.

Christ did not choose Peter “Lord of the Church”. Which, due to the exigencies of history, he has come and made of his office. A monarchical office exercising overlordship in all matters. Thus, rendering the local bishop little more than a water carrying toady and “Yes Man” for Peter who gave him his job. This has no warranty in scripture or in the pre-Nicene Church.

There can be no true ecumenism as long as the Church of Rome’s model for governance continues.

Reading between the lines, the Synod is worried. In their native lands, they are divided against their very brothers in Orthodoxy (some more than others, but none are one). In their native lands, the number of people practicing is dramatically decreasing due to emigration resulting from persecution. This is the “staggering variety of external challenges.” Unless these Churches can consolidate and extend their authority over the diaspora, they will wither away. Unless they can be who they truly are, who they are will be lost (except in text books and well meaning encyclicals). As a commentator at Byzantine TX implies: They are not a bridge.

For members of the PNCC looking at this, take note and learn. Unity with Rome means that you may well cease to be who you really are. You will lose what is unique and special about your character, your contribution to the life of the Church may be washed away. These folks have been unified for centuries and they are loosing more than they have gained, gaining only unity with an idea of “Peter” which doesn’t bear up under Church Tradition.

The R.C. Church has frequently directed the Eastern Churches in union with it to be who they are. They should maintain their unique Rites and uses, including the liturgies. They should be considered to have equal bearing and dignity with the Church of the West in communion with Rome. They should not attempt to change themselves (self-latinize – see long discussion here) into something they are not. Unfortunately, the reality is at best mixed to something quite different.

As the Synod points out, well meaning directives never reach reality. Internally, many of these Churches have self-latinized trying to fit in with the much larger Western Church. They have introduced devotions and styles not in their tradition (while anyone can practice whatever private devotions he or she chooses, things outside the tradition of a Church should not be liturgically practiced – in fact, not what the R.C. Church teaches). Externally, the more formal reality can be gleaned from relations among the Churches under Rome, as is pointed out above: the traditions of the Eastern Churches are not fully respected, rather they are “adapted” to whatever the West sees as best for itself (Patriarchs powers are limited, celibacy is a rule if you happen to have a site in the west, and the decisions of the various Synods on election of bishops is long delayed in Rome).

In my view, the best step forward would be the dissolution of these Eastern Churches back into communion with Orthodoxy in their ancient Sees. That would start the process of absolving centuries of mistrust that have built up from the very day these Churches were established. Politically, their very reason for existence (at least at the start) was to stand against the rightful Eastern Orthodox Churches, and to sheep steal. Those hurts remain real to this day. For instance, I have spoken with members of the Armenian Apostolic Church who see the very existence of these Churches as hurtful. They have asked, Why is there an Armenian Church in communion with Rome dividing the small Armenian population in Poland? It may be time for an honest assessment of their reasons for existence, and for some wisdom of this ‘middle ground’ existence. Changing the outward explanations for existence will not suffice.

Another interesting study on this issue from Orthocath in Can East & West Coexist With Married Priests? Thank you to the Young Fogey for the link.

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Will you buy me?

As some may know, there has been a great deal of stress, sadness, and consternation in Cleveland over the closing of many of the area’s Roman Catholic Parishes. A new website, Endangered Catholics, highlights many of the issues of concern.

I previously wrote about one of the Cleveland Parishes who, with a large share of their membership and priest, have formed their own church in: “What will happen next?” These people are taking concrete steps in an effort to do what the PNCC did over 100 years ago, establish that those who support and work for the Church have a say in its management.

People are finding the courage to speak out. The Rev. Donald Cozzens recently editorialized in the Cleveland Plain Dealer on Why our priests remain silent:

In her letter to the editor, “Silence of the priests” (July 31), Frances Babic lamented the silence of Cleveland’s priests in the face of church closings by the Catholic bishop of Cleveland, Richard Lennon.

For some time now, Bishop Lennon has been the target of heated and often cutting criticism for the closing and merging of 50 of Cleveland’s Catholic parishes. But the strongest cries of protest arose over the closing of perhaps 10 to 12 parishes whose spiritual vitality and ability to meet their bills appeared evident. No satisfactory rationale, it was claimed, was ever extended to these parishioners explaining why their churches had to close their doors — only the oft-repeated talking points of demographic changes, financial realities and the shortage of priests.

But the silence of Cleveland’s priests, with the exception of the Rev. Bob Begin (“Priest sends public challenge to bishop on church closures,” The Plain Dealer, March 13), goes beyond the fate of closed and boarded churches. We priests have remained silent because it is our way of life.

We priests have remained silent as evicted parishioners of closed parishes coped with feelings of disorientation and spiritual abandonment while searching for new parish communities — and others decided not to search at all.

We priests have remained silent about our own tattered morale and the widespread spirit of discouragement in the people of our diocese.

I suspect Frances Babic and other Catholics are thinking: What have you priests got to lose? You have no family to support, no mortgage to pay off, no children to educate, and you enjoy unparalleled job security. Why do you remain silent?

Here is why I think we priests remain silent…

In times of crisis, and I believe it is clear that the Catholic Church of Cleveland is in crisis, mature believers need to ask what they can do to help their church regain its equilibrium and renew its spirit. This is especially true of its leaders, its priests.

A few weeks back I spoke with members of a closed Parish in St. Johnsville, New York, courageous folk who have been hurt. Others in the Albany, New York area have made quiet inquiry. Having just spent a few days at Synod, I heard more on the numbers of disaffected Roman Catholics opening talks with the PNCC so that they might found their own parishes; Parishes where they democratically control the parish property and where each member gets a voice and a vote over their parish’s administrative, managerial, and social matters:

In administrative, managerial and social matters, this Church derives its authority from the people who build, constitute, believe in, support and care for it. It is a fundamental principle of this Church that all Parish property, whether the same be real, personal, or mixed, is the property of those united with the Parish who build and support this Church and conform to the Rite, Constitution, Principles, Laws, Rules, Regulations, Customs and Usages of this Church. — Constitution of the Polish National Catholic Church, Article VI, Section 3

The National Catholic Reporter recently did an article on The ‘had it’ Catholics. The article’s slant toward liberalism aside (no, you cannot change defined Doctrine in any of the Catholic Churches), the statistics reported therein are alarming. The goings-on in Cleveland exacerbate the loss of R.C. adherents. As I have noted on previous occasions, people may not necessarily leave the R.C. Church after a forced closing, but their attendance rate drops. They stay nominally R.C. so that they might be buried from the Church. For those who do leave, and desire Catholic truth in a Church where they have a voice and vote, the PNCC should be seriously considered.

When a group of Christians decide that the idea of this Church answers its convictions and desires to organize a Parish, representatives of said group shall communicate with the Bishop of the Diocese and make known its intention. The Bishop of the Diocese, after investigation and being satisfied of the group’s intention and convictions, shall authorize the giving to the group all manner of assistance, furnish it suitable Church literature, legal requirements, a copy of the Constitution and Laws of the Church and a model charter. This action shall be done in concurrence with the Prime Bishop. — Constitution of the Polish National Catholic Church, Article V, Section 2

This Sunday marks both the 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time (C) and the observance of Heritage Sunday in the PNCC. We mark this Sunday as a day to honor the heritage of our members which now spans the ethnic and cultural diversity of this nation and others. As I reflected today, I felt sorrow over the report at the Endangered Catholics site noting that many of the items from Parishes to be closed are being sold off, even while there are appeals before the Vatican over the closings (anyone get the idea that the Bishop already knows that the response to the appeals will be a pro forma “No”). These items are more than glass, plaster, wood, and cloth. They are the pennies of our ancestors and their heritage, the Church Triumphant. They are now the tears of those who have no say over the fruits of their labor, the Church militant. Looking at them, we have to ask, Who will buy me? Who will cherish me? Who will see more in me than outward appearances?

St. Stanislaus Kostka missing the Crucifix he usually carries
St. Wenceslas with Brass Flag

You can have St. Stanislaus Kostka sans Crucifix for $875 and St. Wenceslas with his brass flag for $3,750.

And I said to them: If it be good in your eyes, bring hither my wages: and if not, be quiet. And they weighed for my wages thirty pieces of silver. — Zechariah 11:12

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WBFO Covers Buffalo-Katyń Connection

WBFO radio aired a very well done story about the Katyn exhibit currently on display at the Downtown Library in Buffalo Connection to the Katyn Massacre. In the piece, reporter Michael Mroziak interviews a descendant of a victim of Katyn who had been born in Buffalo, New York before his family moved back to Poland.

About one year ago WBFO aired a great story about Polish WWII survivors living in Buffalo, a story that later received a prestigious award.

Note that the Katyn exhibit continues at the Downtown Library Saturday, Sunday and Monday morning. On Sunday, October 17th, the English-language version of Andrzej Wajda’s film “Katyn” will be screened at the library at 2 p.m. The library opens at 1 p.m. on Sunday. Arrive early to view the exhibit.

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Events

Polish-American Buffet at the Albany Polish Community Center, 225 Washington Ave Ext., Albany, NY on Friday, October 8th from 4-8pm. Call 518-456-3995 for more information.

Film Screening: The American Polish Central Committee of Lawrence County will show the movie “Nine Days That Changed the World — Pope John Paul II” at 5 p.m. Sunday, October 10th at Holy Trinity Polish National Catholic Church, 1708 S. Jefferson St., New Castle, PA as a part of the October celebration of Polish-American Heritage Month. The documentary is about Pope John Paul II’s historic nine-day pilgrimage to Poland in June 1979 just before the disintegration of Communism in Eastern Europe. The public is invited to the free showing, and refreshments will be served. More information about the American Polish Central Committee.

Ziti Dinner and Basket Raffle: Saturday, October 16th, 5-7 p.m at Resurrection of the Lord Polish National Catholic Church, 35 Zerby Ave., Edwardsville, PA. Adults pay $8; $4 for children 10 years old and younger. Salad, meatballs, ziti, bread, homemade deserts, and beverages served. Takeouts available. For more information call Margaret, 570-288-9350, Dorothy, 570-287-5843, the Rev. Pawel, 570-283-2686, or Rich Manta, 570-696-3668.

Harvest Festival/Dożynki at the Albany Polish Community Center, 225 Washington Ave Ext., Albany, NY on Sunday, October 17th from Noon until 8pm.

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Katyń Massacre Exhibit on display in Buffalo

Katyń Massacre Exhibit at the Buffalo and Erie County Central Library from Wednesday, September 29 at 8:30am through October 18 at 6:00pm. The library is located at 1 Lafayette Square, Buffalo, New York.

Information on the 70th anniversary of the Katyń Forest massacre will be highlighted with an exhibit at the Buffalo & Erie County Public Library. There are numerous local connections to the massacre. The exhibit lists two Buffalo-born men who were killed in the massacre. A number of current local residents are descendants of others who were among the 20,000+ murdered and buried in Katyń by the Soviet secret police.

The exhibit was featured earlier this year at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC during the month of April coinciding with the tragic plane crash that killed nearly 100 of Poland’s leadership personnel in Smolensk, Russia. The Buffalo News did a video on Katyń and the exhibit.

The tragedy thrust the story of Katyń onto the front pages of newspapers around the world, spurring interest in this massacre that had been covered up for decades by the Soviets.

The exhibit was prepared by Andrzej Przewoźnik, a Polish historian, for the Council to Preserve the Memory of Combat and Martyrdom and the New York City based Kościuszko Foundation. Ironically Przewoźnik was one of those killed in that plane crash on April 10.

A CIA spokesman, Benjamin Fischer wrote the following about Katyn:

“One of the earliest – and certainly the most famous – mass shootings of prisoners of war during World War II did not occur in the heat of battle but was a cold-blooded act of political murder. The victims were Polish officers, soldiers, and civilians captured by the Red Army after it invaded eastern Poland in September 1939. Strictly speaking, even the Polish servicemen were not POWs.

The USSR had not declared war, and the Polish commander in chief had ordered his troops not to engage Soviet forces. But there was little the Poles could do. On 28 September, the USSR and Nazi Germany, allied since August, partitioned and then dissolved the Polish state. They then began implementing parallel policies of suppressing all resistance and destroying the Polish elite in their respective areas.”

This exhibit is being brought to Buffalo through the efforts of the WNY Division of the Polish American Congress and the Kościuszko Foundation, WNY Chapter and the Polish Legacy Project of Buffalo-WWII.

On Sunday, October 17th at 2pm Andrzej Wajda’s Oscar nominated film “Katyń” will be screened in the library. The film contains English subtitles.

The exhibit is located in the open area on the main floor of the library.

Christian Witness, Poland - Polish - Polonia, Political, , , ,

New Holiday in Poland

Breaking News, New Holiday Added By Richard Rolak

WARSAW– The Sejm (Polish Parliament) approved that January 6, the Feast of the Epiphany would become a national holiday and an official non-working day.

In a secular oriented announcement it was explained that the additional free day on Epiphany will be a convenient way of using holiday time from the previous year during first few days of the New Year. It was also explained that it was being instituted so families could spend more time together.

From Poland’s Gazeta Prawna (Legal Gazette): To już pewne: Trzech Króli dniem wolnym od pracy

January 6, or Epiphany, will be a day off from work. Parliament amended the Labour Code and Law on days off from work on Friday, September 24th.

The PO and PSL parties voted for a holiday on the Epiphany. The PiS and the Left added conditions based on lobbying by businesses that do not want to offer an additional holiday.

There were 370 deputies voting for, 44 against, and one abstention. Members also voted to remove the Labour Code allowing for a floating day off for any holiday that falls on a Saturday or Sunday. Changes to the Code are effective 1 January 2011.

According to calculations provided, the introduction of additional holiday will result in nine additional days off between 2011 to 2020. The abolition of the floating day off provision will return eight working days to the economy over the same period.

Currently, the January 6th holiday is observed in Germany, Greece, Spain, Italy, Austria, Sweden, and Finland. January 6th was a holiday in Poland until 1960.

Perspective, PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , , ,

Debunking nativism and stereotyping

From The Bristol Press: Addressing Polish stereotypes

Author and scholar Danusha V. Goska came to CCSU to give her “Fiedorczyk” otherwise known as “Brute Polak” lecture, poking holes at stereotypes to a receptive audience Thursday night.

Particularly in the United States, stereotyping of different people is commonplace and unfortunately, socially acceptable, she said.

“In America, Poles have become the prototypical ethnicity associated with the working class. Prejudice against Poles is often commingled with contempt for working class people, and for manual labor itself.”

She discussed the toxic nature of stereotypes and pointed out that “If you think stereotypically, you will stereotype everyone, including yourself.”

Professor M.B. Biskupski, the S.A. Blejwas Chair of Polish American Studies introduced Goska, who teaches at William Paterson University. Biskupski has dedicated his academic career to “setting straight the misinformation about Poles,” according to CCSU media relations officer Janice Palmer.

Goska has written a book on the subject, titled “Bieganski,” which specifically addresses the issues associated with the interaction between people of different cultures, nationalities, ethnicities, and religions, but specifically Jewish, Christian and Muslim relations. This subject encompasses everything from stereotypes, racism, immigration, tolerance, and multiculturalism, the media’s treatment of the concept of ethnicity, the online spread of stereotypes and hate, and the Holocaust.

The process of finding someone willing to publish one’s writing is never an easy feat, but for Goska, it seemed impossible. She began showing publishers “Bieganski” in 2002 and continuously received the same reaction: initial praise, promise of publication, and then a final backing-out. Each of the rejections in this series always employed the same reasoning; although compassionately moving, her words were to be written by some famous scholar, not an unknown Polish-[Roman] Catholic writer.

Finally in 2009, her long search ended when she found a pair courageous enough to take on the controversial book and set it out into the world. Antony Polonsky, Albert Abramson Chair of Holocaust Studies at Brandeis University, suggested Academic Studies Press, run by Igor and Kira Nemirovsky.

Before her speech, Goska told reporters, “I knew that somewhere out there were my fellow Poles and Polish Americans, and I vowed that I would reach them someday with a book that would serve them, serve my ancestors, and serve my own family. In the upcoming lecture at CCSU, I will finally reach my audience.”

It would be interesting to see the author address the role of the PNCC and other early Polonia organizations, such as the PNU (not necessarily Roman Catholic at the time, but inclusive of R.C., PNCC, Protestant, and Jewish Polish immigrants), in both fighting nativism and in building the underpinnings of the success found by future generations.

Bishop Hodur, of course, stressed the idea of cohesive community, education, literacy, representation, Trade Unionism, participative democracy, and self-sustaining communities.

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Screening of Modjeska- Woman Triumphant

Polish Movie Nite is happy to announce the San Francisco premiere of Modjeska- Woman Triumphant, presented by Maureen Mroczek Morris, Sunday, October 17, 2010 at 3pm at the Delancey Street Screening Room, 600 Embarcadero, San Francisco, CA 94107

Modjeska- Woman Triumphant is presented by Maureen Mroczek Morris for the benefit of the Polish Club. Suggested donation: $5-10. Please call (415) 244-5252 to reserve your seat.

Modjeska- Woman Triumphant, 2009, 57 minutes

The stylized documentary Modjeska- Woman Triumphant is the culmination of six years of work by director Basia Myszynski, who has referred to the film as the “project of [her] life.” Probably most compelling is the narration by Beth Holmgren, professor at Duke University, who is currently working on a book about Modjeska.

Born in 1840 (arguably, but that’s a whole other story), Helena Modrzejewska was a famous Polish actress working in the second half of the 1800s. Although much literature and other materials exist about Modjeska (as she came to be known in the States), most notably about her life and career in Europe (Poland did not exist as a sovereign nation at that time), this is the first film to specifically focus on Modjeska and her life in Southern California, which she so loved.

In 2009, I attended a lecture by Marek Zebrowski (director of the Polish Music Center at USC), hosted by the Modjeska Art and Culture Club of Los Angeles, during which he spoke about Modjeska’s close friendship and intellectual exchange with composer Ignacy Paderewski. Zebrowski, who was also interviewed for Myszynski’s film, made the case that Modjeska left Europe for the US for largely political reasons. Interestingly, Woman Triumphant puts forth another thesis, namely that Modjeska also fled greatly for personal reasons. With an illegitimate son in tow (and her own legitimacy also frequently pointed out), she could reinvent herself in a new country without the stigma and gossipy journalism that publicly followed her every performance. No doubt, it was a combination of multiple pressures that pushed her out of the Russian Empire (although she had been born near Krakow under the more lenient Austrian rule, she had advanced quickly to play leads in Warsaw as well as in Russian cities). In a brief email exchange, Myszynski explained to me, “The film focuses on the most personal of reasons because [they] most affected her [and] me as a filmmaker.” Focusing on the personal in addition to the political reasons “would highlight the drama best in understanding why we make the choices we make – usually we are most affected by the personal,” she writes.

That said, Modjeska was not only running away from problems, but turning to new opportunities. She envisioned the formation of a utopian artist colony in the Wild West, where she and fellow ex-patriots would live off the land and at night could discuss art, literature, and music around a campfire. She would eventually call her property Arden, referring to the work of her beloved Shakespeare. After emigrating in 1876, she settled in 1888 in Orange County, in what is now known as Modjeska Canyon. She stayed at Arden until 1906, when she moved to Newport Beach where she would spend the last years of her life writing her memoirs…