Sunday, May 19, 2013

Meszko, Torda and its Edict, and on to Kolozsvar

Meszko, the Alabaster Village


Meszko is well-known as the Alabaster Village. It is the site of a now dormant alabaster mine.  Many of the chunks below the Unitarian Church wall (above) are alabaster.  It is everywhere, including in the garden outside the new social hall (below) where we had lunch. Women of the church (in one case a man) prepared a meal for us in six out of the nine churches we visited.  We were given lunch in the school dining room at the high school in Szekelykeresztur where we brought books and bookshelves. Everywhere the hospitality was gracious and meals were beautifully- served and delicious. Typically, we had chicken cutlets, goulash, polenta or potatoes, cabbage and palinka (a twice-distilled home-made plum brandy). This meals arrangement is of mutual benefit as travelers get a home-cooked meal right where they are visiting and the folks cooking can use their facilities and culinary skills to create income for the church and sometimes for the cooks! One of the advantages of having a pilgrimage with the UU Partner Church Council, and especially John and Csilla Kolzscar Dale is that they connect the folks who want to provide meals
with UU traveling groups, who all get to meet each other.
To say the hospitality was gracious is a real understatement.  It was offered with such generosity, kindness, beauty and warmth that you felt the Unitarian connection despite that most of the cooks spoke only Hungarian, which none of us spoke. Of course Csilla
did a lot of translating but we learned how much is communicated with hospitality
despite a lack of verbal interchange. Talking isn't everything! 
Love and kindness are communicated in so many ways! 


Actually, the Alabaster Village is famous to many UU American because of a book published by that name. It is written by Christina Frederiksen Balazs Morgan, a Scandanavian woman who was married to Ferenc Balazs, a very talented, brilliant and creative Minister, poet, and troubador,  who transformed this village in the 1930's and who also studied at Starr King School for Ministry (UU) and travelled the world as a Unitarian ambassador. Unfortunately, tuberculosis and constant exertion resulted in an early death for Balazs. Starr King created a scholarship for Unitarian Ministers from Transylvania for one year to honor him and they are called Balazs Scholars.  These Starr King Scholars in over 50 years have created an ongoing dialogue between American and Transylvanian Unitarians which has now generated a large group fluent English-speaking Transylvanians who with a year in America have been able build on their years of studying English in school.
On Youtube there is an excellent video where these Ministers talk about their experience in American Unitarian settings and how it influences them in their ministries as well as their younger generation of Transylvanians.
You can watch this excellent and perceptive 60 minute video on Youtube.
It is called The History and Modernization of Transylvanian Unitarianism. I found in it a rare glimpse into a Transylvanian experience of Unitarianism with candid conversation about America's laissez-faire Unitarianism and issues with Christianity, the extraordinary pull of Hungarian identity and language, surviving extraordinarily hard times, the plight of village churches in a world economy, and the unavoidable draw of postmodern life.

Below, statue of Ferenc Balazs next to Meszko Unitarian Church.



Robi Balint, the very articulate and bright Minister at Meszko, introduces us to the Church and the story of Balasz Ferenc. Like many ministers, Robi has to be bi-vocational to support his family. With Kolozsvar an hour away, he commutes to the Unitarian Headquarters
 and is Director of Publications there.
I didn't realize this and when we arrived at Meszko he immediately said, "I just read your article about Margaret Crook and I have a question."  I was stunned.  I knew it had been translated into Hungarian and would be published in their journal, The Christian Sower.  But why would this minister in a small village have read it before it had even been published? He soon straightened me out and we had an interesting conversation about Margaret setting up a childcare program at the Norwich, England, church during World War I for mothers working in the armament factories.

Note bright blue embroidery here!
Hand-painted church ceiling.

The Minister's house.

Robi points out feaures of the new social hall just being completed.

A very attractive lunch in a village that loves blue!

Traditional transportation still works well in Meszko and most villages. At the same time, many younger villagers have wireless and iPhones!



Traveling from Meszko to Torda we saw this "gypsy house."  They are fairly common and are large, extravagant and usually unoccupied. A conundrum.
Sometime people are living in small houses in the back.




Torda, birthplace of Unitarianism

The Edict of Torda convened in a Catholic church to hear arguments about religious toleration. This plaque marks the church.

(Above) The original stone floor in the church on which walked King JohnSigismond and Francis David in 1568.


At the Church of the Edict of Torda, in 1568, Francis David argued for religious freedom.This  resulted in the Proclamation of Toleration by King John Sigismond.  Left to to right, Sierra-Marie Gerfao, Mary Jo Ross, Erol Fikrig. Mary Strieff, Margaret Fikrig, Elizabeth Santoro, Claudia Elferdink, Pat Abraham, Paul Carmichael, Sylvia Carpenter, Jere Armen, and Jan Van Heurck.





On to Kolozsvar, Home of Francis David, Unitarian Headquarters, the "Mother Church," and the Unitarian Archives


The Unitarian Church in Kolozsvar, the mother church founded by Francis David, center, and Unitarian Headquarters(Bishop's office and Consistory (Board) Meeting place, High school and Elementary School and Unitarian Archives) to the right.

 
 Maria Pop, Secretary to the Bishop, met with us on our arrival in Kolozsvar.  She was one of two women admitted to the Unitarian Seminary in a group of ten right after the 1989 Revolution. She travels with the Bishop and does the administrative work of the church. Now approximately half of the seminary students are women.
We met with Maria in the Consistory (Board) Room at the headquarters.  It is on the main floor (US second floor, two stories below where I stayed). Below is a clip of Maria explaining the workings of the Transylvanian Unitarian Church.



In Kolozsvar on Saturday, we learned that many of our Monday flights were cancelled because of a one day Lufthansa strike on Monday when many of us were flying.  Some were able to fly out of Sunday, others were planning an extension trip to Budapest. Over ten days together, through miles in a small bus, some car sickness, the faces of the high school English students and the eager 5th graders, a kaleidoscope of churches, villages and cities, all experienced in a sense of group thoughtfulness and kindness. Extraordinary.  

Our last evening all together was Saturday.  We gathered in the courtyard of the Hotel Transilvania and shared our thoughts and reflections.  We all knew that we had been blessed with an amazingly rich experience which we could only begin to understand. We had received wonderful hospitality from dozens of people. Our Unitarian world had expended beyond imagination- culturally, historically, emotionally, and theologically. This journey will be with us for a long time.


Above, front door of the Church.  We attended a regular Sunday Service, of course all in Hungarian, although the Minister did greet us in English with the announcements at the end.

 

Below, Norbert Racz, the new minister at the First Unitarian in Kolozsvar, stayed after the Sunday Service to meet with us. His English is impeccable.  When asked how he learned  English, he said watching TV when he was a kid!

Note red embroidery in the style of this congregation. He told about the church programs, especially for youth, that happen outside of Sunday morning. Next below, Norbert holds the communion cup used by Francis David and still is use today for communion
, about 4 times a year.



Above, a 16th century communion plate for the bread and the Francis David chalice still in use.
In communion, Transytlvanian Unitarians see it simply as a symbolic meal (no body and blood)
where they celebrate community and look deeply into the Minister's eyes as they drink the wine,
an act of shared faith and connection.

The rock in which Francis David stood in a great gethering where, as the story goes, the whole city of Kolozsvar became Unitarian, a nice legend according to Norbert.

Our Sunday evening final banquet was lovely, but smaller because some had to leave early, a few because of the strike.  It was a quiet end to an amazing pilgrimage.



Bust of Francis David on the way up six flights of stairs to my room,
in the women's college dorm area.

Headquarters entrance area.

Kolozsvar Unitarian Church (left) and Headquarters, right.


Full Circle- The Unitarian Archives

The Hungarian Unitarian Collecting Archives in Koloszvar, Official Title

Having spent a month here in the Archives, it was exciting for me to be able to share this place with our Pilgrims. Lehel had been away and he scheduled early Monday morning before our fhights (which had since been cancelled!). Our numbers were reduced by the srtike, but Archivist Lehel Molnar pulled out all the stops and showed the 16th century gems of the Archives to an appreciative group. I felt gratified to be able to share this important part of my sabbatical with our SUUS folks, thousands of miles from home.


Lehel shows Jan and Mary Jo a 16th century church history in Latin.
 

 Left to right- Jere, Lehel, Mary Jo, Jan, Elizabeth and Mary S.

 


 


Going Further- Recommended Links

On Youtube, "The History and Modernization of Transylvanian Unitarianism," insightful 60 minute video made by Starr King School of Ministry interviewing Transylvanian ministers who have studied a year in Berkely and how their ministry in Transylvania has been impacted, alomg with their comments on American Unitarian Universalism.

The Transylvanian Unitarian Cathecism in English: http://www.unitarius.hu/english/catechism.html

Check out, The Unitarian Church of Transylvania  in Wikipedia.  A very thorough and objective
description of the theology and history.

UU Partner Church Council, www.uupcc.org/

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Marosvasarhely - 21st Century Congregations Moving Forward


Downtown Marosvasarhely Church on Boyai Square

View of Boyayi Square,
Unitarian Church is on the right, below.
Marosvasarhely is one of the larger cities in Transylvania. During the 60s and 70s the Communists
had an industrialization program the forced many people to leave the villages and move to the cities
to work in the factories. This accelerated growth of cities and the Unitarian Churches in cities grew as the population migrated. After the Revolution of 1989, with the overthrough of communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, the Unitarian Church was again able to decide it's own fate and this congregation, bulging from urbanizarion, decided to build a satelite Unitarian Church on the outskirts of the city. Note SUUS Pilgrims gathering below on the way to the church approaching Boyayi Square.

L-R, Csilla Kolcsar-Dale, guide; Jere Armen; Pat Abraham, Margaret and Erol Fikrig.

Laszlo Nagy, Minister at Boyai Church describing church interior. Note Hungarian flag behind him,  traditional raised pulpit, and distinctive white on white embroidery work of this congregation. Hymnals in forground covered on more common red on white fabric. Mary Strief, front, listening.


Symbol of Transylvanian Unitarian Church, the dove and the serpent, in stained glass.

Csilla answers questions, Jere and Jan.

Csilla's father, Sandor Kolcsar, was Minister of this church from 1969-1997, through much of the communist time, the 1989 Revolution and following. His photo is on this wall of former ministers, lower right. Csilla spent much of her childhood under communist rule here.

There have been Unitarian congregations in this area since 1701. Locations have varied in response to political and cultural popuation shifts.
This church was built in this location in 1929.

The Bolyai Church has several partner congregations:
The Winchester Unitarian Society in Winchester, Massachusetts
The North Parish of North Andover , Massachusetts
The Remonstrance Church in Groningen, Holland, a liberal church which grew out of the
Polish Brethern (Unitarian) who fled persecution during the counter reformation
Zsambek Unitarian Mission Church, Hungary


Boyai Church linen, date in embroidery is 1700. 

Detail of Bolyai embroidery style.

Elizabeth views photo exhibit in social hall.



The Kovesdomb Church, the new church begun in 1999.

Csaba Kececs, Minister, describes the new sanctuary, pews are still being completed.
Right, Jere Armen and Jan Van Heurck.
The two churches share religious education responsiilities with a combined youth group and shared Unitarian religious education in the schools. 

Sanctuary and bell tower.  The Kovesdomb Church is
 partnered with the Albany, NY UU Church.
Courtyard, outside sanctuary. 
The office wing of the church includes a second floor guest house.
Seven of us stayed here for two nights under the friendly hosting of Matilde Kiss, office manager and guest house coordinator.
Note unusual roof supports.




Meeting Room

 

Minister's study, note classic print of Francis David at the Diet of Torda
behind desk.




The Teleki-Bolyai Library

One of the first public libraries in Hungary/Transylvania, this library was founded in 1802.  It is just a block away from the
downtown Bolyai Unitarian Church.



Entrance, cameras were not allowed inside.  We learned later that when the communists raided the Unitarian High School library at Szekeleykeresztur,
some of the book were brought to this library.

Elaborate iron door, amazing metal work abounds.