Day: December 2, 2008

LifeStream

Daily Digest for 2008-12-02

lastfm (feed #3) 12:46pm Scrobbled 20 songs on Last.fm. (Show Details)

blog (feed #1) 1:00pm Ecumenical charity in Poland
twitter (feed #4) 1:01pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Ecumenical charity in Poland http://tinyurl.com/6r95ae
blog (feed #1) 1:21pm Your prayers and support needed in the case of Andrzej Nowakowski
twitter (feed #4) 1:21pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Your prayers and support needed in the case of Andrzej Nowakowski http://tinyurl.com/69ua97
blog (feed #1) 1:34pm Service and witness
twitter (feed #4) 1:34pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Service and witness http://tinyurl.com/5qjpcg
blog (feed #1) 1:40pm Community tours in the Pittsburgh area
twitter (feed #4) 1:40pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Community tours in the Pittsburgh area http://tinyurl.com/5oxgvr
blog (feed #1) 2:18pm December 3 – St. Leo the Great from his sermons
twitter (feed #4) 2:18pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: December 3 – St. Leo the Great from his sermons http://tinyurl.com/5woe7l
PNCC, ,

Community tours in the Pittsburgh area

From the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: Three communities open homes for tours

Western Pennsylvania was settled and built in a time of prosperity, with homes that offered a wealth of flavor and design.

From the historic mansions of Scottdale to the array of designs featured in both the Uniontown and Mt. Pleasant areas, holiday home tours have become a popular draw and this year all three communities will once again open a handful of lovely homes for tours.

Mt. Pleasant

Next in line for holiday home tours will be the Mt. Pleasant event, which is sponsored by the Mt. Pleasant Area Historical Society.

The tour will take place from 2 to 8 p.m. Dec. 13 and will feature four homes, one church and the Chestnut Log House.

Featured homes this year will include:

—¢ A 200-year-old farm house that is located in Laurelville. The wonderful old home was once an area stagecoach stop.

—¢ The “Yellow House” on Braddock Road Avenue, one of the area’s older homes, featuring an estate filled with unusual plants and trees.

—¢ A Main Street home where visitors will be treated to an extensive collection of Santas.

—¢ The recently purchased Church Street home of Janis and Monty Gamble, a Victorian style that they are looking forward to showcasing.

“They asked us and I said that I’d be honored,” Janis Gamble said. “I love people and I’m very excited.”

—¢ The Transfiguration of Our Lord, Polish National Catholic Church on Bridgeport Street.

—¢ The Chestnut Log House on Washington Street, along with the Senior Citizens Center that sits adjacent to the home. A raffle featuring many gift baskets will be held at the center.

The tour is self-guided and self-paced and all participating properties will be clearly marked.

Tickets for the event will be $15 and can be purchased at Coke’s Barber Shop, the tax office located in the Borough Building, the Chamber of Commerce offices and also the Historical society offices.

The historical societies of Scottdale and Mt. Pleasant are having a friendly challenge this holiday season, and each are collecting sets of twin sheets to be donated to Christian Layman Society of Greensburg to benefit area children. Ask for details when purchasing tickets.

All three tours will take place snow or shine.

Christian Witness, PNCC

Service and witness

From The Republican: Kitchen’s fare said ‘fantastic’

WESTFIELD – Robert Cyran enjoys being at Our Community Table – also known as the Westfield Soup Kitchen – to eat turkey with strangers on the last Thursday of November.

“This is the day when you wanna be thankful for whatever you have; I am thankful for my health, good patience, and peace of mind,” said the Westfield resident who has been going to the 101 Meadow St. facility for “three straight years.”

A traditional Thanksgiving table was set for about 60 diners at the former Hotel Westfield on Thanksgiving Day, said Edward J. Fournier, who coordinates the volunteers and the meal’s preparation.

The menu featured mashed potatoes, stuffing, carrots, turnips, cranberries, pies, rolls, and “six big carved turkeys,” said Fournier.

“Meals have been delicious – just fantastic,” pronounced Cyran.

The group that prepares free meals for needy people six days a week was ready to provide the holiday dinner for anyone who showed up, Fournier said.

“I don’t know yet how many people would come during the day, but we’ve got plenty of food,” he said. “We are going to do seconds and everything else.”

So far, the supply of donated foods has not slowed for Our Community Table.

“We are thankful for the opportunity for the workers at this kitchen, that they have the opportunity to help, because there may have been times when they were ministered, too,” said the Very Rev. Joseph Soltysiak of St. Joseph’s Polish National Catholic Church. “And now they have the opportunity to minister.”

The volunteers included Susan Tremblay, who went to help serve along with her sons, Nathan, 13, and Trey, 15.

The Tremblays volunteer regularly at the soup kitchen, said Nathan.

“I do drinks and serve them,” he said. “I usually come here on Mondays and holidays.”

The decorations for the event were made by Southwick students, said Fournier.

The Samaritan Inn homeless shelter on Free Street served a Thanksgiving Day meal for about 30 people.

“That’s our usual attendance,” said Peter C. Gillis, executive director.

He also noted that the shelter’s contributors have been generous.

“We are struggling just like everybody else, but we are all set with our food supplies,” he said.

Christian Witness, PNCC, Political,

Your prayers and support needed in the case of Andrzej Nowakowski

Your prayers are requested for Vivian and Andrzej Nowakowski and their family. Also of your charity, please drop a note to Senators Christopher Dodd and Joseph Lieberman requesting their intervention in the case.

From the New Britain Herald: Andrzej’s case up for review

The case of a city man imprisoned for listing prior convictions on a green card renewal application is being reviewed by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

He could be freed. The review is a victory for his family, including a wife who has spent thousands of dollars and much of her time in court, writing letters, seeking help from officials and otherwise worrying since his April 23 arrest by immigration officials.

Andrzej Nowakowski, 43, of New Britain, who came to America from Poland when he was 9 years old, has a criminal history for drug convictions. As a chronic pain patient, he became addicted to oxycodone.

There was never talk of deportation when he pleaded guilty, served his time, kicked his addiction and was working and taking care of his ailing father-in-law and wife, Vivian, who needs a kidney transplant.

Health officials listed Andrzej as her caregiver on the kidney transplant list. She will lose her place on the list without a caregiver at home, which could kill her, and no one else would be as well suited to the job. Health professionals familiar with the case cite Andrzej’s experience and the couple’s shared immunity to germs.

—My whole family needs me,— Andrzej said during a phone interview Friday from the Wyatt Detention Facility in Central Falls, R.I., where he is being held. —I need to be out there for the sake of my wife. She needs me out there. I am really concerned about her health and the health of my in-laws. I will do anything to get her healthy. But they want to deport me.—

Andrzej said he still has chronic pain in his back, but he has learned to live with it.

—I don’t want to do any drugs,— he said. —My wife’s life is on the line.—

Nowakowski’s son, David Lombardo —” Andrzej raised him as his own after Vivian’s prior marriage —” is a corporal in the U.S. Marine Corps in California, awaiting an April deployment to Iraq after training other marines how to fight and survive in the field.

Although Andrzej respects the fact that —my son is a patriot,— he said what the country is doing to him and his wife is wrong.

The review could be a correction to that, and could take place at any time.

But immigration officials won’t let Andrzej out if they see him as a danger to the community —” he has no record of violence —” or as a flight risk.

Letting her husband out to care for her is a safe bet, Vivian said, because —if he does anything to screw it up, I will deport him myself.—

Jokes aside, Vivian said, —He would never skip. Where would he skip?—

Lombardo, who was home for a Thanksgiving visit to his parents’ High Street home with his fiancee, Jennifer Ramirez, noted that Andrzej was co-owner of an area family business and always paid off his car payments and taxes. —It is not like he is some drug addict with no money. He has paid his taxes, supported his family and supported his community,— Lombardo said.

Immigration officials also take into consideration such things as —disciplinary problems while incarcerated,— which does not apply to his father.

—While incarcerated he has never caused any problems,— Lombardo said. —He has been in this country for 35 years. He has done his time [for the past crimes]. None of this applies.—

Ramirez choked back tears as she explained the situation and vouched for the integrity of her soon-to-be father-in-law.

—Everyone is guilty of temptation,— she said. —This is a man who married a woman, regardless of her sickness, knowing that they couldn’t have kids, and raised David as his own. He is a good-hearted man.—

Vivian walked across the carpeted living room and hugged Jennifer.

—I want the whole family together for Christmas,— Vivian said.

She has been depressed during the fight for her husband’s freedom, especially since learning Aug. 29 she’d lost an appeal on his behalf. In addition to missing her husband and being faced with her own death, she has had to deal with the deteriorating health of her father, who was recently hospitalized for his severe heart and kidney problems.

Seeing her son and Ramirez on Thanksgiving cheered her up.

While Vivian is resigned that her fate and that of her husband —is in God’s hands,— her son hopes the officials reviewing his father’s case are able to see it for what it is.

—I am looking at this optimistically,— said Lombardo, adding that he could not believe his father had been arrested in the first place.

—He is her life partner,— he said, and will be caring for his mother and for her father at home.

A Homeland Security source in Washington, D.C., who spoke anonymously because he wasn’t authorized to comment on the case, suggested earlier this month that Vivian needs somebody to —carry the spear for her,— even after letters of support were sent from New Britain’s Common Council, the city’s legislative delegation and U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy, D-5th District.

Sources said Donald Kent, then assistant secretary of the office of legal affairs for the department, never got the materials and wasn’t the right person to receive them. Officials at the congressman’s office, however, believed his letter had merely failed to change the status of Andrzej’s deportation order.

Kent has since resigned and been replaced.

Vivian needs someone such as U.S. Sens. Chris Dodd or Joseph Lieberman, both Connecticut Democrats, Murphy or someone at the federal level to fight for her behind the scenes, the Homeland Security source said.

Immigration officials are human beings too, and can have compassion, the source said.

Now that her son is by her side, she has drawn renewed strength and faith in God, she said.

The family attends the Polish National Catholic Church of the Transfiguration and Our Savior.

—People with no compassion haven’t lived a hard-enough life,— Lombardo said.

Lombardo is leaving today, but plans to return at Christmas.

Christian Witness, Poland - Polish - Polonia,

Ecumenical charity in Poland

From the English section of Polish Radio: Christmas Candle Campaign launched

The annual national Christmas candle campaign launches today at all churches and denominations in Poland.

For 14 years now, the Polish Roman Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox churches have joined in a fund-raising campaign for children, selling special candles which are traditionally lit at the table on Christmas Eve.

This year the organizers are also drawing special attention to the problem of “euro-orphans” —“ children whose parents have gone to work abroad.

Also, part of the proceeds this year will be going towards helping children in Africa.

The program’s principal sponsor is Caritas.

An ecumenical prayer service and concert kicked-off this year’s campaign. The concert and service was held on November 30th at St. Mary Magdalene Orthodox Church in Warsaw. Bishops Henryk Hozer and Tadeusz Pikus of the Roman Catholic Church, Bishops Ryszard Bogusz and Ryszard Borski of the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Poland and Bishop JERZY Pańkowski of the Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Poland represented their respective denominations. The children’s choir —žŚwiatełko— from St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Parish in Siedlcach, the choir from Ascension of the Lord Evangelical-Augsburgian Parish in Warsaw, and the Choir from the host parish, St. Mary Magdalene’s each performed.

Fathers, PNCC

December 2 – St. Ambrose of Milan from the Letters of St. Ambrose

Wherefore in every act, but especially in the search after a Bishop, by whose model the life of all is formed, malignity ought to be absent, that by a composed and peaceful exercise of judgment he may be preferred to all who is to be chosen from all and who may heal all. For a gentle-minded man is the physician of the heart, of that whereof our Lord also in the Gospel has professed Himself a Physician, “They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick.

He is the good Physician, Who has taken upon Him our infirmities, Who has healed our sicknesses, and yet He, as it is written, “glorified not Himself to be made an High Priest,” but He that said unto Him, even the Father, “Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten Thee,” as He saith also in another place, “Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedeck.” And as He was to be the type of all priests, He took upon Him our flesh, that in the days of His flesh, “He might offer up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto” God the Father, “and though He were the Son” of God, “might even learn obedience from the things He suffered,” in order to teach us, that He might become to us the Author of salvation. Finally, having accomplished His sufferings, and being Himself made perfect, He gave health to all, He bore the sin of all.

Thus He Himself chose Aaron the High Priest, that human ambition might not sway the choice, but the grace of God; no voluntary offering, nor taking upon himself, but a heavenly call, that he might offer gifts for sins, who could have compassion on sinners “for that he himself also,” it is written, “is compassed with infirmity.” A man should not take this honour to himself, but he that is called of God as was Aaron; so also Christ did not assume but received His priesthood. — To the church of Vercellae, paragraphs 46-48.