Wednesday, July 25, 2012

SHOULD KIDS BE TAUGHT A RELIGION WHEN THEY ARE VERY YOUNG? Originally posted 1999


     Let us examine the explications of raising the children which with NO specific religion but that our children be raised in a kind of religious vacuum. The obvious if naive hope would be that we would generate a whole new group of young people, full of compassion and love and that there would be no longer bigotry or prejudice. We would all live in harmony and life would be beautiful.  
 
     It is a king of spinoff from the beautiful and poetic fantasy of the American naturalist--the one who says that we should leave it ALL to Nature who or which would allow us to develop with a lovely wholeness undiscovered by the religions of history. Sounds nice but is totally unrealistic from the point of view of an traditional Catholic like me. This is simply because I (and millions like me ) believe in a WOUNDED HUMAN NATURE which is always hurt and inclined toward evil even in the pristine air of the mountain top. So put me in the forest. Give me just a lin cloth. Let me develop naturally and you will see--not a noble savage--but a ruthless, self centered human monster. Alas, human nature has discovered this somewhat brutal reality whether in Freud or the kibbutz or in the protected walls of the nunnery.  
 
     We NEED laws or strictures or boundaries or commandments to socialize us. This is why religion on an institutional level has always been considered a must for a stable society. So, my advice is (take heed you simpletons out there), give your kids SOME religion. Give them something clear and definite. Give them something to hang onto. There is no such thing as a completely reliant person or the completely independant peron. We ALL need structure of belief and virtue. Teach them about God and His love and mercy. If in adulthood they wish to rebel, they can, at least, rebel against something The "vacuum" type person is sadly without a force to rebel against. There is the unhappy atheist who can't even than God when he feels grateful. Give your kid something to believe when he inevitably encounters the big smashing difficulties of human experience. Have a heart, for Pete's sake or for you kid's sake but more precisely for God's sake. 


 Editor's note Looking back on this, I must say it sounds pretty good but where did I get all that stuff?
January 8, 1999

A Man Called Chud (Originally posted in 2001)


A Man Called Chud (Originally posted in 2001)


                                                 
 I visited him in the Carmelite Nursing Home, the acme of compassion, care and respect for the priesthood. He was sitting in a wheelchair, decked out in a Roman collar, hiccupping, and looking very frightened. There was an empty look in his eyes. He spoke no word but hunched in his chair almost as if he expected some kind of blow.
 He was my classmate. We were ordained together over 50 years ago when we were full of enthusiasm and hope and laughter. He had been orphaned early in life when he and his brothers were "farmed out" to different families which took them in for rearing and healing. Their name had been Skomro and my classmate was called Karol like his look alike, John Paul II. But under the weird thinking of the 1940's he was ordered to change his name to White. No longer could he glory in the gorgeous Slavic tradition of bearing the beautiful Eastern European nomenclature. He had to try to "pass" as some kind of hybrid Wasp or "Standard American." But Karol or Charlie or Chud (as his close friends called him) obediently accepted what seemed (to most of us) an irrational artifice.
 He had difficulty with studies in the seminary but like another "marginal" student called John Vianney, Chud had some utterly remarkable qualities. Everyone could see that we had an extraordinary candidate here. He wouldn't write fancy books or give illustrious lectures or be elected to leadership posts in his community. Everyone sensed by a kind of pre-rational radar that Chud would be a "dandy" of a priest.
 Everywhere he went- Clemson, Los Angeles, New York, Boston - he was a sensation. Was it that captivating eternal smile he had? Was it his gentle understanding? His unconditional acceptance of everyone he met ? His ferocious loyalty to what and whom he admired? Was it his generosity? His willingness to drive any of us to the airport or Philadelphia or North Caorlina? Nothing seemed too demanding for him. If you want his help, you've got it. Was it his profound need to be accepted? To be a part of a family he never really had?
One thing was obvious. He profoundly loved being a priest. This identified his self concept above all. If he were asked which held priority in his life, priesthood or community, he needed only a millesecond to respond. He really felt the he---Karol, Charles, Chud--was, in fact, the Alter Christus. When he was clearly "losing it" he insisted on saying Mass in the chapel each day. It mattered not whether there were attendees there. He believed that he was offering the Perfect Sacrifice before the very court of Heaven. A sound Theologic base recomended by John Paul II.
 Alone at Mass? Not at all. He was surrounded, he believed, by angels and saints and the Mother of God and Jesus Himself. He told me --before he lapsed into his present quasi vegetative state---that he was able to say Mass every day during that trying time.
 His devotion to Christ in the Eucharist was patent. He would sit in the front pew and simply gaze at the tabernacle for long periods of time. As his disease progressed, he slept before his Master and seemed comforted by the Blessed Sacrament.
 A simple, humble and holy man was this man Chud. If there was any single trait that drove his confreres to distraction, it was his need to talk at great length----just so we would understand what he was trying to say. The common wisdom was that Chud always had a good introduction to his presentations (even in one on one conversations),a reasonable body of thought---but--man--he never had a conclusion.
 But his goodness and brotherhood more than overrode such a tendency. He was just a loveable and holy child of God. What I saw in the nursing home was some kind of shell. It looked like Chud. But it wasn't truly Chud. The Lord knows what He is doing obviously. We accept the basic proposition of Life's intrinsic value--even in such a depressing and incomprehensible situation as this. Perhaps, Chud is simply doing his mission in another form. But let us forget the hot shot big talk. This is the bottom line of life. May we all be blessed under God by Chud's simple, direct awareness of the Lord. Would that we could share some of his holiness. It was a privilege and honor to have known him.
                                                

 I visited him in the Carmelite Nursing Home, the acme of compassion, care and respect for the priesthood. He was sitting in a wheelchair, decked out in a Roman collar, hiccupping, and looking very frightened. There was an empty look in his eyes. He spoke no word but hunched in his chair almost as if he expected some kind of blow.
 He was my classmate. We were ordained together over 50 years ago when we were full of enthusiasm and hope and laughter. He had been orphaned early in life when he and his brothers were "farmed out" to different families which took them in for rearing and healing. Their name had been Skomro and my classmate was called Karol like his look alike, John Paul II. But under the weird thinking of the 1940's he was ordered to change his name to White. No longer could he glory in the gorgeous Slavic tradition of bearing the beautiful Eastern European nomenclature. He had to try to "pass" as some kind of hybrid Wasp or "Standard American." But Karol or Charlie or Chud (as his close friends called him) obediently accepted what seemed (to most of us) an irrational artifice.
 He had difficulty with studies in the seminary but like another "marginal" student called John Vianney, Chud had some utterly remarkable qualities. Everyone could see that we had an extraordinary candidate here. He wouldn't write fancy books or give illustrious lectures or be elected to leadership posts in his community. Everyone sensed by a kind of pre-rational radar that Chud would be a "dandy" of a priest.
 Everywhere he went- Clemson, Los Angeles, New York, Boston - he was a sensation. Was it that captivating eternal smile he had? Was it his gentle understanding? His unconditional acceptance of everyone he met ? His ferocious loyalty to what and whom he admired? Was it his generosity? His willingness to drive any of us to the airport or Philadelphia or North Caorlina? Nothing seemed too demanding for him. If you want his help, you've got it. Was it his profound need to be accepted? To be a part of a family he never really had?
One thing was obvious. He profoundly loved being a priest. This identified his self concept above all. If he were asked which held priority in his life, priesthood or community, he needed only a millesecond to respond. He really felt the he---Karol, Charles, Chud--was, in fact, the Alter Christus. When he was clearly "losing it" he insisted on saying Mass in the chapel each day. It mattered not whether there were attendees there. He believed that he was offering the Perfect Sacrifice before the very court of Heaven. A sound Theologic base recomended by John Paul II.
 Alone at Mass? Not at all. He was surrounded, he believed, by angels and saints and the Mother of God and Jesus Himself. He told me --before he lapsed into his present quasi vegetative state---that he was able to say Mass every day during that trying time.
 His devotion to Christ in the Eucharist was patent. He would sit in the front pew and simply gaze at the tabernacle for long periods of time. As his disease progressed, he slept before his Master and seemed comforted by the Blessed Sacrament.
 A simple, humble and holy man was this man Chud. If there was any single trait that drove his confreres to distraction, it was his need to talk at great length----just so we would understand what he was trying to say. The common wisdom was that Chud always had a good introduction to his presentations (even in one on one conversations),a reasonable body of thought---but--man--he never had a conclusion.
 But his goodness and brotherhood more than overrode such a tendency. He was just a loveable and holy child of God. What I saw in the nursing home was some kind of shell. It looked like Chud. But it wasn't truly Chud. The Lord knows what He is doing obviously. We accept the basic proposition of Life's intrinsic value--even in such a depressing and incomprehensible situation as this. Perhaps, Chud is simply doing his mission in another form. But let us forget the hot shot big talk. This is the bottom line of life. May we all be blessed under God by Chud's simple, direct awareness of the Lord. Would that we could share some of his holiness. It was a privilege and honor to have known him.

The Movie "Chocolat" Originally posted in 2000

                                                
                                
                       On Seeing the Movie “Chocolat.”

Is the mission of the Great Media society to move the masses away from their “superstitions and bigotries” to the bright and clear New Age where everyone loves one another without the restrictions of the God-thing   and traditional values?  Rarely have I been so struck by such blatant misuse of the powerful medium of modern film as I was yesterday (2/17/01) on seeing the movie   “Chocolat.”


A beautiful unmarried woman arrives in a quiet village with her daughter driven by some kind of mystical and poetic “ North wind” which speaks to her about her mission to travel around the world and  “Save” people from themselves and their chains of  “faith.” She is presented as sweet and loving and tolerant but who blatantly and calmly announces to the villagers that she does not worship as they do. She proceeds to “free” them  (read: seduce) through chocolates which are subtly laced with a narcotic mixture she brought with her from central    America where she herself was born illegitimately from a French father and a free loving Indian mother.

She is presented as normal and balanced while everyone else is rigid, fearful, Unloving and hypocritical. The Count of the village who tries to keep alive the traditions of the Faith and country, is presented as a priggish, phony and dominating tyrant whose own wife (who never appears in the film but is referred to occasionally) has left him and his loveless way of life.  A young mother, grieving for her dead husband, tries to raise her son in an upright and traditional manner but is presented as stiff, bigoted and straightjacketed. Her son is depicted as repressed by mother, certainly   unhappy and a loner. Of course, our Missionary woman saves him through chocolate and loving acceptance. She even has him reconcile to his grandmother who, herself, has been an outcast from society because she dared to reject the faith and Catholic tradition.
Our missionary lady alone shows compassion and by chocolates and love brings this old lady to a peaceful and integrated end of her life. She rescues a poor beaten wife from her lout of a husband who just snores away in a rocking chair and who expects his wife to prepare his meals and be available when, in a drunken stupor, he wants sex. He beats her brutally but our brave missionary takes her into the chocolate shop and in an incredibly short time transforms this near psychotic woman into a charming, intelligent and productive human being.

The parish priest is presented as a total wimp, utterly dominated by the Count and who wanders through the film wide eyed, apparently mystified by the whole panorama of life so much so that he forgets to give absolution to penitents and almost terrified, loudly slams the confessional panel after giving mechanical penances. The confessional sequences are presented   in such a way that the practice is shown to be a farce.

The brave new woman coaches a shy older man to pursue his interest in an older woman and lo and behold again she is successful. She is now transforming the village from a world of darkness into the beautiful clarity of the  “ new age.”
An Irish drifter on a ragtag boat enters the village life via a nearby river. He, too, rebels against society strumming the inevitable guitar. He is presented as balanced and charming—and while nicely stating his non-faith in tradition, articulates the beauty of “ freedom.”  He and our lady friend, of course, sack out   in a loving and interpersonal fashion as all good New Agers should do—without any restriction of “ morality” or faith. And of course, he is IRISH representing the best New Gaels, now free of the shackles and guilts of the  “Older generation.”

But the nasty old Count has someone burn the boat in awful Nazi like style and again—see how the faith people act—how intolerant they are—how repressed they are—how really unhappy they are--- oh—how good it is have the New Light driven by the North wind !  Even the count himself, after a Lent of abstinence breaks into the chocolate shop   and binges on the sweets until he falls asleep as if in a drunken stupor. Our noble New age redeemer finds him, smiles understandingly, forgives him and promises to tell no one.

Her victory is complete, because it is EASTER SUNDAY. She throws a huge party right in front of the church to celebrate the pagan feast of spring. The mounds of chocolate which a grateful townspeople has helped her prepare during the night become the basis of  joy and happiness and freedom and light. We even have a Druid-like priestess dancing around the “Maypole” with flowing white gossamer veils. The Count is incredibly and quickly cleaned up from his binge and he smiles at his Redemptrix who sweetly encourages him. The wimpy priest is there  (not in the church, of course) drinking a little glass of wine while he sports his soutane in support  of the New Faith. Meanwhile the North wind tells her to STAY here and Don’t Move!   How happy that makes everyone!

The picture mocks the supernatural, the Christian faith, any faith. It smacks of devil worship as the lady becomes God. It has a slight message of lesbianism. It is a totally pagan presentation using valid concepts like tolerance, freedom, dignity and love and divorcing them from religion as we know it.  It dares to make such a presentation because, in fact, this is where many people are at!—There was enough   support for this distortion  that it received  nominations for awards from the Academy.  The acting is, of course, top level. The producers have the money to hire capable people for a goal----to de-Christianize society. Nothing is forbidden. Do what you want. There is no God. No after life. No morality.  Just be nice and smile and give people narcotic laced candies and all will be well. Let us live in LaLa land. But don’t tell me the truth.   God be with us when such powerful crypto-pagans rule the media. Rudy Guilani looks better to me every day.

Doesn't Everyone Have an Irish Grandmother?

                                   Doesn’t Everyone Have an Irish Grandmother?



When I was about five years old I thought that everyone in the whole world must have at least one Irish Grandmother. While I knew that somewhere in the world I had a Russian-Jewish Grandmother whom I was not allowed to see (because of my Christian Baptismal status), my childhood perception allowed only for the Irish woman I called “Gramma”.

I knew that she cooked seven days a week for us, that she shopped for food in the neighborhood “grocery store”, that she made everybody’s bed, that she spent hours bent over the washboard ( the antecedent of the washing machine), that she hung  the clothes and bed sheets  on the “line”  in the tenement backyard, that she cleaned the “apartment” each day and generally took care of the seven of us under her care. Two of us were children and the other five were out trying to make enough money to support us.  We were huddled together emotionally against the outside world which we intuited as hostile and unfriendly.

Gramma, who was paid no salary, would (it was apparently understood) be our de facto servant. It was as if this was totally accepted and understood by the whole group. Looking back over sixty years ago, I can only now really appreciate something of this unusual woman. She didn’t want money or approbation. She wanted only the opportunity to show her love for all of us. I cringe as I remember my superficiality. Perhaps it was part of being immature and inexperienced simply to expect that the meals would be there on time and that I would have a clean handkerchief as I set off for my First grade classroom.

Her name was Mary Gallagher  McArdle. She was from the strange world across the Hudson called Jersey City where she was strictly raised by her Irish Mother and Father (who had served his adopted country in the Civil War). She would often tell us of her fun loving brother (whom Gramma’s children  called “Uncle Tom). His reputation for heavy drinking and chasing girls was apparently legendary. With just a hint of invitation, he would entertain anyone with his personable renditions of  “I was walking through the park  one day in the merry, merry month of May” and “I’m a dude, a dandy dude….” or any song  from his large and sometimes raunchy repertoire. But since his easy going nature made It difficult for him to keep a job, he was usually unemployed.  Gramma, with her usual loving care style, would “put him up” until one day he dropped on the street and went to his Maker Whom he might eternally amuse with his singing and joking and livening up the celestial Party!

The 15 year old Mary Gallagher presumably bored with the limitations of Jersey City and, looking for some kind of action and excitement (might we say “boys”?) would take the Ferry across the river to what we now call the Big Apple. Being a very pretty Irish lass with a quick quip and outgoing personality, she attracted the attention of a tall, handsome young Irish bartender, who wore a vest and  a pocket watch with a gold fob!!!  Did they meet in a bar? Why not! After all, she was Irish, too - -  a  beer or two never hurt anyone, right?

He was Edward McArdle from a tiny village called  Dromcondrath in County Louth and was very ambitious. He later acquired TWO saloons (or what we currently call gin mills).Besides, he wore a derby,  a kind of  sign of affluence.  Although he was about ten years her senior, the Great Love Bug bit them both. So they were married and began what looked like a Paradisiacal Phase. The now Mrs. Mary  McArdle  loved kids and babies and appropriately good sex with her husband  - - - so - -  they had ten children. Edward brought some of his family from Ireland to share his good fortune and happiness - -  and of course Mary, his little wife, was totally agreeable. There now was laughter and love and very good times. Grampa was even able to offer a free Lunch with every five cent glass of beer. It was a jolly time.
                                                                                  
But life was not without heartaches. Her first pair of twins died shortly after birth. Her 12 year old  son, Matty,  fell down the saloon stair case and broke his neck. Since Medical skills were not what they are today the boy died shortly thereafter. After 20 years of relatively happy married living, in March of 1906, Edward fell ill with pneumonia and with the unbelievably poor treatment then available, he died, within ten days in the flat above the saloon on 52nd and Tenth avenue in  New York.


Mary (Gramma) was told that due to her husband’s debts the saloon had to be sold leaving her totally penniless. She with her seven surviving children was “dispossessed” from her apartment. That meant that they literally were thrown out on the street. There was no Social Security or Widow’s pension. No one helped except her Church which found her some kind of primitive housing for her brood.

Something called  “ The Gerry Society” offered to take her kids and put them in what sounded like orphanages, a fate that was whispered around as worse than death. This gallant, little woman instantly refused the offer, preferring to keep her children with her believing with her staunch Faith that they would “make it somehow.” And indeed they did!

Gramma told me that she had to scrub floors for a dollar a day and  to scrounge  even to survive in the cellar-like digs  they inhabited. The children who were old enough all went out to make a few pennies for the common “pot.” None was able to finish even high school except Margaret who gained a Master’s degree from Columbia University with 13 credits towards her Ph.D. All the others went to “woik.” They entered the various worlds of photography, Automobile repair, domestic service, education, theatre, postal service

While modern De-constructionists wax poetic about the philosophical need to be tolerant, Gramma wove the tapestry of real tolerance. All her children married contrary to her ethnic instincts, save one. Her in-laws were generally NOT of her Irish preference but were German, Italian, Pennsylvania Dutch, Jewish, and even English. She loved and accepted them all, nurturing them, kidding with them, sharing what little of this world’s wealth she personally possessed. 



Her sense of humor was gigantic but her ability to characterize people with a phrase would send us all into  laughter spasms in seconds.  There was a verbally abusive  young woman who was instantly named “Mouthy” by Gramma. And the young lawyer with the huge head and little boy’s body became  “The head on a stick” and Mrs. Brennan with a huge posterior and a forward tilt became “ Here’s me head, me arse is comin’.” And the woman upstairs who was afflicted with excessive activity of the articulatory organs  became “ Babblin’ Bess.”


                                                      
                                                                                                                        
 When her fortunes improved through the combined contributions of the now grown kids, she wanted to grow flowers in   the pots around her back yard.  Since our street  was used by horse drawn carts and carriages, there was a plentiful supply of the valuable substance so helpful for plant health. So, one day, Gramma in a very loud voice commanded one of her very favorite grandsons, named “Chick,” to scoop up a large supply of the droppings and bring them to her for the beloved plants. In spite of Chick’s pleadings, she demanded he obey her - -  which he did, not only interrupting a  stickball ball in progress, but a  at the same time suffering the jeers and guffaws of the  insensitive West Side kids.  Gramma was a strong woman who knew clearly what she wanted.


Clearly, her strong spiritual “spine” was her Catholic Faith. Though totally unaware of past Christological heresies and Biblical subttleties of the Synoptic Gospels, she was “in touch” with God. She knew all about the Eucharist by pre-articulate Faith. She knew the power of the Rosary which she “did” everyday. She knew all about the effectiveness of Holy Water which was in a little font at the door leading outside and which we all piously used going “out” into the world.


She took me with her to Evening Devotions in the Paulist Church where my eight year old mind was awed by the Great Golden Monstrance   showing forth the Eucharistic Presence of the Lord and the flickering candles and the pungent smell of incense and the exciting stories told about the saints who faced lions in the Arena and whose bodies were pierced by Roman arrows or were tortured for the Faith by evil Kings. The huge Organ pounded out mystical and rousing hymns about Jesus and the Blessed Mother and St. Patrick and the many inhabitants of Heaven. I was impressed and moved and loved it. We all wore scapulars,   tiny, cotton squares hung around our necks by little strings, and which were brown or blue or red, depending on which personal devotion we preferred. We all had little holy cards with saints looking dreamily up to heaven. Of course, it was de rigueur to have a Rosary and the lucky ones wore Miraculous Medals around our necks on a silver chain. Gramma approved all this - - -  so therefore we all  so acted.

How much she influenced me to consider entering the priesthood myself  is known only to God. I do remember her palpable glow when she would invite the local Paulists to dinner in our cramped little apartment on 61st street  - - - - and what presentations she would offer their Reverences!  These were the most overwhelming of repasts.   She would say, a little defensively,  “Nothing is too good for God’s priests.” I remember her telling me about my Grandfather’s framing and hanging over his bar one dollar bill that the local priest had given him for “services.” (Maybe a draft of good Irish beer!!!!)  I remember, too, her cherished friendship with the brusque but manly Fr. Peter Moran who stood six feet four inches, had a deep voice and a huge shock of sparkling white hair. He would sit in her kitchen sensuously drinking Gramma’s strong, strong coffee as he complained, very colorfully, about the deficiencies of the Rectory’s  “Protestant” coffee. I would respectfully meet the great man at the door and escort him to Gramma. Then, they would talk for hours, he, the master theologian and she who mastered only the complexities of the Third grade.

While her coffee was exceptional, she had a secret concoction called Beef tea”
 reputedly the cure for  pneumonia, warts, arthritis, anxiety  and belly aches. Priests, family and friends were dosed with it whenever she deemed it necessary. Once, however, in one of the very few times she gave in to what we might call understandable “self pity”, she got “bombed” and was singing away in her darkened bedroom. She called me in which she rarely did and proceeded to give me a lecture about life. With some ROTC training in my background, I had registered for the Draft in World War II.  So, Gramma was terrified that I would go to war and be killed like a  neighborhood  kid she knew who was killed in World War I.   Florid as the proverbial Lord she grabbed me by the hair I then had and said: “Jimmy, be the father of a fine family OR go into the Seminary.”  There could be NO in-beween status. No single life. No gender ambiguity. Be a Priest or parent. And the message had the note of urgency to it!  “Make up your mind” she seemed to saying to me:“Get to it.”

Since my parents, as vaudevillians, were “on the road” most of the year, Gramma, in fact, raised me. I became so attached to her that when I was about 6  years old, I made a deal with God that He should take five years off my life and add them on to hers so that she could be with us that much longer. How the Lord figured that one out is beyond me since I am now 83!  However, Gramma’s influence on my life - - even my approach to life - - - -  was apparently enormous. Even when I was a teenager, she nudged me to “righteousness”. At 15, I was preening what I considered to be an attractive head of red hair, and was admiring myself in the hallway mirror with typical adolescent narcissism. Gramma came by and quickly sizing  up the situation “ zinged” me  with her quick barb: “You stink.” Ever since I have been very cautious about the Imperfection called vanity. Of course I have no longer any temptation to preen my hair since my head  today looks like a peeled egg. Applied to other dynamics of my spiritual life her barb has been an ominous and strict conscience (or to my therapeutic minded colleagues, a powerful super-ego). Gramma’s approval of all of us was essential for happiness. Her scowl of disapproval (though infrequent) could lead to inner turbulence 

When she was dying in Roosevelt Hospital and delirious, she instructed her nurse that she must get well immediately since she had an Ordination to attend (mine). She was about three years too soon in her calendar but her appreciation of the priesthood was always with her. She was some kind of lady! She knew the score of life. As she often remarked:  “I did me bit.” She had known happiness  and some ecstasy, sadness and pain. She knew how to cry for her brood but also how to laugh with all. She was one of those rare people- a true believer in God and Life. I guess she was what we all need at some time or other in our lives - - - - - a real Irish Grandmother.

                                                                                                                -End-
The Greek diner on tenth avenue and 52nd street (2004).
In 1905, it was the McArdle saloon and immediately above
Is the apartment where Edward (himself) went to his Maker
And from which Mary was dispossessed with her brood.

1944 Grandmother visits me in Seminary