My life 98

Stanislaw Barszczak; To save character of a grace….

In years 1995-2004 as I just mentioned I lived in the mum’s house at Zabkowice. I had a chapel and all to be the priest there. Once I returned home too late. From a rail station I made it down Wapienna Street, walked down behind the crosing, turned south down Związku Orła Białego to 36. I walked up the neighbor’s driveway, found the berry bush, crawled over it, through the open screen and into my bedroom. I undressed and went to bed. In that moment it was louder and uglier. I slept anyhow. As usual it has approached Helena me. “It’s thirty minutes late,” she said. I woke up suddenly. It was 21:30 a.m. I stood outside the door and listened. There were only mum and “grandmother” Helen in my house. Grandmother Helen couldn’t get enough of that. At that time I’d had the French lessons on my own and it had been Maeterlinck, Maurice Maeterlinck. I opened the door. Helen went over and lifted the needle from the record. Then he announced to my mother, “When Mr. Barszczak arrives we always know that it is 21:30 a.m. Mr. Barszczak is always on time. The only problem being that it is the wrong time.” She paused, glancing at the faces around. Then he looked at me. I turned around, walked out, closed the door behind me. I walked down the hallway, still hearing her going at it in there. In that night someone has knocked on the window…The next morning mum was already there by the time. I found the house after a journey of yesterday evening to Częstochowa completely new. Her friends were in the breakfast nook. I was introduced. There was Bożena, there was Bogdan, there was Zbyszek, there was Adam, there was Helena, there was Lucy, there was Regina and finally there was Antoni. They all sat around a large breakfast table. John had a legitimate job somewhere, he and Anton were the only ones employed. Regina was Anton’s wife. When we were introduced Regina had looked right at me and smiled. They were all young, thin, and puffed at rolled cigarettes. “Anton told us about you,” Zbyszek said. “He says you’re a writer.” “I’ve got a typewriter,” I remarked. “You gonna write about us?” asked Anton. The kitchen was very bright. The radio was on. Bożena was inside. He was very, very dignified. I saw, her eyes brightened, and the corners of her wide mouth curved slightly as the next item was showcased. Oh, Johnny, oh Johnny, how you can love! somebody sang. There was no way I could lose that mum’s day. I couldn’t drink.. Anton had a tiny shot glass of his own. As we raised ours and drank them, he raised his and drank. Everybody thought it was funny. I didn’t think it was so funny for a baby to drink but I didn’t say anything. Anton poured another round. “You read my short story, Stan?” Anton asked. “Yeah.” “How’d you like it?” “It was good. You’re ready now. All you need is some luck.”. The second round was no problem, we all got it down, including Regina. She shifted slightly, smiled first at Bogdan – a distinguished man hovering comfortably somewhere near forty. Anton looked at me. “Just get your next drink down.” Anton poured them all around. He skipped Bogdan in the highchair, though, which I appreciated. All right, we raised them, we all got that round down. The next round was poured. Just as it was the door banged open and a large goodlooking kid of around 22 came running into the room. “Shit, Stan,” he said, “hide me! I just am be seeking!” “My car’s in the garage,” I said. “Get down on the floor in the back seat and stay there!” We drank up. The next round was poured. A new bottle appeared. Suddenly somebody has sung; ”it was on the 2nd floor on my Street, I used to get drunk and throw the radio through the window while it was playing, and, of course, it would break the glass in the window and the radio would sit there on the roof still playing and I’d tell my woman, “Ah, what a marvelous radio!” We were still all hanging in there except Regina. It was going to take plenty of whiskey to do us in. Regina pulled open some upper cupboard doors. I could see bottles and bottles of whiskey lined up, all the same brand. It looked like the loot from a truck hijack and it probably was. I felt honored to be drinking with such an active part of the population of Ząbkowice. Anton kept pouring the rounds and we kept drinking them down. The kitchen was blue in cigarette smoke. As I said I dropped out first. Bogdan was the next to drop out. He just shook his head, no more, no more, and all you could see was his hand waving “no” in the blue smoke. Zbyszek was the next. Anton was next. He just jumped up and ran to the crapper and puked. Listening to him. Zbyszek got the same idea and leaped up and puked in the sink. “I usually drink until the sun comes up,” Anton said. Zbyszek still opened a bottle. He poured a new round. There was no answer. We heard him fall through the door, down the steps and into the bushes. We left him there. “I’ve never seen anybody take Zbyszek yet,” said Anton. Regina had just put Anton to bed. She wore the single strand of antique pearls her grandmother had given her for her twenty-first birthday, and an expression of polite interest. It’s seemed she thought now of it as her father’s boardroom look. She walked back into the kitchen. “Jesus, there are dead bodies all over the place.” I pretended it was easy. I grabbed the shot glass and belted it down. Helena just stared at me. We sat and waited. Her eyes were closed, she was down in there, and out. We walked back to the table. The week had gone. I returned home too late again. walked out the back door. I found a back alley and took a left. I walked along and I saw a green sedan. I staggered a bit as I approached it. I grabbed the rear door handle to steady myself. The god-damned door was unlocked and it swung open, knocking me sideways. I fell hard, skinning my left elbow on the pavement. There was a full moon outside. I was tired. I felt as if I couldn’t get up. I had to get up. I rose, fell against the half-open door, grabbed at it, held it. Then I had the inside handle and was steadying myself. I got myself into the back seat and then I just sat there. I sat there for some time. Then I started to puke. It really came. It came and it came, it covered the rear floorboard. I sat for a while. Then I managed to get out of the car. I didn’t feel as dizzy. I took out my handkerchief and wiped the vomit off my pant legs and off of my shoes as best I could. I closed the car door and walked on down the alley. I had to find the another streetcar. I would find it…The next day they went to my house, the teenagers of my second youth. I opened the door of a bedroom and came out on the steps, bending to avoid bumping my head. I went back toward the steps as they appeared hurrying up from left-rear. Gregory is twenty, he is sturdily built, but seems almost puny compared to his fellows. He has a common Irish face, its expression sullen, or slyly cunning, or primly self-righteous. He never forgets that he is a good Catholic, faithful to all the observances, and so is one of the élite of Almighty God in a world of damned sinners. In brief, Gregory is an extremely irritating youth to have around. Gregory wears dirty overalls, a sweet-stained brown shirt. He isn’t alone here. And it was like being in a cage. They stood around snickering and laughing. They stood around me, I saw their frames and faces only. Because they were taunting me I thought they would have hit me with somehow. It was unfair. “What do you want? I asked. You wonna know who kicked the ball to your garden? I didn’t answer. “You”-somebody said. Gregory was a round fat boy, really nicer than most, but he was one of them. I began walking toward Gregory. He stood there. When I got close he swung. I almost didn’t feel it. I hit him behind his left ear and when he grabbed his ear I hit him in the stomach. He fell to the ground. He stayed down. “Get up and fight him, Gregory,” somebody said. The fellow lifted Gregory up and pushed him toward me. I punched Gregory in the mouth and he grabbed his mouth with both hands. “Ok,” somebody said, “I’ll take his place.” The boys cheered. I decided to run, I didn’t want to die. But nobody came up. Nobody gave a question; ”What’s going on there?” “Is that right, boys?” It was something strange on my life. I still would say another story. There would be a football game today. David was worse than I was. With his crossed eyes, he couldn’t even see the colleague. I needed lots of practice. I had never played with the kids in the neighborhood. I didn’t know how to catch a colleague or how to hit one. But I wanted to. I liked it. David was afraid of the ball, I wasn’t. I swung hard, I swung harder than anybody but I could never hit the ball. I always struck out. Once I fouled a hall off. That felt good. Another time I drew a walk. When I got to first, the first baseman said: “That’s the only way you’ll ever get here.” I stood and looked at him. He was chewing gum and he had long black hairs coming out of his nostrils. His hair was thick with vaseline. He wore a perpetual sneer “What are you looking at?” he asked me. I didn’t know what to say. I wasn’t used to conversation. David and I were not accepted. It was because of David that I wasn’t wanted. As I walked off I saw David playing third game. His blue and yellow stokings had fallen down around his feet. Why had he chosen me? I was a marked man. That afternoon I quickly left lawn and walked home alone without David. I didn’t want to watch him beaten again by our classmates or by his mother. I didn’t want to listen to his sad violin. But the next day at lunch time, when he sat down next to me I ate his potato chips. My day came. “Let’s put him on the regular team.” Football season was worse. We played touch football. When the runner came through I grabbed him by the shirt collar and threw him on the ground. When he started to get up, I kicked him. He could have killed me if he’d wanted to. He was our leader. Whatever he said, that was it. He told me. “You don’t understand the rules. No more football for you.” I bet I’ve read everything you read. Don’t think, I haven’t. Resuscitating the body and the soul- look for it…how to enjoy it…to describe something…Premeditated talk-Only Human heart in conflict with itself is worth the agony and the sweat You can tell whether a man is clever by his answers- I became a mentor. Then I was moved into volleyball. I played volleyball with David and the others. All I needed was a little practice. Volleyball I was shameful. Girls played volleyball. After a while I wouldn’t play. I got up while the sun sprung around. The sky moved closer and flattened it all.

There were wonderful years of a growing in glory in my life. Being an alumnus of Major Seminary of Częstochowa’ diocese, Cracow, I am immensely happy to pen down these nostalgic reminiscences about my beloved Alma Mater enough. I recall with pride that I belonged to the solidarity’s batch of theology students, which was a bunch of excellent budding flowers from the southern dioceses and from different corners of Poland. I went to seminary in September 1980 during a time of a third year of the Polish Pope’s pontificate. Those six formative years in my life at Cracow shaped me intellectually, emotionally, physically and spiritually. When I turn back the pages of my personal history, I am convinced of the indebtedness to Cracow’ seminary for grooming me to what I am today. The 3 Bernardyńska street it was the place where we experienced the promptings of the Holy Spirit. The bygone days at Cracow near Wawel, the national monument with the tombs of Polish Kings, were so unforgettable that I hoard up the sweet memories of those times with much gratitude and sincere earnestness. During our time (1980-86), Seminary was in its budding stage with maximum facilities, but we happily lived together under the able guidance of the first Rector of Seminary, Rev.Fr. Dr Zenon Uchnast and the second one, Rev.Fr. Dr John Związek, and theirs wonderful teams on the staff. Cracow’ Major Seminary stood out to have been one of the leading seminaries in South Poland which equips the students to become worthy and capable instruments of the Lord to work in his vineyard, particularly in the challenging mission areas of Central and South Poland, I think, the credit of the same must go to the initial team of educators who set the sings in their proper gambit and the subsequent motion. I recall with delight that as Cracow’ student, I wrote an article in the seminarian issue of “Opinie” titled: “The meeting of professor Hashimoto”(1983). As a young seminarian, with my limited knowledge and inadequate understanding, I tried to state that religious life is relevant. Today, almost after the lapsing of almost thirty years since I wrote that, and also after twenty four years of living as a religious priest, with much more conviction, I reaffirm the same with an addition that it is we who make it relevant in the fast progressing modern world. I’ve heard about The last few years of our Professor, of Rev. Fr. Dr Stanislaw Grzybek’ life were difficult ones. Following periods of hospitalization, he returned home-Seminary in the hope of finding peace and enjoyment in his twilight years. I am sure that Cracow’ Seminary plays a great role to arm also the inmates to be relevant today. Let me this write up with a thought: Life is a big challenge. Very often our attitude determines the approach. The attitude can be biased, tainted with doubt or anxiety, clothed in suspicion, choked with hate or anger, imbued with greed or fired with lust. May the inmates of Cracow’ Major Seminary imbibe from the Holy Spirit an attitude tempered with understanding, consideration, and concern for others. This is my humble prayer. One of the greatest values of life lies in our ability to get along with people around. To work with them we need to believe and trust them to a great extent. When we believe in God, we automatically seek to serve Him. When we serve human beings we serve God. Therefore, our faith needs to become a living dynamic faith- faith in action. Only this type of life will lead to the fulfillment in priestly life. ”When wealth is lost, nothing is lost; when health is lost, something is lost; when character is lost, all is lost!” I wish and pray that God’s saving love may radiate through the hearts of all who pass out of Cracow’ Major Seminary and the holy Spirit may guide the activities of all the Major Seminarians and protect them from all dangers of the world; thus enabling them to become the true disciple following the very foot path of Jesus Christ. Though, this Major Seminary at Cracow it may be for ever of ours.

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