Bethany Church of God is building a 2500-seat
worship center on a site that was once a swamp.
Blog Note: My purpose in reposting this series of blogs about our travels in Eastern Europe in 1990, shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Soviet Union, is to show the joy of the Eastern
European peoples as they emerged from the Marxist system into freedom.
My hope is that at least a few Americans will be warned as our present
government seeks to lead us into that darkness.
Saturday, March 24 After tub baths, which we were
getting used to and tired of at the same time, we were taken to the church for
breakfast. It was the usual eastern European cold cuts, cheese, and jam, but it
was good. (Or maybe we're just getting used to it.) And lots of that good
coffee!
After breakfast we were taken to
the site where the church's new, 2500-seat worship center is under construction. In an attempt to "get rid of
the Pentecostals" by appearing to give them something while actually
giving them nothing, the city gave the church four and a half acres in a prime
location near the intersection of two main arteries. The catch was that the
land was a worthless swamp. But to their surprise, the despised Pentecostals
drained the swamp, filled it with dirt, and proceeded to build.
Paul had to give a seminar at the church, so we went out to photograph the Black Market, which looks very much like a U.S. flea market fallen on hard times. Then back for another Polish dinner (these folks apparently don't do lunch) and more of that great coffee. (Do you detect a coffee addict rescued from withdrawal here?)
Farmers in rural Poland still plant
potatoes in the old-fashioned way.
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After the meal we were driven around town and out into the countryside, where we found farmers doing their spring plowing and people planting potatoes in the traditional way. Then back into town, where we photographed a group of young people from the church holding a street meeting in the town center. Playing their instruments, singing, and then preaching, they had attracted a good-sized crowd.
A group of young people from Bethany Church
hold a street meeting in the Town Center.
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For the rest of the day we were ferried from Bible studies to home churches to children's meetings to music groups, with hardly time to catch our breath. But we did our job as best we could and when we got back to the hotel were very glad to call it a night. As the trip winds down and the excitement and adrenaline ebb away we feel the weariness more and more.
Faces of Poland
A young singer at the street meeting.
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Anna, the Karel's 11-year-old granddaughter
is a budding concert pianist.
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Ferdinand and Lydia Karel. Graciousness
personified.
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Sunday, March 25
We were tired and moving slowly this morning, but since we were leaving Poland that
afternoon, we had to be packed and checked out of the hotel before being picked
up at 8:15 for breakfast and the church service.
Breakfast was the usual meat and
cheese, but redeemed again by great coffee. The church service was packed with
people, which made it difficult to move around, and the lighting was not-very-bright
fluorescent. But we covered everything thoroughly. The Polish Pentecostals are
quite unrestrained in their worship. I'm sure I witnessed several solo
performances of Polish folk dances. Or something.
Sunday morning worship at Bethany Church. Getting
good color under mismatched fluorescent lights
was notoriously difficult when shooting film.
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After a great lunch with the Karels, we loaded ourselves into the church van for an hour's drive to the airport, near Krakow, and were soon on our way to Vienna and some badly needed R&R.
Our time in Katowici was altogether
too structured. Having only united with the Church of God
a year earlier, Pastor Karel and his associates were eager to show their new
denomination the effectiveness of their ministry. However, they did not
understand the work of documentary photographers, as indeed, few do. Consequently, we spent too much
time photographing various aspects of the church's ministry and not nearly
enough time documenting the things that would put that ministry into the
context of the life of the community and the nation. I'll have more to say about this in an upcoming post.
Photographs
made with Olympus OM and
Leica M cameras and lenses, Fujichrome 100D and 400D films. Photographs and text copyright 2021, David B.Jenkins
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday each week.
Soli Gloria Deo
For the glory of God alone
Tags: photography, Dave Jenkins, David B. Jenkins Eastern Europe, Communism, Poland, Katowici, Bethany Church of God, Pentecostalism, Black Market, Krakow, documentary photography, Olympus OM cameras, Leica cameras, Fujichrome film, film, film cameras
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