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Saturday, May 14, 2011

A Young Priest's Journey of Faith From Poland to Arlington Heights

By Robert R. Schwarz
 
 
The priest is a man anointed by tradition to shed
blood, not as soldier, through courage, not as
the magistrate, through justice, but as Jesus
Christ, through love. The priest is a man of
sacrifice; by it, each day, reconciling heaven
and earth , and by it, each day, announcing to
every soul the primordial truths of life, of
death, and of resurrection .
--Fr. Henri-Dominique, O.P.

On August 2, 2003, a 23-year-old man disembarked at O'Hare International Airport after a 10-hour direct flight from Warsaw, Poland. He glanced curiously around—his first look at America—before being shuttled to the immigration line then took a deep breath and asked himself: What have I done?
The lone, apprehensive traveler with kind blue eyes and jaunty walk was Krzysztof ("Chris") Kulig, and he had come to this country to become a Catholic priest. Though confident his calling was from God, thoughts of inadequacy pestered him. Herded through the airport's terminal and hit by a barrage of foreign mannerisms and speech that to him sounded like alien babel, Chris was painfully reminded that he knew no English and was, in many respects, still a country boy from a small village in southern Poland. He had forgotten that tomorrow was his birthday.
In a moment, along with l2 other Polish seminary candidates who had been on the same flight, he would be greeted by the rector of Abramowicz Preparatory Seminary, Fr. Andrew Izyk, and the vice rector of University of Saint Mary of the Lake Mundelein Seminary, Fr. August Belauskas. Showing his visa to the immigration official, Chris' preoccupation with the challenges ahead was an echo of what the late Saint Josemaria Escrivá wrote: In Love with the Church: A priest is expected to bring love and devotion to the celebration of the Holy Mass, to sit in the confessional, to console the sick and the troubled; to teach sound doctrine to children and adults, to preach the Word of God… [and] to give counsel and be charitable to those in need.



Again Chris breathed deeply. Ahead was four difficult years of studying in a language he would have to learn to read, speak, and understand well enough to pass not only exams but also to work effectively as a parish priest among many families immersed in a wide spectrum of American culture.

Growing Up
"I never thought I would someday become a priest," Fr. Chris told this writer in one of several interviews we had in the spring of 2011. There seemed to have been no "mountain top" experience for him, no voice from a burning bush but rather, he said, the momentous decision evolved through the years of growing up in his hometown of Zegiestow. Close to the border of Slovakia and once part of a fashionable resort area known for its healing mineral waters, nearly every one of Zegiesgtow 1,200 inhabitants is Catholic. The village today is farmland, lying in a valley beneath hills covered with pine and oak. "We're lucky there because when storms come, these hills absorb them," Fr. Chris said.
His parents, Janina Skalniak and Adam Kulig, and his two older brothers and three sisters still go to mass each Sunday. "There are no exceptions," Fr. Chris said as he related his days as an altar boy who rose at 4 a.m. to catch the 5 a.m. train for the 32- kilometer ride to high school. He was on the soccer team there. His father is a forester, as was his grandfather; his mother is retired cook who worked at Catholic retreat houses. "When I go home to visit, my mom plans a different menu for me each day (his favorite is a cheese-stuffed ravioli or sweet cheese Pierogi)".
The Kuligs are a middle-class family. With some pride, Fr. Chris mentioned that the family "always had bread on the table." He remembers when food was rationed during his childhood in the waning years of Soviet-imposed communism. To deal with the shortage, each of the Kulig children shopped at a different store. "There was a time when there was no food in the stores," Fr. Chris said: "I remember the revolution of 1989," it was the year when the spirits of Polish people soared because the Solidarity-led coalition government led by Lech Walesa was formed, leading to the eventual fall of communism.
His Formation as a Priest
Inspired by Pope John Paul II and priests in his own parish, the young Chris Kulig now wrestled with whether to become a priest himself. His father wanted him to become a forester and his mother wished her son to remain near home. Procrastination was fueled by fear of failure, of not making the grade at the college level seminary in Tarnow. With that lilting Polish accent of his and a voice lowered almost to a whisper-- as it occasionally will today when making a solemn point during a homily-- he explained how "that kind of disappointment would turn a blessing into a curse for me."
The decisive moment came soon after high school when, during the l999 canonization Mass of St. Kinga in Stary Sacz, Poland, he heard John Paul II say: "Saints draw life from other saints." The words struck a chord with the teenager. "Without any delay," he was to say later, "I decided to be a priest." He took—and passed—an exam at the Tarnów section of the faculty of Theology of the Pontifical Academy of Theology in Kraków. "My mother was shocked."
Reflecting on his four years of living among 279 other seminarians and faculty instructors —the first year being crammed into one dorm room with 14 other students-- Fr. Chris fondly remembers the dramatic body language of his Italian instructor, Fr. Boleslaw Marganski, and the creativity of his cosmology professor, Fr. Michal Heller. At first he disliked being restricted to the seminary building all day except for one hour, and for that he needed permission. "But I learned to like it later for the discipline it taught me." He failed a few exams but found the studying not difficult. To prepare himself to better defend the faith, he read several books by authors who challenged the Christian faith.
In his fourth year at Tarnów Seminary, Fr. Chris faced a critical decision: to stay in Poland as a priest or leave his native land for America to help fill the void there of priests.
Coming to America
The decision was sparked by a visit in September 1999 by Cardinal George of Chicago, who ostensibly came to Poland (a country he knew was blessed with a large number of priests) to encourage seminarians there to consider being ordained in America. The Cardinal explained that this would make it easier for a young seminarian to adjust to the Catholic Church in America and to American culture. Reflecting on the Cardinal’s invitation and discussing it during an exchange of emails and phone calls with former classmate (Fr. Robert, now a priest in the Archdiocese of Chicago), crystallized Fr. Chris' decision to come to America.
"Yes", Fr. Chris exclaimed, "I knew I would be leaving everything, my family and friends and coming to a new culture. It would be like jumping into a big ocean, and I didn't know if I would be able to swim well or not. The language was the big thing. And I would be greeted at the airport by someone I had never met."
The Archdiocese of Chicago paid for his traveling expenses, and now, on that August day, as he waited for the immigration official to stamp his student visa, the same thought flashed again: What have I done?
Housed in the Chicago parish rectory of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, he was given intense courses in English for a year at the Bishop Preparatory Seminary and at University of Illinois at Chicago. "I was bombarded with English five days a week from 9am to 12pm and 3pm to 9pm. It was very difficult for me. Sometimes you just look at the teacher and ask: what is she asking me?" Vocabulary challenged him the most, made even more difficult because students were from different countries and could not apply their newly learned language skills by interacting with each other when outside of class. Administrators purposely situated Chris and the other Polish seminarians in environments where they were forced to communicate in English.
"I really didn't have too much difficulty adjusting to the American culture. The only discomfort I felt was when walking down the street and I had to refrain from returning a wave or smile to a child—all because of the sex abuse scandal. I had smiled once or twice in passing a child and my friends told me  'never, never do that again'."
He was amazed by how "fast everything is in America…there is no time for spontaneity. Everything is by appointment. In Poland, for example, when an adult child wants to visit their parents, they just go to their home." Fr. Chris was equally surprised to discover that, unlike in Poland, supermarkets in Chicago supply free paper or plastic bags and are bagged by staff. But if Fr. Chris had any epiphany during those four years he studied at the Mundelein seminary, it came when he sensed a profound difference between the hope which Polish people have in the ability to overcome daily living obstacles and the hope he himself now felt, that in America "just about anything could be fixed here, but not so in Poland."
A Deacon, then Priest at St. James

In November of 2006, Fr. Chris was assigned as "a transitional deacon" to St. James in Arlington Heights, an upscale suburb northwest of Chicago. On weekends he lived with Pastor Bill Zavaski in a residential home next to the parish office. He would later move permanently to an adjacent home and shared it with Father Jim Hearne and now with Father Joji Thanugundla from India. That next May 19th, Mr. Krzysztof Kulig stood in Holy Name Cathedral waiting to become—for life—Father Chris Kulig. In the pews were his parents and a sister (who had traveled from Poland just for this occasion) and Fr. Zavaski. "It was very beautiful," he said. "I found myself asking: Can I really do it? Can I really take that huge responsibility of being a priest?" Minutes later, this 28-year-old Polish immigrant approached the altar and prostrated his wiry five-foot-eight-inch body face down on the cathedral floor. Parallel to him, their faces also pressed to the floor, were l3 other candidates: four from Poland, two each from Tanzania and Kenya, two each from Mexico and Peru, and one born in Chicago. "I will never forget how cold that marble floor was. One of my classmates was crying and shaking….When Cardinal George put his hands on me, I felt relief, I felt that the Holy Spirit was saying: Don't be afraid. I knew that God's grace had brought me this far." He now was one of more than 27,000 diocesan priests in America.

Soon he was being embraced by his family. "I was so happy I cried." Later came a celebration party for him at the White Eagle restaurant in Niles. "It was like a wedding."

His parents and sister listened to his first homily at St. James, a parish of 4,000 families and seemingly uncountable ministries. He told the congregation that Sunday how grateful he was to God for everything, especially his parents. "I was nervous, so aware that I was considered the new kid on the block, and was—and still am—learning English. But I felt welcomed. I never felt that people looked at me through the prism of my nationality but at who I am as a person, how I treat them."
For his first two years at St. James, Fr. Chris read his homilies, which he had written out. Nowadays, he said he trusts in the promptings of the Holy Spirit. He can’t recall his sentiments upon hearing his first confession other than he felt very humble—and says he still does—and was acutely aware not to judge anyone. "I knew that a priest cannot be prepared for any confession because everyone comes to him with something different to confess. I knew I had to give my personal understanding of that person, how I could help him or her be a better person, not to dismiss the confession by simply saying: 'your penance is to say ten Hail Mary's." As for his first funeral, he was surprised to be wearing a white rather than a purple chasuble as worn by priests in Poland.
A Typical Day
"Tell us all about your typical day," I asked this priest with the cropped dark brown hair whose movements were characteristic quick as he pulled two magazines from a bookcase in his small office and then turned to check his email at the desktop computer. "I'm sure your parishioners would truly appreciate knowing more about all that a priest does for his salary." We both laughed.

'I'm not a morning person," he said somewhat apologetically, aware that I might have been at a weekday Mass when he had been a few minutes late. "I set three alarm clocks for 6 a.m. but sometimes don't hear them," he confessed with a wide smile. After showering, he has a cup of strong Dunkin' Donuts coffee. Commenting on his java brew, Fr. Joji Thanugundla, who shares the home with Fr. Chris, said: "I always tell him the coffee tastes better when he makes it. And he takes good care of our house and the yard."

After presiding over the 7:30 a.m. weekday mass, which is usually twice a week, he goes to his home office to check emails.  At 8:30 a.m. in his home, Frs. Bill and Joji and he pray their required Divine Office (three Psalms, the canticle of Zachariah, and petitions for families and the deceased whose funerals are that day). Fr. Chris doesn't eat breakfast. He's off now to the parish office; there might be a funeral or a Bible study he leads from 9:30 a.m. to 11a.m. He lunches at home, usually on leftovers from last night's dinner prepared by the priests' cook, Angie, a parish member who prepares the meal in Fr. Chris' home. The three priests eat together. His afternoon may entail a parish staff meeting from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., followed by a one-hour break. Evenings are often occupied with some kind of church meeting. "Every day is different….on Wednesdays evenings, for example, I am with RCIA team preparing new members to join Catholic Faith. There are different meetings which sometimes you plan these like wedding appointments or visitation at the wake. But some you can't plan, like sick call visit or going to hospital and being with a family whose loved one is near death… Honestly, when I'm really fatigued, I tell the office I won't be back for an hour and then I just go to my room and rest."
Fr. Chris is usually home at 9 or 9:30 p.m. and unwinds by watching the animated TV shows "Family Guy" and "The Simpsons." He may read a novel or something humorous. "Sometimes when you're preoccupied with your work and getting a bit depressed, laughter is needed….Sometimes I call my old Mundelein seminary friends and we might talk for hours."  Depending on his energy level at this late hour, he might slip in an instructional CD and practice his English pronunciations or just update the St. James Facebook page. He finds the late evening hours the best time to prepare for Mass the next day. In the summer, he enjoys the "inspiration" of insect sounds at night. e reHH In the "Magnificat,"  a monthly missal read by Catholics throughout America, he reads a meditation before going to bed. Lastly, he prays the following:
Thank you God for this day. Give me the strength for
another day and keep all my friends and my family in
your care.
Fr. Chris extended his hand to me. "You see this ring on my finger? It's a Rosary ring my mother gave me when I entered the Seminary in Poland. Many times while falling asleep, I touch this ring and say the Rosary and pray to my Holy Mother in heaven. I also remember my mother on earth.”"
Looking at the ring again, Fr. Chris' voice rose an octave as he explained what role the ring plays at weddings. During the ceremony, he takes it off and cautions the groom never to take off his ring as a convenient excuse to feel free from his marriage vows for an hour or two when out with the men some night at a bar. "Keep it on and you will be free of temptation," Fr. Chris exhorts the groom.
He and the other two priests hears confessions from 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Saturdays in the parish center. “Many times though, people just telephone me and ask if they can seen me." He views a confession more like a "friendship, a conversation between someone I don't know but to whom I must relate." Most of the people he sees in the confessional booth are St. James members and are of all ages; men slightly outnumber women, and from time to time he hears a confession from a teenager. Many confessions begin with a question about morality or a request for advice on daily living, like: "Father, I'm not sure I'm on the right path" or the question: "Did I say the wrong thing to my spouse?" With marital problems, Fr. Chris keeps people focused on love and marriage vows. Quite often at the conclusion of a question and answer session in the confessional booth, finally come the words: "Father, can you hear my confession?" Fr. Chris himself goes to confession twice a year: before Christmas and Easter. For private prayers and meditation he occasionally drives to the church at Marytown in Mundelein and walks the grounds amid the beautifully landscaped Stations of the Cross.
Up Close and More Personal

Recreation , etc.… "I'm reading Jesus of Nazareth by Pope Benedict XVI. He also reads the magazines "Archaeology" and "Discover". He loves barbecued ribs and seldom goes out to eat because, he says, “I have a great cook.” Once every three weeks or so he gets a haircut in Mundelein from a woman barber whose been cutting his hair since his seminary days there. A camping trip to Yellowstone National Park was his favorite vacation in America, but “next time I’ll stay in a hotel.”

Friends…When he needs to "vent," he telephones former classmates or talks to Fr. Zavaski, whom he considers a close friend to whom "I can open up to…whether he agrees with me or not, he has that gift of listening well." Said his home-sharer, Fr. Joji: "We laugh, we share, we discuss—all in good spirit. Fr. Chris is friendly and very responsible." Another close friend, Sr. Joanne Grib of the nearby Sisters of the Living Word convent, describes him as "a deeply spiritual man who has a deep respect for all people. He’' a gentle, kind man who is a dedicated priest. We have a lot of laughs together." With a laugh she added: "We both love movies, and as much as we'd like to go to a movie together, we wouldn't want to scandalize the parishioners." Sr. Joanne consults with Fr. Chris when organizing her evening Bible classes.
Political leanings… He chuckles at this, then thoughtfully comments: "I try to follow what the candidates are saying and disagree with them sometimes." Does he favor Democrats or Republicans? "A little of both," he answered.
Milestones in his life…The many people who have "helped show him the way in life."

Celibacy… "When I visit my family in Poland and see my nephews running around, it is sometimes painful knowing I cannot have biological children. But I married the church."

Biggest disappointment…That seminarians at Mundelein are, in his opinion (challenged by Fr. Zavaski ), not taught enough things relevant to today’s  world.
Major needs of St. James parishioners…That "they experience the presence of God in their lives and the treasure of the Catholic church. From the recent parish survey, which I am still reading, I personally find out that parishioners hunger to learn more about their faith." This is not an easy task, he added, because of the mix among parishioners—healthy as it is—of traditionalists (those who want to see the church return to some of the pre-Vatican II practices) and of modernists (those who want greater freedom in how they express their faith).
What disturbs him as a priest…Church leaders—both clergy and laity—who openly criticize  high leadership positions without knowing all the facts about an issue. It saddens him when people don't proclaim Jesus Christ as head of the church but would rather proclaim themselves or their own particular church as the final word.
Agreement with what the church teaches… He has personal opinions but chooses to "obey" church teachings. (After this interview, Fr. Chris during his homily at next morning’s Mass, exhorted everyone to go home and think about their "obedience to Christ" not to obey what they personally prefer to obey. He cautioned his parishioners that although people interpret church teachings differently, due in part to the natural changing of human language as time passes, the spiritual language of the church remains the same and is universal.

             What drives him… "I'm trying to be as humble as I can. I hope people don't read me as arrogant. I just want to present Christ the best I can as a young priest." Again his words seem to echo those of St. Escrivá : A priest is no more a man or a Christian than any ordinary lay person. That is why it is so important for a priest to be deeply humble.
How He Battles with Satan
Fr. Chris is candid about his own temptations. "Sometimes there are doubts about things you do, things that make you sort of empty." When this occurs, he is helped by meditating on the life of the saint, Padre Pio, who helped many people battle evil. "I know I am vulnerable …and sometimes I pray again and again in that moment of temptation, asking God to give me wisdom and strength. After I have been victorious in overcoming the temptation, then the important thing is that I be grateful to God."
Our interview of several hours ended with Fr. Chris relating what he described as his "worst experience ever of doubting the presence of God in his life." He grew increasingly emotional as he told the story of when his youngest sister, Annette, 23, flew from Poland to visit her him in May, 2010.
Fr. Chris had been summoned to the immigration office at O'Hare, where his sister was being held and disallowed from entering this country despite possessing a legitimate visa. He was not allowed to see his sister, who was being held in an adjacent room. Separated by a wall and that he was absolutely helpless to do anything for her, was perhaps the most agonizing moment in his life. "They didn't even tell me that they were about to put her back on the plane to Poland for another ten-hour flight!" He went home, he said, and "cried like a kid,"asking God : Where were You? "I doubted that God existed if he could allow that to happen." He burned with anger from the unfairness, the insensitivity, the gross mistrust of those particular government employees. "For the first time in my life I was so weak. Then I looked up at the crucifix on my wall. In that moment of pain, I realized how "helpless" Christ was when he hung there on His cross, helpless like I was."
"I offered up all my pain to him then and knew it was a victorious moment."
THE END
©2011 Robert R. Schwarz


NOTE: This is the last Exodus Trekkers interview
article until next September. All seven previous
articles will remain posted on this web site
and will be reprinted in the summer issues of
the St. James bulletin . Your comments are
invited.


Thursday, April 14, 2011

This Nun in the Blue Jump Suit Cautioned the Men: "Call Me 'Sister' "

 
                                                                      By Robert R. Schwarz
 
 
            There she was, a nun who at age l6 had vowed obedience, chastity and poverty, now working in the oil fields as a research chemist. For the next 20 years,  she'd be a co-worker among 1,400 employees, sometimes refining the language of  men and,  as one  boss said, "showing but  never telling" them how to live.
           Today, after her career in a company blue jump suit, followed by decades as an educator, Sr. Joanne Grib, lives out her vows as an active 76-year-old convent member of the Sisters of the Living Word in Arlington Heights, Illinois. Once pocketing her Rosary beads during trips to oil fields and steel and paper mills throughout America or Venezuela, you now see her holding them as she walks the St. James church   grounds. 
            We met on a March day in an activity room of Sr. Joanne's convent. The morning sun was casting long shadows across the outside garden where convent’s 70 sisters come to meditate and stroll. As I arranged my note-taking materials,  the room's  conspicuous silence  made me think of other close up conversations  with nuns, of those  privileged  peeks into a dimension of life normally veiled  from most of us.   In that respect, this white-haired nun with the brown eyes and brisk walk was not to disappoint me. 
            I encouraged Sr. Joanne to reminisce, and she did, talking freely with a healthy respect for facts.  In a self-effacing manner, she spoke with low, articulate tones, flashing an occasional grin over some memory that obviously humored her but which she chose to keep private.  It was St. Patrick's Day, and I complimented her on her teal green slacks and sweater and her shamrock-shaped earrings.  “I’m Polish and Czech,” she said, “far from Irish.”  She saw me gaze at the glass Celtic cross hanging from her neck. "It's from Ireland, a gift from a friend."
            We started at the very beginning. “I was born in Cook County Hospital,” she said, then quickly added: “In those days it was a reputable hospital.” e father H Her  Her father was a tool designer, who insisted that her mother remain a homemaker to care for their son and daughter. “I’ll take two jobs before you take one, “he promised.  Both parents were "staunchly” Catholic. From youth her mother had wanted to be a nun. She died when Sr. Joanne was seven. Sr. Joanne's dad married his wife's sister, who gave birth to two girls.
Our nun grew up on the city’s South Side in the St. Gall parish. "I've been going to mass daily since I was knee-high to a grasshopper.”
            In her high school senior year she took vows and entered the convent of the Sisters of St. Joseph and became a postulate, then spent two years as a novice in a convent in South Bend, Indiana. Next came a B.S. degree from DePaul University in Chicago, followed by a master's degree in chemistry from Kansas State University.  “I wanted to be a pharmacist, “she said,” but the sister superior of my religious community said they needed a chemistry teacher. I didn't want to be a teacher, but in those days, it was ' no, sister, yes, sister.' "
            After teaching chemistry for 25 years, Sr. Joanne served a three-year term as school   principal. One day she expressed her desire to go into industry. She was given permission along with Sister Superior’s comment: “We certainly can use the money.”   Whatever money Sr. Joanne would earn throughout the life would be given to her "community." 
At Work in the Fields in a Blue Jump Suit
            Except for a four-year break to teach at St. Ignatius College Preparatory school in Chicago, Sr. Joanne donned that blue jump suit for the fields and laboratories of the Nalco Chemical Company, and then headquartered in Chicago, now in Naperville.  Did Nalco hesitate to hire a nun?   "No.  I went for an interview and they hired me on the spot.  Then they sent me all over America, to Rome, even Venezuela. I worked in paper and steel mills, in oil refineries. I was instrumental in getting lap top computers for the salesmen and in setting up a computer chemistry program for them. "
            I asked her what it was like working as a nun—the only one— among 1,400 employees and  many of them men who likely saw her as a  woman from a world they only knew from afar.  “Well, everybody called me ‘Sister.’  They also called me, though not to my face, ‘Nalco's Blue Nun’ because I wore a blue jump suit when I worked in the fields.  Blue Nun wine was popular at the time, and so when an occasional salesman took me home to eat dinner with his family, there was always a bottle of that wine on the table.  But in the beginning, the men were uncomfortable in my presence—until they got to know me.  I was very careful to let them know I was a nun.  I did clean up some of their language.
            I asked: "Any—well, how we can say it—'relational' problems?”
                        "One man was flirtatious and I had to tell him I was a nun.” The man explained, somewhat defensively, she related, that  he was from the South and thought she was too and that in the South  everyone calls a woman 'sister'  in the intimate manner he had called her.
            Asked if she ever help convert any Nalco employee, Sr. Joanne recalled that two  workers approached her one day to tell her that they had returned to the Catholic church after a long absence because of her behavior as a  "nice and caring" person.
  "If there was gossip at the lunch table, I would get up and leave or change the subject," she continued. Another man still sends her a Christmas card along with a "good" donation to Sisters of the Living Word (S.L.W.) because she helped walk him through a divorce from a woman whom Sr. Joanne used to hear scream at her husband in his work cubicle.
            In  l992, Sr. Joanne transferred  from Sisters of  St. Joseph to her Arlington Heights convent, an order that began in l975 when 90 women of the Sisters of Charity (headquartered in Europe )" joined hearts and hands" to form S.L.W.  In 2000, Sr. Joanne retired from Nalco with a "juicy pension”. She took it in one lump sum and gave it to her community of sisters.
A Typical Day…Lots of Praying
            This nun’s typical day begins at five, sometimes five-thirty a.m., with a prayer, or the "morning office”, as the church calls it. It's followed by 20 or 30 minutes of meditation when she “just communicates with God.” Before breakfast she recites the Rosary.  Then she might teach a computer class at the Arlington Heights Senior Center or help feed the homeless at the nearby "Journeys from Pads to Hope”, where she also applies her PC skills to client data intake.    Bedtime is between 9 and 10 p.m., before which she prays the "evening office." There is always time for a "good” spiritual book (she is currently reading “The Jesuit Guide to Almost Everything”).
            I should have known the answer to my question about her day off.  "You never get a day off from God," she instructed me. Of course.  The question of why she became a nun, however, caused Sr. Joanne to searchingly look out the window for a moment, as if neither she nor anyone else had ever really asked it. "Prayer, I guess, led to it,” she finally said.  She paused again, recalling something from many years ago. “They always told me I got my vocation from my mother. She always wanted to be a nun but never could. I didn't know about this until after she died. And then, by an act of God, I entered the very same religious community she had wanted to enter. “Sr. Joanne's eyes became teary.
            When we talked about her life challenges, the nun summed them up with three: remaining faithful, being patient with the senior citizens she teaches, and taking time for prayer—"you're tempted to neglect that sometimes and sleep in." She then admitted: "I guess I don't have any real challenges. Many times God seems a million miles away but you just keep working at it.” Sr. Joanne's eyes moistened.
What about spiritual warfare?  With that, we shared a laugh. "Oh, yeah," she said, a bit leery about where we might go with this.  “I pray constantly for wisdom and understanding and for a deeper spiritual life.  I'd like to be able to pray better, get rid of those distractions. “She said she handles distractions during mass or a homily by resolving in that moment to "see what message here Jesus may have for me…During the offertory I offer myself up to the altar of God… At the consecration, I am very aware that Jesus is coming into that piece of bread and into that cup of wine. Many times I leave [the morning mass] with Jesus still dissolving on my tongue. I have a deep love for the Eucharist and a deep desire in my heart to be more Christ like."
Since her trip to the Holy Land last July (a gift from her best friend),   the Holy Mother and the Rosary has become more alive for her, she affirmed.  Now when she recites her Rosary, she sees in her mind's eye those Holy Land churches and other sites associated with the mother of Jesus.
At this point, one had to ask if things came easy for her.  “I don’t know if they come easy. I make them easy. I'm free. God takes care of me. I don't have to worry where I'm going to get food or where I'm going to live." Her goal is to "spread the living Word of God."  This she does by teaching a weekly Bible class and by speaking only positive, “life-giving words" to people.
Does this nun have any regrets about a lifestyle which, since childhood, has been one of frequent self-denial?  Sr. Joanne sensed what I really wanted to ask. She became mellow, quite warm.  " There's always been temptations like  'why not quit and get married …you could have children of your own'…I love children. But these temptations are fleeting. I know better. As you get older, it's not that big of a struggle. The life here isn't that austere."
She waxed some delight—and some relief—when we went to questions about her recreation.  Yes, she does see a movie now and then (a James Bond or the recent "'Kings Speech”, which she found "fabulous ") and, on television,   she watches "CSI”, “Jeopardy” and ABC News. She likes to read mysteries by women authors and loves Chinese food.  She also mentioned the dice game “Farfell" which the sisters play.
Any big plans for the future?   "Keep on keeping on," she said as we parted in the convent parking lot. “By the way," I shouted to her,” who’s your patron saint?"
"Joan of Arc!”
Naturally.

THE END
©2011 Robert R. Schwarz

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

This Cantor's Heart Flies on Eagle's Wings

                                    
 
 
 
           
                                                                    By Robert R. Schwarz
        The organ and cantor rested a few bars. Then the cantor, an attractive woman of 63 years, gently yet commandingly raised her outstretched arms to invite the hundred or so mourners to sing the refrain:  And he will raise you up on eagle's wings, bear you on the breath of dawn, make you to shine like the sun, and hold you in the palm of his hand .The cantor will later say this was a magical, transcendent moment for her.
              As the sanctuary swelled with her singing On Eagle's Wings", a hymn equally loved at weddings as well as funerals, the voice of the accomplished soprano both heightened and soothed her listeners' mourning.  They sensed an inexplicable quality about her voice that was different, perhaps unlike anything they had appreciated at Ravinia or the Lyric Opera.
             For those who had come from afar, she was a stranger, suddenly appearing in the midst of their delicate, intimate hour; and so, no doubt some wondered just how much this "hired" cantor, this woman in her long sleeve black dress, could really share their sorrow. After all, had she not sung this same hymn at hundreds of funerals, so often that surely this matter of mourning and funeral liturgy had become just a bit mechanical—no matter how soulful she sounded?   
             True, this Mary Ann Beatty had been a professional cantor for 42 years and had sung regularly at St. James Catholic Church in Arlington Heights, Illinois, as do several other artistically talented cantors who sing there today. But here was a cantor—maybe a rare one—who makes a practice of developing empathetic relationships with the deceased by acquainting herself with the deceased's life prior to singing hymns like "On Eagle's Wings.” 
            "It’s not a job, it's not a gig,” Mary Ann said as we later walked up to the choir loft to talk. She moved quickly and gracefully, a dexterity acquired from a variety of many solo stage performances and as a member of the Chicago Symphony Chorus.
           We sat in a pew, and I noticed she had blue eyes and brown hair, subtle (and unnecessary) makeup, wore wooden, jade-colored earrings, and a necklace with a solitary diamond (a Valentine gift from her husband who, on a later Valentine Day, dearly presented her with malted milk bars). She soon revealed her passion for Roman culture; it was easy to visualize this statuesque woman hosting a musical event on some imperial portico in ancient Rome. Not as easy was to see Mary Ann as the Latin teacher she was at a junior high school nor as someone who has balanced a busy singing career with the raising of three daughters and a son while also being a cooking homemaker for her husband Carter, now a retired accountant.
           We began with the question:  "What were you feeling when you sang " On Eagle's Wings" ?  Mary Ann obviously likes to take her time developing her answers.
          "A cantor can get jaded over the years unless he or she personalizes their singing.  When you do that, you’re doing justice to the person and to God's work. You also participate in God's word that happens to be coming through the music."  She explained that when singing "On Eagle's Wings" and recalling that the deceased had been a pilot, she was also thinking about "how pilots are up in the air and close to God.” She reflected a moment on her words, then added:  "I guess when I sang that, I was concentrating on ethereal questions.”      
             But would her singing had sounded the same if she hadn't done homework about the deceased?
            "It's a magical thing about singing,” she said. Patiently waiting for my note-taking to catch up with her speech—it demonstrated a discipline  acquired from 14 years of teaching private voice lessons to high school students—then  made her  point : "When you can link the song to the person, this colors what you are singing."
             (Earlier, St. James director of music, Scott Arkenberg, had told me that the criteria for a good cantor are
to sing the prayer, be respectful of the music, know the acoustical levels of the setting, and be in tune with her or his own spirituality… and Mary Ann has deep spirituality.”)
Can this "magic" occur in a secular setting?
              Animated by the question, the soprano shifted her posture,  glanced pensively  down at the now empty sanctuary , and exclaimed: "Sometimes when I'm singing with the Chicago Symphony Chorus ,  everything is as perfect as it can get—musicians, the conductor, and  me are all in sync—I have a transcendent experience. " 
              "Like what?" I asked.
             "Well, it was like the other day when a student of mine came so close to what I had hoped she would do in developing her voice. For me, this was a heavenly experience. "
             As for opera, Mary Ann admits she is not a big fan. “I’ve been to the Lyric Opera four times and each time I looked at my watch and asked myself what I could have done in the last two or three hours that would have been more worth my time.” Her sister, who, like Mary Ann, is of Slovak heritage "one hundred percent,”  has sung opera throughout Europe. Her stage name is Joanna Porackova.
              Mary Ann's professional singing biography is a seemingly endless list of guest soloist appearances in the Midwest with symphony orchestras, musical theaters, and churches of all denominations. She has recorded five CDs:  “Requiem" on the Classical Angst label, “Don We Now…” released by the Windy City Gay Chorus, "Gentle Woman: Songs of Mary" and "On that Blessed Night" with the St. Thomas of Villanova Choirs, and "You Are for Me", The Liturgical Music of Tony Barr.
             “When I was a toddler,” she said, "my parents found out I could carry a tune pretty well.” Her parents encouraged her singing, and soon she was singing in the church choir in Whiting, Indiana.  “So, I have sung in church since second grade but did not have a voice lesson until age 25.”   At Indiana University she studied classical languages and literature. Then came a master's degree in Latin from the University of Wisconsin, which later led to her teaching high school Latin in Freeport, Illinois.   While a student at the U. of W. from l972-73, she and the university's highly rated concert choir were given an all-expense paid trip to Venezuela to sing at the president’s palace, churches, and in several villages.
             Shorty thereafter, Mary Ann married, and she and Carter moved to Des  Plaines, Illinois. Then came  one of her  two career turning points:  She successfully auditioned for the Chicago Symphony Chorus after singing—in Latin, of course-- an impressive  " Ave Maria", followed by a  melody which no doubt raised a few eyebrows among the classicists there: "As Long as I  Have You," from the musical "Oliver."   
             Her comment on the audition came with her own raised eyebrow and a laugh: "Now, mind you, I had had no vocal training up to then.”
             Her other career juncture appeared when she was offered a full-time position as a voice teacher in a high school near Chicago. "Music had always been a part of my life but to make it fulltime was a shock.”
Reminded that the overarching theme of our interview today was about the experiences of people who are trekking an exodus trail similar in spirit to the Biblical Exodus, I asked this grandmother of a three-year-old child about her life challenges.  
             “As a teacher and a mother, I’ve had numerous roadblocks put in front of me by people trying to reduce me to mediocrity.”  One example she cited was once being confronted  by fellow teachers  who felt that her  passion for teaching Latin and  music—a passion which  had motivated her to work many hours before and after school-- was undermining their teaching  contracts.  Mary Ann reacted to this particular confrontation somewhat rebelliously, she confessed, by not compromising any of her “trouble-making” zeal for putting on a successful celebration of Latin Week for the sole benefit of her students. "I'm not the person who is striving for notoriety. I just want to make sure that I'm working the best and the hardest I can with the gifts God had given me. "
             Mary Ann said she prays almost daily to see more evidence of a denominational Christian faith in her husband, a non-Catholic who attends church with his wife only on holidays.  She is quick, however, to ward off any judgmental opinions about Carter. "He's a better Christian person than I am. He would drop anything to help someone. " Their children were raised Catholic.
             At her home with Carter in wooded area a short drive from Arlington Heights, Mary Ann, with a sigh, says she doesn't do very much for fun.  “Carter and I watch the television program 'House', I love to needlepoint when time for it.  I also, when with friends, re-write song lyrics.   I read the Wall Street Journal arts section, saw the movie  ' The King's Speech'—that was really, really good.  We like to try new restaurants. There isn’t any food I don't like, but I am allergic to eggplant. "
             We rose to leave the choir loft. “Something else," she reminded herself. “Above all things I'd like to do anytime is see a dance or a ballet performance. "
              I grabbed my camera for an outdoor photograph of her. “We’ll have to hurry," she said. "I have two more funerals today."            




THE END
©2011 Robert R. Schwarz

Sunday, February 6, 2011

From India with Love

                                                              By Robert R. Schwarz
            As two searching pilgrims, Tom and Gheeta Chitta nine years ago stepped off their jumbo jet at  O'Hare International Airport, cringed a bit at the radical  climate change from their hometown in India, and headed for the northwest Chicago  suburb of Arlington Heights. Their mission—which they were starting from scratch—was to pitch a  base camp from where they could be reaching back to help the "rural poor"  in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. Besides repeated prayers, their hope lay only in having learned that  an Arlington Heights married couple once adopted a three-month-old boy from an adoption agency in India . Now they were about to meet the parents of this child, Gail and Al Walton.
Momentum for their base camp picked up amazingly fast. The "kindness of strangers” first came with Katie McCambridge, who provided the Chittas with living quarters in her condominium for two months. After that, several other families, perceiving the mission zeal of Tom and Gheeta, shared their homes with them.  The Waltons gave them an office, and Gail Walton donated her full-time services as executive secretary. Soon, the Chittas had their base camp for a fledgling not-for-profit organization called Foundation for Children in Need (FCN).
            But the milestone for FCN,  Tom said in this interview, was when Fr. Bill Zavaski, pastor of St. James Catholic Church there, offered them a parish-owned home. “Fr. Bill was a blessing in our lives," Tom said. “He changed everything for us. ".  And now came an annual FCN "thanks giving” banquet, sponsored by St. James and emceed by the foundation's future board secretary, Brian Reynolds, a musician who plays his drums as fervently as he promotes FCN today. 
            Next came eight years of the Chittas  criss-crossing  America  by automobile and jet, annually averaging 20,000 miles  to add sponsors and bring their  FCN message to more than 300 Catholic parishes.  "I don't know of two harder working people,” Reynolds said. “Tom is not able to slow down. He has only one speed:  'faster ' . " 
            Nowadays, Tom, 56, and his 50-year-old physician wife, Gheeta, provide leadership for an organization that brings critical aid to almost 5,000 Indian children, students, and the elderly. They spend six months each year at their home in Porumamilla , a town of 30,000 people  in the  continent's southeast, about 400 kilometers from  the city of Hyderabad.  There, one sees the fruits of the Chitta’s seemingly indefatigable  labors and of the loyalties of thousands of American donors and volunteers. Here is where 2,200 children and college students receive aid, where another 2,000 non-sponsored students annually receive dictionaries and notebooks, and where care is given to more than  500 individuals afflicted with deafness, blindness, lameness,  and physical deformities. (You just might occasionally see the Chittas at mass in St. James.) 
            FCN school is spread over  eight acres surrounded by mostly flat farmland of  sugarcane, lentils,  sunflowers, peanuts, and—if water is available—rice.  Many of the farmers here are unskilled day laborers who, working in summer (March through May) with temperatures of 90 to 110 degrees F. , earn 150 to 200 Rupees daily, or U.S.  $3 to $4. 
            Porumamilla is encircled by approximately 200 villages, all within a 20-mile radius of the FCN operation; each is   populated by 20 to 50 families.   Most people are Hindus but, Tom said during our interview, there is "a good-sized Moslem population, with whom we have an amicable relationship."    The local language is Telugu, the official tongue of Andhra Pradesh and is spoken by the third largest number of Indians. Its vocabulary has been somewhat shaped by the Sanskrit and Prakrits tongues.
            Water comes from hand-pumped "tube" wells in the villages; it is stored in tanks from which people tap it and then carry home. Homes do not have running water.   Although typhoid, tuberculosis, pneumonia, and Hepatitis A exist, none is endemic, Gheeta explained.  "Infant mortality is about two to five per cent,” she said.  Tom added that “mosquitoes are a big problem.  “So is malnutrition.  In a recent newsletter FCN, stated that "most of the people in the villages do not eat balanced food. The health and sanitation conditions are very poor. "
            FCN has separate hostels for 90 boys and girls in grades one through ten. The students are brought in from villages and provided with education, food, clothing, and medical care. They return home on holidays. Another 250 children daily   walk one to three miles from home to attend school and, guided by FCN staff, are given disbursement checks to deposit in their bank accounts.  All students attend classes 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., with a 45-minute lunch break.  They have a six-week summer vacation.  FCN also provides free food, clothing, and medical care for 40 elderly at its St. Xavier's Home for the Aged.  
            Because many older children and college age students have to stay at home to look after their younger siblings and because child labor abuses are a serious problem in the region, FCN staff and social workers must encourage parents to have their children educated. Asked to relate "success" stories of his students, Tom paused, then confidently replied: "The success story   is when the student graduates and is able stand on his own two feet.”
            One such story is about Bramhaiah Chintakunta,  a college history major from a poverty-stricken family whose father  died when he was age four, forcing his mother to  work in the  fields.  "I am so grateful for a college education upon which to build the dreams of my life, " he stated.  Another success is Parameswari Palle ,  a college freshman studying engineering.  "I now have a bright future because of FCN,” she said.  And there is Bharath Moyela , an eleventh grader born with a protruding spinal membrane, who related : " My mother is an unskilled laborer who is looking for work each day. It was very sad to see my mom struggling to take care of my medical needs and then to send my sister and me to school. God heard our prayers and my days are bright now just because of someone in America [i.e., Fr. Bill Zavaski, pastor of St. James] who is helping me through sponsorship. "
            Though FCN staffs 3l people and two nurses in India (there is no paid full time staff in America), its annual fundraising disbursements of four per cent and administration costs of three per cent (according to its 2009-20l0 financial report) are obviously to be envied – if not to be sought — by most not-for-profit organizations.  Reynolds, in an interview, explained that the Chittas take only asmall stipend for themselves. “Everything is for the kids," he added.  Also, as a FCN factsheet points out, dollars go ten times further in India than in America.  For example, $75 will buy a bicycle for a social worker, $50 a month of work from a social worker, $240 for a year of sponsorship of a child, student, or a senior, and $6,000  will build  a classroom. (Sponsorship and other information about FCN can be had from their website:  www.fcn-usa.org or by writing FCN,  P.O. Box 1247, Arlington Heights, Il, 60006-1247).
            Tom sees FCN as unique: "It has been built up on the sacrifice of many peoples' time, talent, and prayers,” he said.  “We are a very personable organization which keeps in timely touch with our sponsors. We keep a good link between our children and sponsors by having them exchange letters. “Sponsors are also encouraged to take educational tours to FCN in India and visit their sponsored child or student and family. One such sponsor, a St. James member, and his sponsored child, now in the fourth grade, have been exchanging letters for four years. In her last letter, Mounika Kalluri, gave a full report of her studies, adding: "I am safe here. Hope you are also safe by the grace of God. "
            Tom's parents were both primary school teachers and were from what he labeled "lower middle class.”  He has been a Catholic from birth; his father was a Hindu convert.   Tom obtained a Master's Degree in pastoral theology and counseling from Loyola University in Chicago. Gheeta obtained her medical degree (with a family practice specialty) from St. John's Medical College in Bangalore, India. Her father was a military office, her mother a homemaker.
Tom and Gheeta met in India while both were engaged in Catholic parish ministries in Kadapa.  Both have been immersed in Catholicism all their lives; critical help for launching their mission, however, also came from two non-Catholics, Gail and Al Walton.
For recreation, the Chittas read a variety of books and favor Italian food. They rarely see a movie and turn the TV channel only to news.  Tom's most difficult adjustment to this region?  Without hesitating, he simply uttered, “cold weather.”  His most loved prayer is the widely-known one of St. Francis. As for scripture, he loves Matthew 25:40: "Whatever you did for one of these least of my brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me." 
Husband and wife have been inspired by the work of Mother Teresa, especially Gheeta, who met this likely saint of the future when Gheeta was l7.  "I see something special in you,” Mother Teresa told her. "You little girl are going to be a doctor and help the needy."
Years later with her medical degree in hand, Gheeta told her husband:  “And when a saint tells you to do something, you do it."
THE END
©2011 Robert R. Schwarz

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