St. Emeric Parish was
established in 1904 to serve the needs of the Hungarian immigrants
on the West Side of Cleveland. Today, it is a parish of 350
households, still serving the needs of the Hungarian-American
community, especially those for whom English is their second
language and who still seek spiritual guidance and liturgy in
Hungarian. The parish is a community of Hungarian-Americans who wish
to worship together as a community of faithful in the Roman Catholic
Church in their native Hungarian language with traditional
liturgical music. Also, the church has always been and still is a
center for cultural activities that embrace Christian values for
members of all ages, the elderly as well as the youth, enriching
lives both spiritually and socially.
The latest large number
of immigrants arrived after the Communist takeover of Hungary after
1949 and also after the defeat of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution
seeking a new life in the land of the free. The church again
provided a welcome and stability in their lives at those trying
times. These new immigrants worked very hard in the footsteps of the
older generation to keep and maintain their church for worship in
the Roman Catholic Faith, observing traditions of a 1,000 year old
Christian nation. The liturgical music is one of these which creates
an atmosphere of reverence and worship.
St. Emeric Church is
located in Ohio City, behind the West Side market. There is ample
parking during evenings and non-market days through the graciousness
of the city of Cleveland. The church is centrally located, easily
accessible by four major highways, I-90, I-77, I-71 and the Shoreway,
by bus and rapid transit. The parishioners are mainly from the west
side of Cleveland and its western suburbs, some are from the far
east and south sides, even as far as Canton.
The buildings, church,
rectory, custodian house, and Hungarian Scout Center are well
maintained, in excellent condition. The parish enjoys sound finances
without debt, has always paid its assessments to the Diocese, and
even has reserves for emergencies. It has been a good steward of its
resources, with a number of the workers, salaried elsewhere, being
volunteers. The parish administrator, Father Sandor, is an "extern"
priest fluent in the Hungarian language. He is not a diocesan
priest, hence the parish closure would result in the diocese losing
a priest. The greater Cleveland area, including Akron, has many
elderly Hungarian-Americans residing in nursing homes. For these
shut-ins, the visit by Father to administer to them in Hungarian is
the ray of sunshine and hope in their otherwise bleak and
challenging old age.
The Scout Center is a
building that was an old abandoned warehouse on parish grounds,
slated for demolition 20 years ago, but the Scouts contracted with
the Diocese a twenty-year lease for the building. The older scouts
completely renovated it at their own expense into a modern facility
housing classrooms, meeting rooms, a kitchen and a dance studio. It
is used regularly by the youth, the Scouts and the Hungarian School
several evenings a week. All expenses for utilities and maintenance
are assumed by the Scouts. The Scouts participate in special
liturgical events at the church, and Father visits them at summer
camps and picnics to offer mass, traveling sometimes as far as
Fillmore, New York. Parish organizations include an Altar Guild, a
Holy Name Society, a Craft Club, a Fatima Family observing First
Saturday devotions, and Rosary Prayer service before Sunday Mass.
Special liturgical celebrations with respective traditional sacred
music include Easter Procession, May Crowning, First communion,
Corpus Christi outdoor procession, St. Emeric Feast Day, Christmas
Concert and midnight mass.
Submitted by: Ildiko Peller