Thursday, December 20, 2012

New Members Inducted at PPh's Heritage Society Luncheon


Members of The Philadelphia Protestant Home’s Heritage Society gathered for a luncheon in their honor on December 12.  The luncheon, which was to be held on October 30, was delayed due to Hurricane Sandy.

Roberta Healey and Anthony Manzo  
Roberta A. Healey, Simpson Senior Services Vice President for Philanthropy, past PPh Development Director and founder of The Heritage Society, was the keynote speaker.   She spoke about how valuable the philanthropy of the members of the Heritage Society is to the future of PPh. 

“The next generation of residents may never know your name, but they will be grateful for your commitment to PPh,” she said.    

New members S. Elizabeth Bonsall, Mary Fields, William Krai, J. Frederick and Gertrude Loeble, and Karl Loewe were inducted by Anthony Manzo, President and CEO, and Barbara Beckman, Chairperson of the Board of Directors.  Each received a certificate, a Heritage Society pin, and a copy of PPh Memories.  In addition, their names will be added to the Heritage Society plaque in the esplanade and a brick engraved with their name will be placed in “The Garden…”

Right to Left: Barbara Beckman, inductees, Anthony Manzo
The Heritage Society of The Philadelphia Protestant Home was established in 1990 and the name reflects our appreciation and admiration for those who had the vision to launch PPh.  Membership in the Society recognizes individuals who have made a deferred gift, such as charitable gift annuity, a bequest through a will, an IRA, life insurance or other gift which is made by a donor during his or her life and received by the Home after the donor’s death.

For more information about The Heritage Society, contact Diane Nawn at 215-697-8568.     

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Maria Gil: The Survivor


Maria Gil shared her remarkable story at PPh's Founders' Day on November 20, 2012.

Maria Gil is a survivor.

She was born August 12, 1923, in Ukraine to Eudokia and Konstantin Ripka.  Her parents were poor farmers. 

When she was 2 years old, her mother passed away, and because her father could not take care of her, he wanted to put Maria in a foster home.  Her mother’s parents adopted her and she went to live with them and the three of their nine children who lived at home.  They became her sisters and brothers.  Maria was the baby and used to sit on her grandfather’s lap and comb his long hair and beard.  

Anthony Manzo, David Sine and Maria Gil.
Maria’s grandparents never told her about her biological parents, but a next door neighbor child told her when she was 4 or 5 she had been adopted.

In 1932, when Maria was 9 years old, the Soviet leader Josef Stalin unleashed genocide in Ukraine.

Eric Margolis, wrote about what transpired in "Remembering Ukraine's Unknown Holocaust," which appeared in the December 13, 1998, issue of the Toronto Sun.

“Stalin was determined to force Ukraine's millions of independent farmers like her father and grandfather into collectivized Soviet agriculture, and to crush Ukraine's growing spirit of nationalism.
Faced by resistance to collectivization, Stalin unleashed terror upon Ukraine. Moscow dispatched 25,000 fanatical young party militants - earlier versions of Mao's `Red Guards' - to force 10 million Ukrainian peasants into collective farms. Secret police, also known as Chekists, began selective executions of recalcitrant farmers.

When Stalin's red guards failed to make a dent in this immense number, the Chekists were ordered to begin mass executions. But there were simply not enough secret police to kill so many people, so Stalin decided to replace bullets by a much cheaper medium of death, mass starvation.

All seed stocks, grain, silage, and farm animals were confiscated from Ukraine's farms. Chekist agents and Red Army troops sealed all roads and rail lines. Nothing came in or out of Ukraine. Farms were searched and looted of food and fuel. Ukrainians quickly began to die of hunger, cold, and sickness.

When the Chekists failed to meet weekly execution quotas, Stalin sent his henchman, Lazar Kaganovitch, to destroy Ukrainian resistance. Kaganovitch, the Soviet Eichmann, made quota, shooting 10,000 Ukrainians weekly. Eighty percent of all Ukrainian intellectuals were executed. 
During the bitter winter of 1932-33, mass starvation created by Kaganovitch and the secret police hit full force. Ukrainians ate their pets, boots, belts, bark, and roots. Cannibalism became common; parents even ate infant children.

The precise number of Ukrainians murdered by Stalin's custom-made famine and Cheka firing squads remains unknown to this day, but legitimate sources estimate between 7 and 9 million people or 25% of Ukraine's population was exterminated.”

One day, the secret police came to Maria’s grandparents’ farm, searching for her grandfather to arrest him because he had a farm and wealth and the communists wanted everyone to be “equal.”  She was sitting on her hope chest, which contained a pair of boots.  A policeman threw her off the chest and took the boots.   

The next day, Maria was sent by train to live with her biological father, his new wife and their children. 
When Maria went to school, she would sometimes go in the same clothes that she slept in.  The teacher would monitor what they brought for lunch to see if their families were hiding food from the authorities.

When she was 14, she went to work on the collective farm, where she worked sun up to sun down.  In 1933, they had no food, soap or salt and had to register every month for bread, butter and sugar.  Once, her stepmother went to the city and traded the family’s pots and pans to a farmer for grain, potatoes, corn and onions.  The Communists closed the churches.

In the spring, when the grass grew, they would mix it with water and make pancakes.
Life was not all bad. In the summer she and friend, whose father was a member of the Communist Party and, therefore, was well off, would take a row boat out on the Dnieper River and play the harmonica and sing songs. 

In 1941, the Nazis conquered Ukraine and Maria was taken to Germany to work on a farm. After the war Maria was afraid to go back to Ukraine because she could be called a traitor.  She heard stories of the police dragging people from trains, forcing them to dig ditches and climb into them and then shooting them. She learned that her father had died in a concentration camp in Germany.

In 1946 Maria went to a camp for Displaced Persons operated by the American Red Cross.  She worked in the kitchen, cooking for 1,000 people.  They received chocolate and cigarettes, which they traded in town for butter, eggs, and bacon. They learned not to take the ferry across the river because the soldiers would stop the ferry and confiscate the goods for themselves. They received donations of clothing from America.

Wasyl Gil came to work in the kitchen, lifting heavy food containers, and three months later they were married in the local sheriff’s office.  Maria learned how to operate a sewing machine and she worked for the Red Cross making children’s clothes.  Once they were interviewed and photographed for Life Magazine. 

In 1952, Maria and Wasyl received permission to emigrate to America and they went to work for a couple in North Carolina that was looking for a couple without children who had knowledge of farming and housekeeping.  The first time the lady of the house put a vacuum cleaner in front of Maria, she had no idea what it was.  Not knowing any English, Maria used hand signals to communicate with her employer.   

After a year, Maria and Wasyl moved to Philadelphia and got jobs sewing in a factory.  They had a daughter and a son David and several grandchildren.

Maria moved to PPh in January 2005.  She volunteers in the craft room three times a week and recently made her first quilt with the quilt club.  She likes taking the van to go shopping at the mall and the Acme and going on the trips to Lancaster County.

She says that PPh feels like her second family.

     

  

      



Ruth Freestone: Cycling Pioneer


The following is Ruth Freestone's story, which was shared during PPh's Founders' Day on November 20, 2012.

Ruth was born at home on December 2, 1918, to Ernest and Elsie Greiner.  They called her their “war baby.”  Her father was a professional house painter and woodwork-stainer and her mother was a homemaker. 

Ruth graduated from Kensington High School but didn’t like school very much.  She loved to roller skate and her older brother was a competitive bicyclist.  However, when he enlisted in the Marine Corps, his Schwinn racing bike, which had no brakes, sat idle.

One day her father said, “Somebody has to use this bike, so I guess it’s you.” She was 15 at the time.
Anthony Manzo, Ruth Freestone, Natalie Hardiman.

He took Ruth out at night to train. She would ride on the Roosevelt Boulevard from Oxford Circle to north of the Nabisco plant and back.  He would ride behind her in a car close enough to keep the other cars away. 

Ruth joined the 20th Century Bike Club and began entering and winning races.  After a few years, she entered the Pennsylvania State Championship and took first place for 4 consecutive years.  She received many medals as prizes, which are mounted on a plaque and hang in her room. 

She says, “If I had received money for my wins like they do today, I would have spent it.  I can look at the medals with pride in my accomplishments.”

Ruth met her husband Edward in high school. When he proposed marriage to her, she said, “Yes, but I don’t cook.  If I’m hungry, I open a can of beans.  Also, I plan to continue my bike racing career, so we can’t start a family for a while.”

That was fine with Ed.  He was the oldest of 13 children and was a good cook because he helped his mother in the kitchen.  They eventually had a son Eddie.

Ruth’s husband worked for Archehold Holmes as a carpet weaver for 42 years.  One summer, work was slow, so the family went to Wildwood Crest to look for work.  They became the managers of the Robert Stevens Hotel, which had 48 rooms and 3 apartments.  It was a family affair, with Ruth doing the housekeeping, Edward, Senior, the cooking, Eddie waiting tables and even Ruth’s mother and mother-in-law helping.  They managed the hotel for 13 summers until Eddie graduated college. 

Ruth and Edward retired for just a little while.  One day after church, they stopped into Gieger’s Bakery on Home Avenue and asked if they had any part time job openings. The owner said to be there 7 o’clock the next morning. Ruth and Edward worked for the bakery until he died.

In the mean time, Ruth didn’t stop riding her bike until she reached her 80s.  Following an illness, she came to live at PPh and has never been sorry. 

She says, “I am happy here. I have made PPh my home.  My faith, reading scripture, daily devotions and prayer are a natural part of my day and have sustained me all of my life.”


  

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Everybody Has a Story: Orlando Alvarez


PPh is blessed with residents who have lived remarkable lives.  On November 20, at Founders Day, we featured the stories of three residents.  Below is the life story of Orlando Alvarez

Orlando Alvarez was born in Havana, Cuba, on February 20, 1929.   His parents, Maria and Anthony emigrated to Cuba from Spain.   He has a brother, Anthony, and two sisters, Josefa, and Blanca. 

His childhood was like anyone else’s who lived on a Caribbean island—days spent at the beach and the ocean and playing baseball.  However, they had hurricanes all the time. He remembers the Pinar del Río Hurricane of 1944 that caused 300 deaths in rural Cuba.

His father got him a job as a bookkeeper in the office of the Havana electric company.  He met his future wife, Maria Emelina, on a bus to work.  She worked for a clothing manufacturer. 

Orlando said, “We took the same bus. I saw her and thought she was pretty.  The bus driver would wait for me to get on if she was already on the bus.”

They dated for a year and were married on December 27, 1950, at a lawyer’s office in Havana.  Their son, Orlando, Jr. was born in 1954.

From 1952 to 1959, Cuba became embroiled in a revolution, which brought Fidel Castro to power. In 1961, Orlando took part in the Bay of Pigs invasion and was captured and put into jail.  He was scheduled to be executed, but the guard mistook him for someone else and let him go.  A friend told him that he must leave the country, because if he didn’t, he would most certainly be killed.  He managed to get his seven year old son and his wife asylum in Venezuela through his brother-in-law.  Lastly, he left, and brought his family to Miami, Florida.

In Miami, he started out washing dishes and cooking and working in a bakery.  His wife worked as a seamstress.  Eventually he got a job with Caribbean Airlines.  Caribbean was bought out by American Airlines and he moved to Queens, New York, and worked at John F. Kennedy Airport as a crew supervisor.

He and his wife retired in 1994 and they traveled extensively to Florida, Hawaii, California, Puerto Rico, Canada, Aruba, and the Dominican Republic.

He is very proud of his son, his daughter in law Patty and his two grandsons, Christopher and Robert. 

He moved to PPh after his wife passed away and is happy to be here.  He plays bingo for blood and likes to give the candy bar prizes to the staff because he shouldn’t eat them.  From April to October you will find him watching baseball on TV.  Unfortunately, he is a New York fan.