And Our Thanks to the Allied Serving Forces - US, Canadian and British Brothers in Arms
Abide With Me
"When You Go Home, Tell Them Of Us And Say,
For Your Tomorrow, We Gave Our Today"
By Daniel J. Cassidy(Published in The Post Eagle, 12/27/06Plans are well underway by the Archdiocese of Newark to close or convey to another rite or ethnic group one of Polonia’s most important and magnificent churches, St. Casimir’s Church, the Polish “Basilica of the Ironbound,” and a National Historic Site. This jewel-like church reflects in every tile, fresco and stained glass window, the heroic story of a people who have been at the vortex of the conflict between good and evil because as a nation and a people their very identity is found in Christ Himself and His Blessed Mother. The walls of St. Casimir’s Church remind all that enter of the price to be paid by those who unite themselves with Christ’s suffering and follow Him closely. Those walls tell the story of the Polish people and the terror, torture, execution and death of holy nuns, priests, noble soldiers and the humble faithful. We sense also, in the splendor of that holy temple, that where the cross is, there also is the resurrection. When it is dark enough, one can see stars!Once again the Archdiocese of Newark has declared war on its own people. The battle to save St. Casimir’s, and all the parishes targeted for destruction, is a spiritual conflict, but this spiritual battle is one the Polish people are particularly graced to win.The life of St. Casimir, Patron of both Poland and this Newark church, shines through the centuries as a rebuke to those who would destroy it. An earthly king’s son, born to wealth and power, St. Casimir would kneel through the night, in snow and rain, before the locked doors of churches, uniting himself to Christ within. He rejected the offer of foreign thrones; he wore the plainest of clothes and hair shirts; saw riches as temptations that warred against his soul; he slept on the bare floor; was known for charitable works and for fiercely defending the right despite ridicule and humiliation. He was a Prince who defied his father out of love for an even greater King. After his death at the age of 23, whole volumes were written about his powerful and miraculous intercession, and his body was found incorrupt 120 years after his death.And who is it that would destroy a church built in honor of Saint Casimir and loved for a century by his spiritual heirs? A farmer’s son who fancies $300 custom-made shirts, who uses the donations of hard working, faithful Catholics to purchase a Hunterdon County estate, and there builds a swimming pool for his personal enjoyment while closing churches and schools; an ambitious prelate who is reported by associates to speculate on choice appointments that might facilitate his entering the College of Cardinals; a shepherd of souls who takes public relations tours of Poland, paid for by his fellow travelers, but refuses to meet with Polish-Americans entrusted to his care when they oppose their eviction from and the closing of their historic churches; a successor to the Apostles who excuses the buggery of children and even attempted to reinstate a priest suspended for the sexual abuse of children. According to the Dallas Morning News, when the priest’s victims could not obtain a meeting with their bishop, and instead expressed their outrage through the media, Myers commented that he “didn’t realize they would be so upset.”The consultants from Seattle who assist Archbishop Myers in managing the collapse of Catholic life in the Archdiocese of Newark have asked if St. Casimir’s can support itself. The question Polonia should ask is whether or not the Archbishop of Newark can support himself. Certainly, with a vast network of closed schools and churches to rent, redevelop and sell, investment properties, and a massive stock portfolio, the Archbishop of Newark should not need the contributions of poor and working people to support his luxurious lifestyle.It may be hard to appeal to the heart and conscience of such a man, but the people of St. Casimir’s, and all of Polonia, cannot lose the spiritual battle before them. Their opponents usually fail to grasp how tenacious the Polish people are in defending their freedom, faith and heritage. A valiant defender of the right himself, Sir Winston Churchill observed that despite its long bondage, occupying powers had been unable to extinguish the spirit of the Polish nation. He prophesied: “the heroic defense of Warsaw shows that the soul of Poland is indestructible and that she will rise again like a rock which may, for a time, be submerged by a tidal wave, but which remains a rock.”An ambitious prelate with a taste for the high life will not endure in a spiritual battle against the determined efforts of faithful Poles fighting in solidarity for their faith and culture with support from the hierarchy in Poland and Rome. Surely they will have the intercession of the holy and powerful Saint Casimir. The saint who prayed outside the locked doors of churches is a particularly apt patron not only for Polish-Americans, but also for all the faithful in the Newark Archdiocese. And when the battle is long ended and the Church in America is cleansed of the current scandals and restored to holiness, perhaps a Polish artisan will add a new fresco to the walls of Saint Casimir’s commemorating yet another chapter in the strife of truth with falsehood, the battle to save that holy place.