Our Lady of Częstochowa-St Casimir Parish

Church in New York, United States
40°39′40.6″N 73°59′53.7″W / 40.661278°N 73.998250°W / 40.661278; -73.998250Location183 25th Street, Brooklyn, New YorkCountryUnited StatesDenominationCatholic ChurchMembershipabout 200 families (2000)Weekly attendanceabout 291Websiteourladyofczestochowa.comHistoryFoundedOctober 2, 1896 (1896-10-02)Founder(s)Polish immigrantsDedicationBlack Madonna of CzęstochowaDedicatedNovember 18, 1904 (1904-11-18)AdministrationDivisionCathedral Basilica of St. James (Brooklyn)DistrictEastern Pastoral RegionProvinceBrooklynArchdioceseBrooklynParishConventual Franciscans from Canadian Custody of Franciscans Conventuals St. Maximilian Maria KolbeClergyArchbishopCardinal Seán Patrick O'Malley OFM CapBishop(s)Nicholas Anthony DiMarzio 2003-presentVicar(s)Rev. Cezariusz W. Jastrzębski, Parochial Vicar OFM ConvDeanWitold Mroziewski - auxiliary bishop of the Diocese of BrooklynSenior pastor(s)Rev. Jerzy ŻebrowskiPastor(s)Rev. Janusz Dymek Ph.D. OFM ConvLaityOrganist(s)Mr. Wojciech Typrowicz

Our Lady of Częstochowa-St Casimir Parish is a church in New York City at 24th Street in Brooklyn. The church, which was designated for Polish immigrants, was founded in 1896. It could also be spelled Częnstochowa, due to the tail on the third letter. The original church building was a wood-frame structure, which was destroyed by a fire in 1904. The replacement was a Gothic Revival Style with a tower and steeple rising to 175 feet that was built on the site of the original church.[1]

This is one of the Polish-American Roman Catholic parishes in New York City in the Diocese of Brooklyn.

History

Among the immigrants of many ethnic groups, who come to the United States at the end of the nineteenth century, there was a significant number of Poles, who for various reasons left their homeland. Relatively many of them settled in Brooklyn, especially in the southern part of the town of Gowanus, Brooklyn. In 1904, Bishop McDonnell of Brooklyn installed the current cornerstone for a Gothic church of brick and Belleville gray stone. The front facade on 24th street had a central tower which rose to a height of 176feet above the sidewalk, flanked by shorter steeples on both sides. The project when completed in 1911 included a school and rectory.[2]

The parochial school was the province of the Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth order of nuns, founded in Rome, Italy in 1875 by Frances Siedliska, a Polish noblewoman; it closed in 1996. As of 2015, there are over 1,300 members of the order in Australia, Belarus, England, France, Israel, Italy, Lithuania, the Philippines, Poland, Puerto Rico, Russia, Spain, Ukraine, and the United States of America.[3]

from 25th st, stained Glass image of St. Casamir

That building period was at the occurrence of a schism[4] in the Roman Catholic church, with reformist Lithuanian and Polish congregants bemoaning the lack of Polish speaking priests in the clergy. The reform movement among European immigrants began in the 1870s, immigrants wanted to establish their own parishes where priests would speak their language, but received little support from American bishops who were mainly of Irish and German descent. In 1884, a meeting of American bishops in Baltimore decided that property of parishes belonged not to the community that financed it but to the diocese.[5] Lawsuits between pastors and parishioners over the property were quite common.[6] In protest of such policies, the Polish National Catholic Church (PNCC) was established in 1897.[5]

In the meantime, a number of parish-related organizations were formed such as:

The architect for the 1904 building was T. Edwards of Dorchester, MA.

Between 1906 and 1908, three Felician nuns from Buffalo were brought in to teach in the basement of the church. In 1911 a school was completed including a hall in the basement for parish functions. By 1926 school enrollment increased from an initial 103 students to 642. Eight nuns and two lay teachers were hired with approximately 60 students per class.

In 1919, a two-manual organ was installed by the Tellers-Kent Organ Company at St. Casimir. It was a divided organ, placed in the gallery facing the nave, with a detached key console. After the merger in 1980, the organ was relocated to Our Lady of Czestochowa.

After Fr. Chmielinski's death in 1937, Rev Bartula is appointed pastor followed by Rev. Naguszewski. In 1940 Cardinal William O'Connell entrusts the parish to the Franciscan fathers. Fr. Michael Cieslik. O.F.M. is the first Franciscan pastor and serves until 1942. In 1942, Fr. Stephen Musielak, O.F.M. is appointed pastor and serves as pastor until 1957. During that time, a club for teenagers and young adults was organized using the lower church hall for a meeting place. Fr. Musielak played a leading role in the settling of the post World War II wave of new Polish immigrants helping them locate family and friends in the US and finding lodging, securing employment, establishing residence and obtaining medical care. From 1943 to 1951 post WWII immigrants and non-Polish families from Old Colony Housing Project create mixed school enrollment. Classes are divided into two separate groups—1. exclusively in English and 2. Polish language as well as English.

St. Casimir's Roman Catholic Church

In 1957, Fr. Angelus Zator is named pastor and services until 1966. In 1961 the church celebrates its 75th Diamond Jubilee with a concelebrated Mass.

In 1966, Rev. Edwin Agonis, OFM becomes pastor.

In 1973, Rev Manual Wolkanowski OFM is appointed pastor through 1979. In 1978 Karol Jozef Wojtyla is elected Pope and takes the name, John Paul II.

In 1980, St. Casimir's Roman Catholic Church, a polish church in Williamsburg was closed and the congregants joined with Our Lady of Częstochowa, at which time the church assumed the new name of Our Lady of Częstochowa-St. Casimir Church. In 1996, the church celebrates its 100th anniversary.

Black Madonna of Częstochowa

Lucan tradition

The icon of Our Lady of Częstochowa has been intimately associated with Poland for the past 600 years. Its history before it arrived in Poland is shrouded in numerous legends that trace the icon's origin to St. Luke, who painted it on a cedar table top from the Holy Family house.[7][8] The same legend holds that the painting was discovered in Jerusalem in 326 by St. Helena, who brought it back to Constantinople and presented it to her son, Constantine the Great.[9]

Pastors

Rectory on 25th St.

Please note, this is a list of pastors of the OLC parish in South Boston MA, not the NYC parish. I was a parishioner at OLC south Boston, so I have no information on the NYC parish.

  • Fr. Jan M. Chmieliński (1893–1934)
  • Fr. Peter Bartula (1935–1938),
  • Fr. Edward B. Naguszewski (1936–1940).

In 1940 Cardinal William Henry O'Connell entrusted the parish to the care of the Conventual Franciscans Fathers:

  • Fr. Michael Cieślik OFM Conv (1940–1942)
  • Fr. Stephen Musielak OFM Conv (1942–1957)
  • Fr. Angelus Zator OFM Conv (1957–1966)
  • Fr. Alfred Stopyra OFM Conv (1966–1967)
  • Fr. Edwin Agonis OFM Conv (1967–1973)
  • Fr. Manual Wolkanowski OFM Conv (1973–1979)
  • Fr. John Bambol OFM Conv (1979–1985)
  • Fr. Andrew Skiba OFM Conv (1985–1991)
  • Fr. Paul Miśkiewicz OFM Conv (1991–1994)
In 1994 the parish was taken over by Conventual Franciscans from Polish Prowincja Matki Bożej Niepokalanej in Warszawa, Poland:
  • Fr. Andrzej Sujka[10] OFM Conv (1994–2000)
  • Fr. Miroslaw Podymniak OFM Conv (2001–2006)
  • Fr. Jerzy Auguścik OFM Conv (2006–2008)
  • Fr. Andrzej Urbaniak[11] OFM Conv (2008 - suspended in 2012)
  • Fr. Jan Łempicki OFM Conv (2013–2015)
  • Fr. Jerzy Żebrowski OFM Conv (2015–)

See also

  • flagNew York City portal
  • iconCatholicism portal

References

  1. ^ "Brooklyn Catholic".
  2. ^ "Our Lady of Czestochowa Catholic Church - Brooklyn, NY". www.nycago.org.
  3. ^ ""CSFN - Welcome", Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth - Generalate".
  4. ^ "Polish Catholic Church in Poland". World Council of Churches.
  5. ^ a b Strumickienė, Ilona (2012). "Lietuvių tautinė katalikų bažnyčia (LTKB) Amerikoje: religinės ir tautinės tapatybės bruožai" (PDF). Oikos: Lietuvių migracijos ir diasporos studijos (in Lithuanian). 2 (14): 43–49. ISSN 2351-6461.
  6. ^ Wolkovich-Valkavičius, William L. (Summer 1994). "Immigrants Who Become Lithuanian by Becoming American". Lituanus. 2 (40). ISSN 0024-5089.
  7. ^ Duricy, Michael P (2008-03-26). "Black Madonnas: Our Lady of Czestochowa". The Marian Library/International Marian Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio - University of Dayton. Archived from the original on 12 October 2011. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
  8. ^ Zenon Zawada (2008-01-26). "EASTERN APPROACHES - The Black Madonna". Ukraine Observer. Archived from the original on 2008-01-26. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
  9. ^ "Black Madonna Shrine", Franciscan Missionary Brothers Archived August 29, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ Forced to return to Poland in connection with the scandal of sexual abuse Bishop-Accountability.org
  11. ^ "News and Press Archives | Archdiocese of Boston". www.bostoncatholic.org.

Bibliography

  • Our Lady of Czestochowa Parish; Sophie Kulik; Stanley Sadowski (1993). Our Lady of Czestochowa Parish - Centennial 1893-1993. Boston, Massachusetts: Our Lady of Czestochowa Parish.
  • Kruszka, Waclaw (1998). A History of the Poles in America to 1908; Part III: Poles in the Eastern and Southern States. Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press.
  • The Official Catholic Directory in USA

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Our Lady of Czestochowa-St Casimir Church (Brooklyn).
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