Tag: immigration

Perspective, Poetry, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , , , , ,

Dr. John Guzlowski – out, about, and reflecting

It is great to see John well on the road to recovery and writing. Two recent posts for your reading pleasure:

Charles Simic and Me: DP Poets

I got an email yesterday from a friend. He asked me what I thought about Charles Simic. He’s a poet that some of you might have heard of. He was the poet laureate of the US a couple of years ago. I think my friend was asking me about him because he figured that Charles Simic and I shared some history. We both came to the US after the war as Displaced Persons, refugees…

A really interesting reflection, and followed by a selection from Charles Simic and a new poem by Dr. Guzlowski, “A Dog Will.”

And for Father’s Day: Father’s Day

My father didn’t teach me to fish or play ball or paint a fence or drive a car. He couldn’t do any of those things. He was an orphan who worked on his aunt’s farm in Poland until the Nazis came and took him to a concentration camp. When he got to America after the war, he was too busy working to do much of anything else…

Also, compare and contrast to: My Father’s Gift to Me by Nicholas Kristof from the NY Times.

When I was 12, my father came and spoke to my seventh-grade class. I remember feeling proud, for my rural school was impressed by a visit from a university professor. But I also recall being embarrassed —” at my dad’s strong Slavic accent, at his refugee origins, at his —differentness.—

Christian Witness, , ,

Memory eternal Metropolitan Schott

From the Pittsburgh Tribune: Byzantine archbishop preached unity

A Bishop who saw through divisions to underlying unity. Eternal rest grant unto him O Lord.

Many of the people who knew Metropolitan Basil Schott say the trappings that come with heading the Byzantine Catholic Archeparchy of Pittsburgh never diminished his desire to live the simple life of spirituality that drew him to ministry as a young man.

“He was a very humble, unpretentious man who overflowed with warmth and caring for people,” said the Rev. Donald Green, executive director of Christian Associates of Southwestern Pennsylvania. “Even when there were disagreements between us about how various churches viewed things, he always was quick to remind us that we are all brothers and sisters.”

Metropolitan Archbishop Basil Myron Schott died Thursday, June 10, 2010. He was 70. The archbishop was diagnosed with cancer last year, according to the Rev. Dennis Bogda, rector of the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Munhall.

The archeparchy, which is the eastern church’s equivalent of a Roman Catholic archdiocese, is made up of about 58,500 members in 79 parishes across Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Tennessee, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas.

Archbishop Schott was born in Freeland in Luzerne County, where he attended St. Mary Byzantine Catholic School. He graduated from St. Gabriel High School in Hazleton. He entered the Byzantine Franciscans Order in 1958 and made a profession of his religious vows a year later. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1965.

The archbishop earned bachelor’s degrees in philosophy and theology from Immaculate Conception College in Troy, N.Y., and master’s degrees in theology and pastoral counseling from St. Mary Seminary in Norwalk, Conn.

The Rev. Schott was ordained a bishop in July 1996 and appointed head of the Byzantine Catholic Eparchy of Parma (Ohio). In May 2002 he was appointed Metropolitan Archbishop of Pittsburgh by Pope John Paul II.

Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik described the archbishop as a “great and well-loved leader and a good friend not only to me personally, but to the entire Catholic community.”

“All that have been blessed to know him recognized the deep compassion of a Christ-like leader,” Zubik said. “He was always there as a gentle, supportive voice to all that make up our beautiful mosaic of faith — Christian, Jewish and Muslim — and to all of Pittsburgh,” Zubik said.

Green said the archbishop had a unique ability to promote ecumenism.

“He came out of a tradition that lived through all sorts of conflicts in Europe, including persecution during the communist era,” said Green, who visited and prayed with the archbishop on Monday at UPMC Passavant in McCandless. “Because his Christian tradition bridged both east and west, he was especially sensitive to the call for unity…”

Events, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , , , , , , , ,

Upcoming Capital Region events

This weekend: 2010 Annual Armenian Festival at St. Peter’s Armenian Apostolic Church, 100 Troy-Schenectady Road, Watervliet, New York on Saturday, June 12, 4:00 to 8:00 p.m. and Sunday, June 13, 12:00 noon to 4:00 p.m.

This year’s Festival will again be held for two days on the church grounds of St. Peter Armenian Church located on a majestic hilltop overlooking the city of Troy. Join our Saturday night Tavloo (Backgammon) Tournament: 4:30 P.M. $15 Registration Fee. Sunday afternoon free Armenian dance lessons will be offered. A local DJ will provide Armenian and Middle-Eastern music for dancing and listening enjoyment. Amusement rides as well as pony rides and games will be available for the children. Dinner & Ala Carte Menu (subject to change) including Kebab Medley Dinner: $15; Lamb Kebab Dinner: $13; Chicken Kebab Dinner: $11; Kid’s Meal: $5 (includes one hot dog, pilaf and tossed salad); Lahmejune: $3.00 each; Pilaf: $3.00 serving; and Cheese Beoreg: $3.00 serving.

The bakery will offer an array of Armenian pastries and homemade baked goods including paklava, cheoreg, simit, kadayif, boorma, kurabia as well as a variety of cookies, brownies, cakes and pies all sold at ala carte prices.

For more information, contact the St. Peter Church Office at (518) 274-3673.

At the Polish Community Center, 225 Washington Ave Ext, Albany NY

Friday, June 11: Polish-American buffet 4-8pm
Sunday, June 13: Jimmy Sturr Annual Polka Ball 3-7pm. Polish-American kitchen open as well as cash bar with variety of imported Polish beers!
Sunday, June 20: USA Ballroom Dance 6pm
Saturday, June 26: Mystery Dinner Theater 6pm

For more information, please contact the PCC at 518-456-3995.

Saturday, July 3, 2010: Bus trip to a Yankees Game! NY Yankees vs. Toronto Blue Jays. Leaving the PCC at 8:15 am, returning directly after the game (1:05 pm game time). Cost is $85 for PCC members, $90 for non-members. Price includes game ticket and round trip charter bus service. Seats in section 207 (main level). Contact Susan Matala at 518-355-7981 or by E-mail.

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, 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, Perspective, Political, , , , , ,

Arizona’s Immigration Bill is a Social and Racial Sin

From Jim Wallis via Sojourners.

For the first time, all law enforcement officers in the state will be enlisted to hunt down undocumented people, which will clearly distract them from going after truly violent criminals, and will focus them on mostly harmless families whose work supports the economy and who contribute to their communities. And do you think undocumented parents will now go to the police if their daughter is raped or their family becomes a victim of violent crime? Maybe that’s why the state association of police chiefs is against SB 1070.

This proposed law is not only mean-spirited —” it will be ineffective and will only serve to further divide communities in Arizona, making everyone more fearful and less safe. This radical new measure, which crosses many moral and legal lines, is a clear demonstration of the fundamental mistake of separating enforcement from comprehensive immigration reform. We all want to live in a nation of laws, and the immigration system in the U.S. is so broken that it is serving no one well. But enforcement without reform of the system is merely cruel. Enforcement without compassion is immoral. Enforcement that breaks up families is unacceptable. And enforcement of this law would force us to violate our Christian conscience, which we simply will not do. It makes it illegal to love your neighbor in Arizona.

Before the rally and press event, I visited some immigrant families who work at Neighborhood Ministries, an impressive community organization affiliated with Sojourners’ friends at the Christian Community Development Association. I met a group of women who were frightened by the raids that have been occurring, in which armed men invade their homes and neighborhoods with guns and helicopters. When the rumors of massive raids spread, many of these people flee both their homes and their workplaces, and head for The Church at The Neighborhood Center as the only place they feel safe and secure. But will police invade the churches if they are suspected of —harboring— undocumented people, because it is the law? Will the nurse practitioner I met at their medical clinic serving only uninsured people be arrested for being —with— the children of families who are here illegally as she treats them?

At the rally, I started with the words of Jesus (which drew cheers from the crowd gathered at the state Capitol), who instructed his disciples to —welcome the stranger,— and said that whatever we do to —the least of these, who are members of my family— we do to him. I think that means that to obey Jesus and his gospel will mean to disobey SB 1070 in Arizona. I looked at the governor’s Executive Tower and promised that many Christians in Arizona won’t comply with this law because the people they will target will be members of our —family— in the body of Christ. And any attack against them is an attack against us, and the One we follow.

Catholic Cardinal Roger Mahony of Los Angeles just called this Arizona measure —the country’s most retrogressive, mean-spirited, and useless immigration law.— On CNN, I defended the Cardinal’s comments, which likened the requirement of people always carrying their —papers— to the most oppressive regimes of Nazism and Communism. I wonder whether the tea party movement that rails against government intrusion will rail against this law, or whether those who resist the forced government registration of their guns will resist the forced government requirement that immigrants must always carry their documentation. Will the true conservatives please stand up here? We are all waiting.

Arizona’s SB 1070 must be named as a social and racial sin, and should be denounced as such by people of faith and conscience across the nation. This is not just about Arizona, but about all of us, and about what kind of country we want to be. It’s time to stand up to this new strategy of —deportation by attrition,— which I heard for the first time today in Arizona. It is a policy of deliberate political cruelty, and it should be remembered that —attrition— is a term of war. Arizona is deciding whether to wage war on the body of Christ. We should say that if you come after one part of the body, you come after all of us.

Jim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: On Wall Street, Main Street, and Your Street —” A Moral Compass for the New Economy, and is CEO of Sojourners.

I was also interested in the events over in Congress today. The people who run Facebook got a dressing down, with members of Congress telling them how they should run their company. You must use opt-in rather than opt-out or some such nonsense. The sorry truth is that government uses its legislative powers to do what appears to be good at the time (in their minds), and in the process wrecks everything. Facebook has a bad security/privacy model — the market will decide. I want to have a cervezas with José and Maria after church on Sunday, — do not associate with them or we will arrest you (Constitution, free association and free exercise be damned). Don’t pack your chips or pretzels with salt — because we assume Americans and the free market are too stupid, lazy, and overweight to know better. We need a nanny. Don’t eat Foie gras, don’t use trans fats, but go ahead corporate America, pour in as much high fructose corn syrup as possible… no problem there.

Actually, good on Arizona. When their restaurants have to pay fair, or at least minimum wages and overtime to white boys and girls for cutting vegetables and running the dishwasher, when uncle Henry and aunt Jane have to trim their own cactus, when Union carpenters move in to do the framing work on all those senior housing developments, then they’ll get it. Following laws will be a 100% full time job for Arizonans. Just follow the law, and your dinner out will double in price, and your buy-in for a place at Sun City (assessment fees, capital contribution costs, original housing cost) will double; all because José and Maria aren’t doing it for next to nothing anymore. You’ll be paying Brandy and Todd instead, and they won’t take your crap, they’ll walk out or strike. Oh, and don’t forget about the sales and property tax increases, because a big segment of your society isn’t earning or spending in Arizona anymore. At least you won’t have to look at those odd Catholic foreigners, those scary people and their scary brown children (they’re all the same aren’t they???).

But, you want it both ways don’t you?

Unfortunately, the worst laws are those quickly enacted to make a point. They create a country where we are free to be fat, lazy, cheap, and protected because someone had an idea and made a point. Whatever happened to building things with our ideas? Now we just write laws for the sake of laws. We use ideas as fodder for the word-processing programs that enshrine law over and above all else, and most particularly over the Law that tells us we are free.

Christian Witness, , , ,

95th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Today, I stand with my Armenian brothers and sisters in New York’s Capital Region in recognition and memory of the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

To All Mothers By Kegham Sarian
Translated from Armenian by Daniel Janoyan

Our mothers preserved the Armenian language
And passed it to their children when breast feeding.
They also filled them up with the Fatherland
So that its people will live eternally.

Our mothers preserved the Armenian songs
While rocking their children all along their songs
With tears in their eyes and wounds in their hearts
They always kept dreaming of life that is free.

They never yielded our language and our songs
To traitors, the sultan, nor also to any tsar
Whose dream was only see us give up and retreat
And to enable them rule over our Armenian land.

Our mothers have never been slaves to foreigners,
Neither have they ever been disappointed.
Having hugged the Armenian book and their children
They’ve always lived proudly in this very world.

Even now it is the Armenian mothers
Who are keeping the legacy live
Preserving our songs, language and noble spirit
Having sacrificed themselves whole-heartedly for our Fatherland.

I am now embracing your hands, O mothers.
You are sacred and holy within my heart.
Keep preserving always our Armenian language
To enable us live forever in this world of ours.

Poland - Polish - Polonia, , , ,

Remembering Katyn, remembering a grandfather and father

From American Public Radio: Remembering Katyn

Across Poland this week, memorial services have been held to honor the dozens of dignitaries who died in last weekend’s plane crash. They were on their way to mark the 70th anniversary of what’s become known as the Katyn Massacre, the killing of over 20,000 Polish officers and intelligentsia at the start of World War II. Anna Wojtowicz’s father perished on that plane. Wojciech Seweryn had devoted his life to building a monument to honor the Polish victims of Katyn, including his own father. His powerful sculpture of a fallen Polish soldier held in the arms of Mary sits at the entrance to St. Adalbert Cemetary in Niles, Ill. Anna talks with Dick about the importance of remembering all that her dad and her grandfather stood for…

The podcast of the interview is here.

Poland - Polish - Polonia, , ,

Praying for the dead in Bethlehem, PA

From The Morning Call: Polish church in Bethlehem holds service in memory of plane crash victims

 

From the ashes of tragedy, the Polish people might well rekindle the sense of solidarity they lost in the years since uniting to throw off the yoke of Soviet control, the Rev. Bogdan Jurczyszyn believes.

Jurczyszyn celebrated a special Mass Sunday at Our Lord’s Ascension, a Polish National Catholic Church in Bethlehem, to honor Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and 94 others — largely high-ranking officials — who died April 10 in a plane crash in Russia.

”The government was divided, there were a lot of parties and they make trouble, you know,” Jurczyszyn said before the Mass. ”But this event changed most in the government and they are ready to talk and unite the parties and move forward if the decision is good for the country.”

The service began with the blessing of the Polish flag, which was carried by Hank Kudzik, the son of Polish immigrants and a World War II submariner who lives in Allen Township. Jurczyszyn led about 20 people in Polish prayers and hymns but gave the homily in English.

In searching for meaning to the tragedy, Jurczyszyn said before the service that he was heartened by Russia’s response to Poland’s loss. The two nations have had a tense relationship for years but Russian leaders have reached out to their grieving neighbor.

Kaczynski and the Polish delegation were on their way to a service commemorating the 1940 Soviet massacre of about 22,000 Polish officers and civilians in Katyn, Russia, during World War II. Jurczyszyn hopes Russia will open its archives to the Polish people so they can learn more about what happened to their countrymen at Katyn.

”Looking at Russia right now, we see very positive movements,” said Jurczyszyn, whose wife, Anna, is Russian.

Losing half of a government in an instant would test any country, much less a young democracy like Poland’s. But Jurczyszyn said so far Poles have passed that test, keeping the peace and responding with a renewed purpose.

Contributing to Jurczyszyn’s optimism is the fact that he once had the new acting president of Poland, Bronislaw Komorowski, for a high school history teacher and has faith in him as leader.

”He never used the book, only his head, you know,” the priest said. ”Every class with him was so interesting.”

Attending the Mass, Karen Amate of Northampton said she came to honor the Polish people and show support for Jurczyszyn.

”I haven’t been to a Polish Mass in a long time,” said Amate, whose father was a Polish immigrant. ”When I hear it, it brings back memories of growing up and it does remind me of our heritage.”

That was true too for Bethlehem resident Nicolette Stavrovsky, who grew up in the church and learned some Polish from performing songs in traditional costumes as a child in a church group called The Children of Mary.

”As you get older, you appreciate the traditions more,” she said.

Daniel Broczkowski of Bethlehem, whose grandfather was a founding member of the parish in 1927, said his family’s ”love for Poland and our sympathy for the Polish people are deep rooted.”

The sudden loss of so many government leaders is almost unimaginable, he said. ”It’s hard to fathom that in America and have the country go on. It would certainly be a blow aÂ… to the spirit of the country and make people look to each other and say, ‘How do we go on from here?”’

Current Events, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , , , , , ,

In Albany last night

From WRGB:

The ceremony was attended by the diversity of the Polish community, with members from the Polish National Catholic, Roman Catholic, and Ukrainian Catholic communities. Prayers were offered by each, including a beautiful panikhida by the Rev. Mikhail Myshchuk. Reflections were offered by the leaders of Polonian organizations as well as area political leaders. Greetings and marks of condolence were read from the Capital Region’s Jewish community.

From the Schenectady Gazette: Capital Region Poles unite to honor plane crash victims

More than 200 members of the Polish community in the Capital Region attended a memorial service Friday night honoring the president of Poland and 95 other members of that country’s political, military and religious elite killed when their jet crashed April 10 in Russia….

From YNN: Polish community honors crash victims

The local Polish-American community came together to remember and honor the Polish leaders who died in last week’s plane crash.

The memorial service was hosted by Albany’s Polish Community Center. There, people heard prayer readings and a speech that Polish President Lech Kaczynski was supposed to give at a ceremony before he was killed in the crash.

The Polish President and First Lady were among 97 of the country’s dignitaries killed in that crash one week ago. They were flying to Russia for a ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the Katyn Forest massacre where more than 20,000 Polish prisoners of war were killed by soviet agents.

Those who attended the memorial service say they are not surprised by the large turnout.

“It shows the deep emotion and feelings people have. It’s also indicative of the large numbers that we have in the Capital District area of people from Poland in the recent past and from Polish heritage background,” said Fr. Carl Urban.

Mourners also tell us that the most positive thing to come out of the plane crash is that many people are now aware of the Katyn massacre.