Tag: Literature

Everything Else

Review of Into the Desperate Country

John Guzlowski reviews and recommends Jeff Vande Zande’s novel Into the Desperate Country

From the first page I was reading not because I had to be reading but because what was happening was fresh and engaging. Jeff’s created a novel with a hero, Stan Carter, who blends the kind of plausible motivation and implausible action that you see in the really best novels. Stan’s lost his wife and daughter in a car accident, and in his mourning he’s gone up to the vacation cabin he shared with them in Northern Michigan. Up there, while he’s trying to pull himself together, trying to make sense of what happened, he discovers that he hasn’t been making payments on either his cabin or his house, and both are to be repossessed…

PNCC, Poetry, ,

Happy New Year, and my project for 2009: Poetry

First, I would like to wish you, my readers, a very happy New year. May 2009 be a time of continual growth and enlightenment in our journey to the heavenly Kingdom.

Thank you for following my 2008 project, selections from the writings of the Church Fathers. The Fathers project was my third project. Previous projects included the PNCC Calendar of Saints and selections from the Śpiewniczek Kościelny in 2007 and prayers from Żywoty Świętych – a Polish language lives of the saints in 2006.

Our organizer and first Prime Bishop, Franciszek Hodur, was a strong advocate of education, the printed word, literature, and poetry. He saw these as the fruits of man’s cooperation with God, and the means by which members of the Church could lift themselves up; the path to manifesting their dignity and acquiring economic, social, and cultural standing in their new country. My plan for 2009 is to present a year of poetry in recognition of Bishop Hodur’s emphasis on education, human dignity, freedom, and our ultimate call to union with God.

In The Origin and Growth of the Polish National Catholic Church, the Rev. Stephen Włodarski, Ph.D. writes:

Bishop Francis Hodur was a great advocate of the printed word. He stimulated interest and engendered a desire in his followers to acquire learning. He organized special teaching courses and made available suitable reading material for them. He published the weekly “Straż” (Guard), and later, in 1923, published the weekly “Rola Boża” (God’s Field). Other periodicals published by him were “Nowy Świat” (New World), “Trybuna” (Tribune), “Dziś i Jutro” (Today and Tomorrow), “Wiara i Zycie” (Faith and Life) and the quarterly “Polka” (Polish Woman). In addition to these, Bishop Leon Grochowski published in Chicago, the weekly “Przebudzenie” (The Awakening). A literary book store was opened at St. Stanislaus Parish, in Scranton, where classical literature and various brochures were made available. To encourage reading, cultural evening classes were regularly conducted. Bishop Hodur and other priests lectured on famous writers and scholars, and particularly those of Polish origin. Whenever a famous Pole arrived in the United States, such as Ignacy Paderewski, Henryk Sienkiewicz, Tomasz [Zygmunt] MiłkowskiPseudonym: Teodor Tomasz Jeż (1824-1915), Writer, publicist, and politician. Involved in a clandestine democratic group as a student at the University of Kiev, he went to Hungary and joined its revolutionary anti-Austrian Army during the uprising of 1848-1849. After the fall of the insurrection, he moved to Turkey, joined the Polish Democratic Society (Towarzystwo Demokratyczne Polskie [TDP]), and became its agent in the Balkans. During the January Insurrection of 1863, he organized a small Polish unit there, but he did not manage to join insurrection forces fighting in Poland. In 1887 he co-founded and became the first President of the Polish League (Liga Polska). However, later be did not support its successor, the National Democratic Party (Stronnictwo Narodowo-Demokratyczne [SND]). He authored about eighty works, mostly novels on the history of Poland and the struggle of the Southern Slavs against the Turks. — J. Krzyżanowski, A History of Polish Literature (Warsaw, 1978), 376, PSB, XXI, 263-268 as cited in the Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945, Jerzy Jan Lerski, Piotr Wróbel, and Richard J. Kozicki 1996, Greenwood Publishing Group., Wacław Sieroszewski, and others, they were invited to Scranton where they addressed the assembled and were entertained with poetry recitations and song.

Juliusz SłowackiBishop Hodur greatly admired the poets Juliusz Słowacki (1809 – 1849) and Maria Konopnicka (1842 – 1910).

Konopnicka was Poland’s most inspirational woman poet of the day. In 1906 Bishop Hodur founded a women’s patriotic, cultuiral, and literary society within the Church in her honor – The Maria Konopnicka Societies of the Polish National Catholic Church.

Maria KonopnickaMaria Konopnicka was a prolific poet, novelist, translator and essayist. Her works were noted for their realism, freshness, and spontaneity. In her writings she touched upon the social issues of her time, and exerted a great influence on the next generation of Polish poets and novelists. Konopnicka expressed ideals of democracy and patriotism in her cycle of folk songs and in a poem about peasant emigrants, Pan Balcer w Brazylji (Mr Balcer in Brazil). She also wrote novels for children.

Bishop Hodur was in Poland at the time of Maria Konopnicka’s death, and when the Roman Church refused to bury her, he stepped forward and offered to do so. The Roman Church quickly recanted following Bishop Hodur’s offer. At a celebration in honor of Maria Konopnicka, held in 1920, Bishop Hodur said of her:

She earned merit, above all, in that she spoke to the educated and wealthy strata of the nation, to all working for the enlightenment of the people, to all the disinherited, in the conviction that we are all part of the nation that sooner or later will gain their due rights.

The greatest service Maria Konopnicka performed, however, was in awakening in the soul of the Polish woman love for her responsibilities to the nation, to the family, and yearning for all that is noble, beautiful and good.

Maria Konopnicka tried to point out that the time has passed when a woman tended the home hearth knowing nothing about the world. But new times have come when a woman must be a fellow worker with her husband. She must know the hard responsibilities tied to this life, and share with her husband fate good and bad, to stand by his side, trust him, and uplift his spirit.

Christian Witness,

Pope Shenouda III’s New Book

From Christian NewsWire: Pope Shenouda III’s New Book, Have You Seen the One I Love, Portrays the Soul’s Quest for Jesus Christ

On May 20, 2008, Have You Seen the One I Love, an exegetical book on the Song of Songs (Song of Solomon) by His Holiness Pope Shenouda III, will be released for sale to the general public. Pope Shenouda draws upon his many years of contemplation as a monk in the ancient desert of Scetis, Egypt to develop his commentary on the human soul as found in the Song of Songs. The book is a translation and transcription of a lecture series given by Pope Shenouda in the 1970s. In contrast to many modern authors who seek to paint the Song of Songs as a book of sensuality and physical intimacy, Pope Shenouda captures the true spiritual essence of the Song of Songs, drawing upon the wisdom and writings of the early Church fathers. Pope Shenouda explains that the Song of Songs is a meditation of the human soul while she searches for her Beloved, mirroring the spiritual love of Jesus Christ for His Church. It is only with an understanding of our spirituality that we may embark on our voyage leading to our Lord.

Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria is the 117th Pope of Alexandria and the Patriarch of the Holy Apostolic See of Saint Mark the Evangelist of the Coptic Orthodox Church.

[AMAZONPRODUCT=1419697056]

Poland - Polish - Polonia,

Stuart Dybek Receives MacArthur Grant

I’m catching up with some older news. Here one from the Chronicle of Higher Education: 8 Professors Are Among 24 New MacArthur Fellows

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation named eight professors today among the 24 MacArthur Fellows for 2007.

The fellowships, or “genius awards,” as they are commonly called, recognize people in a variety of fields for their creativity and promise. Each new fellow receives an award of $500,000, which is meant to encourage future exploration and comes with no strings attached.

Among the academic winners for 2007 are a medieval historian, biologists who study bees and spider silk, and several other professors working in the sciences.

The MacArthur Foundation does not accept applications for the awards. Instead, it invites approximately 100 professionals from nearly every academic discipline to submit anonymous nominations to the foundation’s 12-person selection committee. The committee, whose members also serve anonymously, reviews all nominations and then forwards its recommendations to the foundation’s Board of Directors for approval. Winners are then notified via telephone.

This year’s class of 24 brings the total number of MacArthur Fellows since the program began, in 1981, to 756.

Stuart Dybek, writer in residence at Northwestern University. His short stories pay tribute to the literature and iconography of the Old World while exploring the imaginations of contemporary American communities.

Here is Mr. Dybek’s profile from Western Michigan University where he is a professor of English.

Everything Else,

The Pope’s new book

Benedict XVI, the Bishop of Rome, has a new book coming out, Jesus of Nazareth. A few notes from the AP via the Houston Chronicle:

Benedict began writing his personal meditation on Jesus Christ’s teachings, entitled “Jesus of Nazareth,” in 2003 when he was still Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. He stressed that the book is an expression of his “personal search for the face of the Lord” and is by no means official Catholic Church doctrine.

“Everyone is free, then, to contradict me,” he wrote.

Benedict —” a prolific and well-known theologian well before he became pope —” thoroughly examined the Gospel accounts of Jesus’ public ministry to arrive at the foundation of the Christian faith: that Jesus is God.

Benedict said the fundamental question he is exploring in the book is what Jesus did.

“What did Jesus truly bring, if he didn’t bring peace to the world, well-being for all and a better world? What did he bring?

“The answer is very simple: God. He brought God.”

The 448-page book is due in bookstores in German, Italian and Polish on Monday, Benedict’s 80th birthday. The English edition is due for release May 15 and translations are planned for 16 other languages.

The book is the first of two volumes: Rizzoli, the Italian publisher, said Benedict is expected to write a second volume exploring the birth of Christ, his crucifixion and resurrection.

“Jesus of Nazareth” covers several key points of Jesus’ public life and ministry. An entire chapter is devoted to his baptism, another to the prayer Jesus taught the faithful, the Lord’s Prayer, and another to Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, praising the poor, the meek and the hungry in the “Beatitudes.”

It looks like this will be a very good read. As with a few of John Paul’s books, I’ll probably read this one as well.

The Catholic mind and heart has much to teach the world. As such reading the works that flow from our shared, yet separate experiences, opens one to seeing things in new ways.

Poland - Polish - Polonia,

Literary introduction

The Consulate General of Poland in New York invites you to the De Lamar Mansion Salon of Arts & Ideas, Thursday, March 29, 8pm, for the formal introduction of a new work of historical fiction JADWIGA’S CROSSING by Aloysius A. Lutz and Richard J. Lutz with Readings by co-author Richard J. Lutz.

Photo ID is required for admittance to the Consulate

233 Madison Avenue (at 37th Street), Manhattan, New York City, NY