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FR.Hennepin Province
Michigan and Ohio 4th Degree

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Item 1 of 4

Michigan District II
Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus
Father Louis Hennepin Province

Our Michigan District II “Operation Patriotism” project, “Patriot Fountain” will be dedicated this Sunday afternoon in Battle Creek, Michigan at 1:00 p.m. This will be a great exercise in showing patriotism and respect for our service members. Bring the children. Free food and refreshments after.


 
A Battle Creek fountain with sentimental meaning is being dedicated at its new home at 1 p.m. Sunday at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center.  The 77-year-old fountain, which just a year ago was set to be demolished, was restored and now sits on the VA's 200-acre property in Fort Custer, near the center's greenhouse.  The buzz about saving the fountain began last year when Battle Creek resident Kacie Brunner began a Facebook page with the idea and set-up coming from her co-worker, Melissa Matson.  The fountain's home had been a piece of property, north of the intersection of Dickman Road and Brydges Drive, that was being cleared and prepared for future development by Battle Creek Unlimited. It originally was most likely built in 1933 by Civilian Conservation Corps workers, according to archived documents.  Brunner, a Battle Creek City Water Department employee, and her co-workers, had admired the fountain through the years, keeping it clean of brush.  Brunner said one day when she and her crew were on the fountain's former property working, her boss told her the property was scheduled to be demolished with 20 feet of fill put in, and that's when she went to work to save the fountain.  "I couldn't bear the thought of it being bulldozed under," Brunner said.  "We thought nobody else knew about (the fountain)," Brunner said of her and her co workers. "But it turns out a lot of people knew about it and thought it was their little special place, too," Brunner realized after getting so much response from the Facebook page.  Todd Greenman, VA Medical Center public affairs officer, said the fountain is a perfect fit for the campus.  "It really fits in well with the greenhouse, and it's a quiet area where people can go -- patients, family," Greenman said.  The move is all thanks to a donation to the VA from the Knights of Columbus, which gave $5,000 to have the fountain moved, restored and re-installed with running water.  Each year the Knights of Columbus chooses a VA hospital and donates toward a project. This was Battle Creek's year.  "We were just glad it could be saved, and we call it the 'Patriot Fountain,'" said Gus Groat, a member of the K of C.  The Battle Creek organization will have a presentation during Sunday's dedication, Groat said.  Brunner, who said Battle Creek Unlimited gave her a deadline of six months to move the fountain or they would have to move on with their plans of demolition, is thankful the parties involved played a role in saving the fountain.  "And the VA has done such a fantastic job," she added. "I remember when this fountain was in the woods and at times looked like it had been completely forgotten about."  "There couldn't be a better group of people to enjoy the fountain than the veterans," Brunner said. "I'm so grateful for their sacrifices and I have a deep respect for them."

 
 

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Davison Knight Honor WWII Veterians

KofC Davison Mi Pride & Honor Flight

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Subject: FROM THE OFFICE OF THE SUPREME KNIGHT   

Importance: High


Dear State Deputy:

Last night, we received some very exciting news regarding Parish Priest,
Douglas Brinkley's new biography of our founder, Fr. Michael J.
McGivney.

The New York Times, which compiles the most closely-watched list of
best-selling books in America, ranks Parish Priest at number 20 in its
most recent survey.  That's just short of the top 15 list that appears in The
New York Times Book Review section of the Sunday paper each week.  The
book is now officially a best seller, but we need an all-out effort to get it
over the top, and we need your help right now.

Getting into that top 15 list makes all the difference in the world.
Books that make the NYT top 15 are automatically carried in book stores
everywhere, including airports, train stations, grocery stores.  Book
stores such as Barnes & Noble offer best-seller discounts and special
promotion for books that make the list.

Here's the bottom line: we're very close to putting Parish Priest in
that exclusive category.  If Parish Priest makes it into the top 15, the
story of Father McGivney and the Knights of Columbus will achieve a public
profile unprecedented in the history of the Order.


I ask you to do all you can in the next few days to encourage every
brother Knight to make a trip to his local book store to buy a copy of Parish
Priest.  Get in touch with every District Deputy, and ask them to get in
touch with every Grand Knight.  Ask them to pass the word by phone,
e-mail, and in person.

Let's put Parish Priest over the top!  The benefits for Father McGivney's
cause for sainthood, for the image of the Order, and for recruitment are
tremendous.  Please get the word out as soon as you possibly can.

                                    Fraternally,

                                    Carl A. Anderson

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                        Item 4 of 4

 

Contributed By:

George Mallison
Vice Supreme Master
Hennepin Province
02/18/06

One Man's Vision For Change

BY CURT SCHLEIER

FOR INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY

Posted 2/15/2006

Father Michael McGivney was appalled at the widespread poverty he saw around him.

McGivney (1852-1890) was the pastor of a small parish in post-Civil War New Haven, Conn. It was a difficult period for Catholics, who because of broad-scale prejudice couldn't purchase land in the state without special permission. Also, they also had to pay taxes to support Connecticut's official religion, the Congregational Church.

Living conditions were so bad, many hard-working immigrants — most of them Catholic — died young of diseases they had no money to prevent or treat. Widows and children were left with no resources, and often whole families were wiped out.

Certainly, McGivney could've looked the other way — many, even among the clergy, did. After all, he was busy enough ministering to his congregation and trying to raise funds to eliminate the enormous debt incurred when his parish built their church.

But McGivney couldn't turn his back on suffering, whether the sufferers worshipped in his parish or passed him on the street.

It wasn't an easy task. He had to fight an entrenched bureaucracy that was leery of him and his motives. He knew he couldn't do it all alone. So McGivney founded a fraternal welfare society to provide sick benefits and low-cost life insurance for the Catholic poor.

Building on the principle that strong families were the foundation of the church, McGivney's organization spread across the nation to include millions and help millions more. It still exists. Today the Knights of Columbus number 1.7 million members who volunteer 61 million hours and raise $130 million in aid annually. The organization also insures 1.2 million people.

While it sounds logical in hindsight, the organization was a radical concept for a priest at that time.

According to David Brinkley and Julie Fenster in "Parish Priest: Father Michael McGivney and American Catholicism," McGivney served the church at a unique time — many immigrants had been farmers or independent tradesmen in the old country, but found themselves working in factories and facing an identity crisis.

To compensate, some joined one of the dozens of secret fraternal societies that sprang up at the time, such as the Elks and the Moose. But because these organizations had rituals that were seen as anti-Catholic, they conflicted with the church.

So when McGivney broached the idea of a fraternal society — although it was exclusively for Catholics and would focus on charity — the idea wasn't immediately well received by the church hierarchy.

Nevertheless, he refused to give up. While he hounded church leaders — in a gracious way, writing countless polite letters — he gave what he could to the poor in his parish. His reputation for devotion and steady service stood him in good stead. His stick-to-it, straightforward approach convinced church leaders "that any project he originated must be beneficial for Catholics or it could not have come from him," said Brinkley and Fenster.

Building Teamwork

Once he got the green light from the church, McGivney made sure he had a support structure. He formed a committee of prominent local leaders to oversee this new organization and give it stature.

Getting the committee's busy members to work together, and quickly, wasn't easy. To gain their cooperation, he tailored his work style to fit individuals.

"He knew when to be stern and when to ease off, when to press his own views and when to stand aside," wrote Brinkley and Fenster.

To increase their cohesion as a group, McGivney pitched right in to lead by example. "No chore was too much trouble, no reading too dull — and no acquaintance immune from his enthusiasm for the idea," Brinkley and Fenster wrote.

Before he made a new move, his first step was research. He checked to see what other societies were doing, because if there already was "a Catholic organization similar to the one he envisioned, then there would be no need to start from scratch."

There wasn't. He culled the good ideas from other organizations and fit them into his own. In early 1882, the committee voted to name the organization the Knights of Columbus — "Knights" to show their fealty to Roman Catholicism, and "Columbus" in honor of the European discoverer of the New World to show their American patriotism. Shortly thereafter, the group received a charter from Connecticut.

It was slow going early on, but McGivney kept going as confident as ever of success. He regularly did mailings to other churches in the diocese describing benefits of membership ($5 a week for up to 13 weeks, with possible additional payments if the member remained ill) and talked up the organization to nearly everyone he encountered.

While members of the founding committee got into arguments about picayune subjects — the colors of their uniforms, for example — McGivney kept himself focused on the organization's goal, working single-handedly when necessary. "Father McGivney's role was to keep the founders from losing sight of the horizon," Brinkley and Fenster wrote.

Focus On The Positive

No matter how slowly membership built, he kept an optimistic attitude and urged others to do the same. "Our beginning is extremely slow, but I think when our by-laws are distributed we will advance more rapidly," he wrote to a despairing founding committee member.

The idea eventually caught on. But McGivney refused to bask in his accomplishment. "In 1884, with the order flourishing and the opportunity for immense influence lying well within his grasp, Father McGivney declined to allow himself to be re-elected as secretary of the Supreme Council," the authors wrote. Instead, he re-devoted himself to parish duties, noting that he had much work to do there.

McGivney's ultimate success with the Knights was little surprise to those who knew him and his background. Following his ordination, McGivney became curate of St. Mary's, the first Catholic parish in New Haven. It was a difficult assignment. The parish pastor was ill, and his duties were often left to the new priest. The church was heavily in debt and was located in a Protestant area where it wasn't welcome. An article about St. Mary's in The New York Times in 1879 carried the headline, "How an Aristocratic Avenue Was Blemished by a Roman Catholic Edifice."

From the moment McGivney arrived, he demonstrated a can-do attitude. One of the biggest problems facing members of his church was high levels of alcoholism. Total Abstinence League groups already existed, but largely languished.

He soon became involved. The TAL sponsored a series of plays to raise money and attract new members. McGivney directed the productions and showed his willingness to try something new by casting women in the female roles. The production was a huge success — more than 1,800 people attended on opening night — and it raised big funds for the church.

No matter what he undertook, he gave it his all. Still, McGivney loved his work. "The only thing he liked better than working with them . . . was standing back and watching them work together."

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