PHSR

Polish Heritage Society of Rochester
Skalny Welcome Center
St. John Fisher University
3690 East Avenue
Rochester, NY 14618

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585-248-0152
info@polishheritagerochester.org
Founded 1918
Web site updated 4 April 2013

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Polish Heritage Society of Rochester
Wigilia dinners and programs.

2011 Koledy (Youtube) and 2011 photo album (Facebook).

Wigilia - A Traditional Polish Christmas Eve Dinner
December 8, 2012, 6:00-9:00 pm (doors open 5 pm)
Cleary Auditorium in Kearney Hall
St. John Fisher University, 3690 East Avenue, Rochester, New York 14618
Directions (park in lots I and J).

Adult PHSR members - $30
Other adults - $35
Student age 7-18 - $15
Children age 6 and under - free
Let us know youth ages so that we can provide special gifts and snacks.

*** TO RESERVE SEATS BY MAIL *** make checks payable to "PHSR" and mail by December 1 to:
PHSR, PO Box 273, Webster, NY 14580.
No tickets will be mailed. Check in at the door. Be sure to provide your name and address with your order. Please provide your phone number and/or email address, in case we have questions. Seating is first come, first served, unless you reserve a full table of ten.

Menu:
Starters: Herring, cheese, rye bread, barszcz with mushroom dumplings (uszka), cheese
Main Course: Red and white wine, pierogi (cheese & potato, sauerkraut & mushroom), fresh sea bass, split peas and cabbage
Coffee & tea
Dessert: Poppy seed cake, kruschiki (Polish bow cookies)

Watch for information each Christmas season on programs to be presented by the Polish Heritage Society of Rochester, the Krakow Sister Cities Program and the Rochester Museum and Science Center, especially the annual Wigilia celebration and szopka workshops.

See the links page for additional information on the web related to this article.

"Wigilia" comes from the Latin word "vigilare," meaning "to await." The actual Wigilia celebration begins on December 24th when the first star in the east (Gwiazdka) is seen. The 2006 Wigilia program began with a "Winter Skies" Planetarium show highlighting the first evening star of Christmas, and the Trumpeter of Krakow (played in 2006 by Rachel Winsberg).

From the tower of the Mariacki Church, for centuries past, the Hejnal, or Hymn to our Lady, was played by a trumpeter. He played it four times to the four winds, and he played it every hour. In the 13th C, the bugler used the Hejnal to warn the city of an invading army from the East. He played the tune over and over as an alarm. His bugling was cut short by an arrow from the invaders that killed him and to this day, the Hejnal is played hourly with an abrupt ending, reminding people of the bugler’s heroism.