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Our Partner ChurchFirst Unitarian, Louisville, is partnered with the Unitarian Church of Nagyenyed, in the Transylvanian region of Romania. This is a fairly extensive explanation of our relationship with Nagyenyed and the various components of the program we are engaged in with them. You can either read it in its entirety as it appears below or skip about to read the sections that particularly interest you by clicking on the following links: Letter
from the Minister Originally written by Richard Beal. Updates from 2000-2006 by Beverly Moore. History of the Partner Church Program Historically, Transylvania was part of Hungary - save for a brief period of time as an independent kingdom in the sixteenth century. After the defeat of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in World War I, Transylvania was awarded to Romania. Almost all of the surviving Unitarian churches (which at one time had numbered over 500 and now is about 160) in East Central Europe thus became not only a religious but also an ethnic minority in the vastly enlarged Romanian state. In the nineteen twenties the old American Unitarian Association instituted a "Sister Church Program" to match American with Transylvanian churches because for a time it looked as if the persecution of our co-religionists would entirely wipe out Unitarianism. Louisville was one of one hundred Sister churches in the United States. It was linked to Kadecs, a farming village. By 1990 there was no memory of this connection in Louisville (though when I visited Kadecs in '97 the people there remembered the partnership with Louisville and were pleased to hear news of it). Very few memories of those old connections with Transylvanian Unitarian churches survived anywhere in the US. Even the most successful partnerships broke down during World War II and the forty years of isolation under communism. Just prior to the so-called "revolution" in Romania in December of 1989, the UUA began to receive reports of a renewed danger facing the Transylvanian churches. The highly nationalist Ceaucescu dictatorship, intent on eliminating the "Hungarian problem," proposed a kind of final solution. The proposal was to create large agro-industrial centers to which village populations would be moved and the villages razed. The effect would have been to mix the Hungarian population with the Romanian majority where, cut off from the roots of their culture -- which was on the land and in their villages -- it could be easily assimilated. Had this plan not been stopped by the fall of the Ceaucescu government the Unitarians would have lost the vast majority of their ancient churches. the threat was sufficient for the UUA to attempt to revive the old Sister Church program. Louisville was among the first churches in North America to respond to the UUA's mailing about the need for renewed partnerships. At the Annual meeting in 1990 the congregation passed a recommendation from the Board that we enter into the program. In July we received a letter saying we had been partnered with Nagyenyed, and we began what has become a long correspondence. Because of our involvement I was invited to a meeting held during the General Assembly in Charlotte, NC, to discuss the problems the UUA was having in administering the program and to propose solutions. The essential problem was that the UUA had neither the staff, the finances, nor the expertise to adequately supervise the rapidly expanding program. It had never really had "foreign missions" and therefore had little experience in dealing with people with different cultures and histories than our own. The eight or nine of us meeting in Charlotte decided that the only way to adequately deal with the Partner Church effort (at that time still called "the Sister Church Program") was to create a membership organization separate from the UUA and to work closely with Dr. Judit Gellerd. Judit was the daughter of a famous Transylvanian Unitarian minister, Imre Gellerd, and had been living for some time in the United States. She was passionately committed to the cause of saving Transylvanian Unitarianism and had the knowledge and contacts in Transylvania the program desperately needed. We founded the Partner Church Council then and there, with Leon Hopper of the Bellevue, WA, church as President and Judit Gellerd as General Secretary. The rest of us, along with several others who soon came on board, constituted the Executive Committee and began to build an organization. Description of Nagyenyed Meaning and Pronunciation: "Nagyenyed" means Big Enyed in Hungarian. As far as I know there is no longer a "little Enyed." Perhaps Little Enyed was originally a small village, which over time was surrounded by the adjacent town and incorporated into it. "Nagy" is the Hungarian word for "big" and is pronounced Nadge (the "a" sounding like the "a" in Andre, the "d" being suggested rather than fully articulated). It's okay to simply refer to the town and our Partner Church as "Enyed." Location: Looking at a map of Romania, Transylvania is the region in the northwest of the country, bordered by Serbia on the Southwest, Hungary on the West, and Slovakia and the Ukraine on the North. Most place names in Transylvania have Romanian, Hungarian, and oftentimes German equivalents. Thus you will find the provincial capitol of Transylvania listed on most maps as Cluj-Napoca. In Hungarian, and as used here on the web page, it is Kolozsvar ("var" means "castle"). Once you locate Cluj/Kolozsvar on a map, you will see that just to the Southeast is a smaller city: Turda/Torda. And south of Torda you'll find Aiud/Nagyenyed. Enyed is somewhat separated from the majority of the Unitarian churches in Transylvania, which are further to the East in a section of Transylvania called the Szekelyfold. But it is central to the area in which the major events of the 16th century in Transylvania took place and the Unitarian church was founded. Description: Enyed is a small city. It borders on the Maros River, but the town was located on a hill some distance from the river, probably for defensive purposes. By North American standards the Maros is a small river, but it is the principal river of Transylvania. On one side of the town the land slopes down to the river. On the other side rise higher hills, which are part of the Torocki range of small mountains. The higher portions of the hills are forested, but the lower slopes are covered with vineyards. Enyed is one of Transylvania's better wine producing centers. The major industry of the city was iron working, but the factory has been shut down and a good percentage of the population became unemployed. It is also well known (or notorious) as the site one of Romania's most brutal prisons. The two major cultural institutions of Enyed are Because the school offers classes in Hungarian many Hungarian students from villages in the area board at the school or live with families in Enyed during the week in order to study there. It now has Unitarian students and the minister of our Partner Church teaches them the religious education the State provides in public schools. Description of our Partner Church At the time of the granting of Transylvania to Romania there were vast disruptions to the lives of the Hungarian population. This was particularly true for young villagers, many of whom had to move to nearby cities to find work. This was the case in the Unitarian villages near Enyed. So a city which had had very few Unitarians living in it suddenly had a population sufficient to support a church. In 1928, with help from Hungary, a small church was constructed. The Unitarians in Enyed had originally been promised a site on the city's marketplace, which would have been a prominent location near the Calvinist, Catholic and Lutheran churches. But the Romanians also wanted to have a church in Enyed, so a large Romanian Orthodox building was erected by the government (and took over the entire marketplace). The church is now on a small plot of ground, on the banks of a very small tributary of the Maros, about a ten minutes walk from the square. As you face it the minister's garden is on the left, as well as a small building housing a parish hall. On the right is a small orchard containing a carved wooden post memorializing George Enyedi - a very important leader of the early Unitarians in Transylvania. The building is a two-story structure of brick covered with stucco. The minister and his family live on the first floor. The sanctuary is on the second, reached by a flight of steps on the facade of the church. It has a small bell tower, which contains a bell originally belonging to a Unitarian church deep in the mountains. That church was destroyed during the troubles that accompanied the Romanian occupation of Transylvania and the men of Enyed, accompanied by guards, took oxcarts into the mountains and brought the bell back when the Enyed church was being constructed. The sanctuary is small, seating about eighty people when they really crowd together. For large services, when they can number two or three times that number, people stand outside and listen to whatever floats out through the windows and the open door. It is pulpit-centered and has a small reed organ. Like all Unitarian churches in Transylvania it is decorated with panels of embroidery (in Enyed's case red on white embroidery). In front of the pulpit is a round Communion table also covered with an embroidered cloth. The Transylvanians celebrate communion four times a year (Harvest, Christmas, Easter and Pentecost) as a memorial meal. When we first visited there was only a small wood stove in the sanctuary, but it is now heated with gas. The Minister and his Family The minister of our Partner Church is the Reverend Botond Sandor. (In Hungarian the family name comes first, so in Transylvania he is the Reverend Sandor Botond. His nickname is "Boti." His wife, Eva (pronounced "Ava" with a long A) is a teacher at an orphanage school in a neighboring village. They have two teenage sons, Ursi (pronounced "er-shi," now headed for college) and Elod (pronounced "el-ood" -- as in "hood"). (In Hungarian the accent always comes on the first syllable.) Boti and Eva are in their forties and have been ministering in Enyed for about twenty years. Originally Boti wanted to become a botanist, and this is still his avocation. But when it was time for him to go to university there were no places for Hungarian students (you had to be very well connected in the Communist Party if you wanted an advanced education) and his father was a Unitarian minister, very suspect because of that. The Bishop, the leader of the Unitarian church in Transylvania, offered Boti a place at the seminary and he took it. At that time only two Unitarian theological students a year were permitted by the government to enter ministerial studies. So it was a great honor even if it was not his first choice.
Our Relationship with the Enyed Congregation Over the years we have had a great deal of contact with Nagyenyed and there have been many different aspects to the relationship. The categories below break them down into general areas but are probably not totally inclusive of every component of the relationship. Correspondence
Visits Of great importance have been the many visits back and forth between Louisville and Enyed:
Obviously all of these contacts, and the generosity of the church in allowing
me the time for my various trips, to serve on the Executive Committee of the
PCC, and to function for two years as the organization's president, has meant
a major contribution by First Unitarian to the organization and development
of the Partner Church Council.
Financial Relationship One important -- but not necessarily the most important -- aspect of the relationship has been our financial support. When we agreed to the partnership with Enyed we made a commitment to provide $1,000 each year. We have continued to do this, raising the money in part from the church budget and in part from fund-raisers organized by our Partner Church Group. Though the economic situation has changed radically in Romania since 1990, we have kept the level of support constant. Our feeling has been that the money we send (usually in April of each year) is theirs to do with entirely as they think best. It's our intention to provide assistance, not make them in any way financially dependent on us. Consequently our support has been about at the midpoint for North American churches. Some wealthier churches have been of much greater assistance, providing their villages with tractors, clinics, or scholarships. Many others have not provided either the same level or the same consistency of support we have.
* The funds to do these things have come from gifts, donations, the church budget, and fund-raisers. Among the latter have been a series of jewelry sales organized by Kay Woodworth, Penny Nader, and members of the Partner Church Group. We have held dinners and entertainments with help from Klara Papp and members of the local Hungarian Club. In the fall of 1998 we held our most successful event, turning the entire first floor of the church into a facsimile of Rick's Café and holding a Café Casablanca with Odile Saurat as chanteuse and Steve Taylor's orchestra, Riviera, providing the music for dancing. We repeated this, using a "Speakeasy theme, in the fall of '99. And for two years, with the substantial help of Joan Johnson and Ann Caudill, we had an "Hungarian Table" selling breads, pastries, cakes, cookies and other Hungarian delicacies at the church's Food Fair - with the proceeds of the table going to our partner church.
Education One of the great benefits of our partnership with Enyed has been the opportunity to learn a great deal more than we would otherwise know about the Transylvanian roots of Unitarianism. This has partly come about through visits and visitors, but we have also devoted at least one service each year to examining our relationship to our partners and to Unitarianism in East Central Europe. In addition, we've learned an extraordinary amount about the courage it takes to belong to a persecuted religious faith and the sufferings involved in being an ethnic minority in the Balkans. There is a difference, when you have visited and talked with people and gotten to know something about them and the life they lead, in how you read the accounts that appear in the local media about what has been happening in areas of ethnic conflict. Our "Partner Church Group" Though every member of First Unitarian has been involved in our relationship with Enyed at some level, the bulk of our work has been done by a small group of volunteers. Most of them are people who have been on one or another of our visits. One helper, not previously mentioned, has been Michael Burp, who served for three years as the first English teacher in Kolozsvar. A true pioneer, he's an exemplar of the major level of contributions First Unitarian, Louisville, has made to the whole partner church program. Others have been Joan Beal and Bev Moore, who have served as Networkers and PCC Contact People for the UUA's Ohio Valley District.
For More Information First Unitarian's Partner Church Group is small and would welcome additional "members." A small library of useful books on Transylvania and Transylvanian Unitarianism is available to the Partner Church Group, and an annotated bibliography is available through the Partner Church Council. You can also read more about the work of the Partner Church Council at its web page or by subscribing to its newsletter, which comes three times a year as part of an individual membership in the PCC. For subscription information, contact the Partner Church Council
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