Archives for February 2016

Gorecki Scholarship Available for Pol-Am students

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PAC-MI at the Folk Festival

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The Polish American Congress Michigan Division was present at the 9th annual Polish Folk Dance Festival on Saturday, February 6, organized by the American Polish Cultural Center in Troy, MI.
As one of the sponsors of the event, we prepared a table with information about our activities. Guests of the festival had a chance to visit our stand and pick up a membership application, scholarship application and other brochures produced especially for this occasion.
“1050 Years of Poland’s Christianity” was one of them. This pamphlet informs about the important anniversary of the founding of the Polish state. On April 14, 966, after his marriage to the Christian Dobrawa of Bohemia, pagan ruler of the Poland Mieszko I was baptized and converted to Christianity. The event is considered to be the founding of the Polish state and the entry of Poland into the community of western European Latin rite Christian states.
Other interesting pamphlets available for guests of the festival included a list with names and short descriptions of some of the well-known public figures that have Polish roots, including Jon Bon Jovi, Mike Krzyzewski, Keith Urban and Pat Sajak.
PAC-MI officers were present to welcome guests at our booth, including Ann Bankowski, Barbara Lemecha and Barbara Gronet. Also, thank you to volunteers who helped throughout the afternoon.

A book “Those Who Risked Their Lives” available for purchase at PAC-MI

newsletter_spring2016.pmd   In the cynical age in which we live, accounts of altruistic behavior by individuals who risked their lives for others during World War II should be especially welcome to readers. In wartime Poland, unlike in other German-occupied countries, gentiles who extended any form of assistance to Jews risked execution by Nazis. Despite cultural, religious, and linguistic differences between Polish Jews and Polish Christians, most Poles were sympathetic to the plight of the Jewish people.  Hundreds of thousands of Poles sheltered, fed, clothed, provided forged documents, and looked after the medical needs of Jews on a regular basis.  There were additionally hundreds of thousands of Poles whose assistance, though occasional and indirect, was no less dangerous. Poles who risked their lives by aiding Jews acted on values they had learned from their parents.  Often these virtues – compensation, empathy and generosity – were rooted in religious faith.  Moreover, many Poles, including those who had prewar anti-Semitic views, responded positively to the Jews as an expression of resistance against the hated Germans, who terrorized and killed Polish citizens longer than any other people in Europe. “Those Who Risked Their Lives” compiled, edited and annotated by Anna Poray, offers us a glimpse of some of the thousands of Poles who rescued Jews.  Several years ago, Rabbi Harold Schulweis observed that we needed to know the heroes and heroines, those exemplars of good, who helped Jews during the Holocaust.  “Those Who Risked Their Lives” records the name and experiences of many of these remarkable individuals. This important book is available for purchase at the Polish American Congress Michigan Division office.  Consider buying the book for your local library and school.