Wednesday, March 27, 2024

The White Flag

A few weeks ago Pope Francis came under fire for comments that Ukraine should have the "courage of the white flag" and open negotiations with Russia for an end to the war. I don't think he meant surrender as many say. He has always been in favor of negotiation to end conflicts. Refusing to dialogue continues conflict. Some may argue that negotiation with Russia is fruitless, but how does one know unless they try to open that dialogue? For as much grief as the Pope has received on this issue, is he right, that there is courage in the white flag?

One of the world's top economists, Jeffrey Sachs at Columbia University and director of its center for sustainable development seems to agree with Francis. In a post on 8 Feb 2024 he said that  "The $61 billion (that is military aid for Ukraine) will make no difference on the battlefield except to prolong the war, tens of thousands of deaths, and physical destruction of Ukraine. It will not “save” Ukraine. Ukraine’s security can only be achieved at the negotiating table, not by some fantasized military triumph over Russia." You can read his full post here.

Source: National Catholic Reporter

In a July 2023 post Sachs damned the US position. History is seemingly repeating itself from what occurred sixty plus years ago in Vietnam, as Sachs says in that post:

At this point, Biden knows full well that NATO enlargement to Ukraine would trigger World War III. That’s why behind the scenes Biden put NATO enlargement into low gear at the Vilnius NATO Summit. Yet rather than admit the truth – that Ukraine will not be part of NATO – Biden prevaricates, promising Ukraine’s eventual membership. In reality, he is committing Ukraine to ongoing bloodletting for no reason other than U.S. domestic politics, specifically Biden’s fear of looking weak to his political foes. (A half-century ago, Presidents Johnson and Nixon sustained the Vietnam War for essentially the same pathetic reason, and with the same lying, as the late Daniel Ellsberg brilliantly explained.)

Third, in 1990 the US and Germany promised that if Moscow accepted German reunification there would be no eastward movement of NATO. In the earlier mentioned February post Sachs notes: "In 2021, after 7 years of fighting and more than 14,000 deaths in the Donbas, Putin called on newly elected President Biden to stop NATO enlargement and engage in negotiations with Russia over mutual security arrangements. Biden rejected Putin’s call to end the gambit of NATO enlargement to Ukraine." 

Sachs further noted: 

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky immediately called for negotiations based on Ukraine’s neutrality. Within a month, a framework agreement to end the fighting was reached between Ukraine and Russia, based on Ukraine’s neutrality and an end to NATO’s enlargement to Ukraine. Biden stepped in to stop the deal, with the U.S. informing Zelensky that the U.S. would not support neutrality.

Sachs is no Republican, he views the world through a large lens and is no fan of war and destruction. Some commentators have a less emphatic view that an agreement was reached between Russia and Ukraine before the war. Sachs is known for creating bold and effective measures to address complex issues from poverty and climate change to fiscal obligations, so his opinion matters. The US continues to promote, what President Eisenhower warned about in his 1961 Farewell address: "In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist." 

Is there a realistic end-game for Ukraine? The west keeps pouring in more advanced weaponry and money. The west is providing F-16 fighter jets from a variety of NATO countries to assist Ukraine. The US made decisions imbedded with folly in Afghanistan, funding and supplying the forces fighting the Soviets. Twenty years later those same arms were used to fight the US. Recently, the US all of a sudden found $300 million more to provide to Ukraine for military aid at the same time as its  own defense arms are in a $10 billion deficit. 

The only one who wins in a time of war are the arms suppliers, that Military Industrial Complex which seems to run US foreign policy. Negotiation may or may not work, but not negotiating continues the pattern of death and destruction. Catholic Outlook has this to say about Francis' controversial positions: "To put it simply: Pope Francis prioritizes nonviolence over war as a matter of principle. From the beginning of his papacy, Francis has been consistent about the inviolability and dignity of the human person, and this principle applies to his frequent calls for fighting around the world to cease. "In February article at Americamagazine.org (here) by a rabbi and a priest (no it is not a bad joke) there is this:

Pope Francis takes a consistent line regarding violent conflicts around the world—a line that is completely opposed to any war and treats any action that harms body and soul as terrorism. Thus, for example, in the Russia-Ukraine war, the pope refused to support Ukraine’s offensive actions and called for an immediate end to the war. The Ukrainians were enraged at the pope’s position, which refused to distinguish between pure evil and unfortunate necessity, just like the Israelis who were enraged at him for similar reasons.

Two years ago, March 18, 2022, in an address, Pope Francis was clear on war: "There is no such thing as a just war: they do not exist!" In the same address he also commented that: "A war is always — always! — the defeat of humanity, always." I have thought about the Pope's comment and the wide spread criticism he has received over the past few weeks. Negotiation at least opens possibilities. Those possibilities may not bear fruit, but Zelensky, according to Sachs, had reached agreement in 2022 with Putin, until Biden stuck his nose in. Sticking the American nose in to this situation is another example of American hubris which did not serve us well in Vietnam, Afghanistan or Iraq. If Zelensky had reached agreement before, is it not possible to once again open the door? The white flag does not mean surrender or capitulation, it means having the courage to engage in dialogue. 

On March 20, 2024, Pope Francis was criticized by Ukrainian Metropolitan Archbishop Borys Gudziak for his comments, which you can read here. Gudziak says Francis does not understand Putin. I am not sure if anyone understands the Russian president. What concerns Pope Francis is the destruction and loss of life. The Archbishop actually seems to inform Francis' position as the article states: "Gudziak mentioned the thousands of Ukrainian families who have lost someone in the war, or have family members who are missing in action, and are wondering if they are still alive when he states:  "Hundreds of thousands of families are living in this acute anxiety from day to day," said the archbishop." The reason the Pope desires negotiation is to put an end to the bloodshed in order to not increase the families facing the acute anxiety mentioned by the archbishop. 

Ukraine may have tried to negotiate, but they need to keep trying. Perhaps they will have some success so as to bring closure to those who have lost, those not sure what they may have lost, and to simply end the loss. Additional bloodshed means more loss and more loss means more anxiety. The current method is circular. If Russia shuns their overtures, then it is on Russia not Ukraine.

On St Patrick's Day I emailed Professor Sachs regarding Pope Francis' white flag comment. Professor Sachs responded to me with: "Yes, Pope Francis is wondrous, the world’s greatest moral leader." Just like prophets of old, current leaders of our time are often not appreciated until they are gone. Francis has the moral courage of his convictions to speak and take the grief. The courage of the white flag is important not just to Ukraine, but all conflicts. 

Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Chocolate Cookie Punishment

On Thursday, March 7 the wife made some cookies to take up to the Twin Cities area in a visit with our son and daughter-in-law. I saw her mixing dough and I asked if those were chocolate chips in the dough, and she said yes. I said she needed more, she said no. Thus began the chocolate chip cookie punishment.

After I asked if those were chocolate chips she had put in, she came back with the comment that went something like this: "That is all that were up here (in the cupboard), but there would be more if you did not eat them by the handful." I offered to go to the basement and get some more, but she would have none of that. In other words, she was skimping on the chocolate chips in the cookies to get back at me for eating a few. I plead innocent to eating by the handful, the palmful maybe, but not the handful. I can see her fuming as she reads that sentence. The cookies became a form of punishment as she reiterated her point about me eating the chocolate chips and then the dagger came: "Now you will have to pay for it."

Later in the day she asked if had a cookie, and I said yes (I did not tell her I had had four by that time) and she asked me how they were.  I had all I could do, because even I am not that stupid, to say "They could have used more chocolate chips" but instead I simply said they were good, which they were even though they were light on chocolate chips. I wonder how much better they could have been with a more appropriate amount of chocolate chips? I know how many chips get in one cookie could be a matter of how the dough is mixed, but there is also a relationship to how many chips are put in the dough. Of the first four cookies I ate, one of them only had three discernable chocolate chips. Does that even qualify as a chocolate chip cookie? I am not aware of any standards for the number of chocolate chips to be in a chocolate chip cookie so perhaps I need to come up with a standard. The wife would say I should have have eaten a few less palms full of chocolate chips. To be fair, other cookies I ate seemed to have a more respectable number of chocolate chips. Someone took the time to count the chocolate chips in Chips Ahoy cookies, and a sample of 36 cookies found they averaged just over 21. They must be small chocolate chips in the Chips Ahoy cookies.

If my wife gets through this blog post without blowing up at me, she will either say, "You are so funny!" or the more likely, "You can make your own cookies from now on!" 

Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Meet at the Pool

A few weeks ago it was suggested to me by a physical therapist that I should try to do some swimming over biking to see if it provides less distress for my feet. I was cautious about the suggestion because it has been grilled in me, by most (but not all) medical professionals to be in footwear at all times, and I would have to have bare feet walking on the pool deck. The following Friday after my PT appointment I found myself at the McFarland high school pool, to attend the Fun and Fitness class. I am not a good enough lap swimmer to take a lane for lap swimming, so I thought perhaps the three times a week Fun and Fitness would fit the bill. I also possessed some reticence about being with a bunch of Marie Barones. 

Going to this session made me think of the Everybody Love's Raymond Episode, where Marie talks about her water aerobics exercise class and the women in their swim caps, and then babbles on and on about the class. I have a hard time getting a vision of Marie Barone and her companions at the water aerobic class out of my mind. It is the type of visual that makes me appreciate a trip to the dentist. I wondered if this was the fate that was in store for me, that Fun and Fitness would be a take-off of Marie Barone's water aerobics class. My wife has a friend, a member of her book club, who is a year or so older than the wife, who goes to the class. The wife got the scoop from her, let me refer to her as J, about the entry, what happens, etc. and she passed that information on to me. I suppose the evening water exercise class may be more akin to Marie's class. 

View of pool bulkhead, white divider.
Fun and Fitness is on both sides of the bulkhead
about two lanes wide each side

Not that it would really matter, but J assured my wife that there were other men there. Well, there is another, perhaps two on the best days, although a few men use the lap swim at that time, that may show up, but usually just Mark who comes with his wife. Mark introduced me to Gail and Barb who both thought my name would be easy to remember. Gail's departed husband was named Tom and Barb's boyfriend (her word, not mine) is named Tom. I told them, I was a twin, and Thomas means twin, which they did not know, or perhaps care about. Barb then commented that her boyfriend fits his name as he is a doubting Thomas. "That is odd," I said, "because my wife says the same thing about me fitting my namesake." Gail was kinder to her former husband, not saying anything regarding this exchange. They should now remember me, but that is better than Theresa. 

They are supposed to remember Theresa, who I guess is a member of the group but whom I may or may not have met, by thinking of Mother Theresa. Yet they struggled with the woman's name because they could not recall how they worked the association for her name. They knew the associative woman was a saint, but what saint, they wondered. They were going through varied titles when one said "mother, maybe mother, "and I said "Mother Theresa" and that was what jogged their collective memory. Given their struggle, I have to think  they need a better mnemonic for Theresa. 

Of the lap swimmers, there is one middle aged man who appears as a regular. Mind you, I am the youngest in the F&F group, but this man wears a small and tight red Speedo swim suit over his near chiseled frame, no dad bod for this guy. A woman on my side (lane side of the bulkhead) saw him get out of the pool and one commented that the suit reminds them of the suit worn by females which exposes the female buttocks and wondered how it did not "ride up". Two others commented, something to the effect, that they did not care, it sure was nice to look at. As I continued my side stroke I looked back and could see them all nodding in agreement. This reminds me of another Everybody Loves Raymond episode. Women need to learn men have brains, too. 

Pool, looking toward bulkhead end. 
Eight lane pool for competition, 25 yards to bulkhead
It is also 25 yards across 

The new pool was built with an addition which started in 2018 and attending my first Fun and Fitness class was my first venture to this new pool. It is a nice pool, is over 25 meters long and is 25 yards wide, and a moveable bulkhead to make it 25 yards for high school competitions that run the length. Other than competitions, the lanes run the width of the pool so 25 yard long lanes, with lanes on both sides of the bulkhead. The competition lanes are wider than the lanes for typical lap swim jexercise, they fit 10 in for lap swim, compared to 8 for competition. Spectator seating for 500 is provided in a mezzanine. It is also uses less chlorine since an Ultra-Violet disinfection system is used. UV disinfection has been in used at the Madison Metropolitan Sewerage District for decades, and it was one of, if not the first, treatment plant to use UV disinfection as it was pioneered between the UW and MMSD. To make room for our Fun and Fitness class they move a lane marker on each side and the class is separated by the bulkhead. I chose the side toward the middle and that is where I go. The day of this post we had six on my side of the bulkhead and other side for most of the time had two.

When I first arrived that one Friday I had to give my name and tell them that I was not only a resident of the village, but also an older citizen which gets me yet another discount. For $2.00 a session, I can see ten to twelve Marie Barone's, and Mark. I do not wish to paint a visual. But, let me say, for a while I thought they had a dress code for the pool since all but one of the woman on my first day at F&F had a navy blue swim suit on. The one rebel female had a slightly less dark blue than the navy suit. No discernable patterns on the swim suits, just plain navy blue. I felt out of place in my hand-me-up red swimsuit. 

Pool, looking toward bulkhead

The thing is I am not so much Tom as I am Toni's husband. I knew who the pool director was from when my kids were at school, but had never met him. My wife's friend, the following Monday started to introduce me to a few of the Marie Barones in attendance. She then introduced me to Stu, J introduced me as Tom, and I said my first and last name, which did not seem to jell with Stu, until J said that my "wife Toni Hovel is the best seamstress" and went on that she has known Toni for forty years. It was then he recognized the last name and noted he had my kids. This is not the only time. When J introduces me to people, it is as Toni's husband. "You know Toni, she is the best seamstress in the village, this is her husband Tom. I have known Toni, and well Tom, too for forty years." J is a nice person and I don't correct her in that I have been in the village for just under 34 years. One person who is one of the instructors, used to live on our block before her divorce years ago. Our class, yes even though a newbie, having attended a few times now, I am part of, and welcomed to the group. The F&F class lasts 45 minutes, with the first 25 or so free swim, and last 20 or so minutes instruction of fitness in the water. Marie Barone would be happy to see us doing exercises with boards, pool noodles, but most often foam dumbbells.

If people at the pool don't know Toni Hovel as the best seamstress in town, they do recognize her through Facebook. She is on McFarland Community and McFarland Mom's and Dad's. The day of this post I decided to join the McFarland Community so they can appreciate my dullness. Years ago I tried to join McFarland Moms and Dads, but never got approved, so I thought screw them. I much rather enjoy my Czech culture group where I get to salivate over some really good looking food on occasion, or read about a Czech composer. My spouse obviously makes some impression in these Facebook groups, probably by some in-depth analysis of an issue important to the community, like whether or not recyclables should be put in clear plastic bags, before being placed in the recycling container. Or issues of lesser importance such as the April school referendum to increase property taxes for operating expenses. 

Fun and Fitness Class being taught by Stu, fall 2019
Source: McFarland Thistle

Sometimes at F&F Mark livens things up such that you would not want to be away. On Monday, 3/4, we did some exercises with reach up the foot and at the same time move an arm over the head, like you would see in synchronized swimming. Mark was, in a kidding sort of way, wanting us to get in synch. Let me just say the US Olympic Synchronized swim team has nothing to worry about. Then again maybe they do, because they did not even qualify for the London Olympics. Can the US team be displaced by the seasoned citizens of the McFarland F&F? I doubt it.  Try to imagine, if you will, 10 to twelve seasoned woman, and two men, evenly divided on each side of the bulkhead participating in synchronized swimming of kicking your leg up to water level and hand over the head, it was a site to behold. My geriatric body, even though I am the youngest, had all it could handle to get my leg kicked to the water level. All we missed was the music, my preference would be Handel's Water Music, albeit well shortened from its 60 minute span. What was Handel thinking writing a composition for water that takes 60 minutes? Attention spans in the the in the early 18th century must be better than ours today. Or, perhaps a more lively tune, like Dancing Queen. I doubt I would have been able to keep the beat, as keeping a beat has never been my strong suit. I wonder if my red suit stuck out compared to the navy blue preferred by the finer gender in the group. I doubt my suit color will get me kicked off the F&F team, as I tend to make the rest of the group look proficient in this pool art/exercise form.

Friday, 3/1 Stu, the pool director, who recognized me after recognizing the McFarland seamstress name, told me to pick up a sheet of paper, titled the McFarland Fun and Fitness Buzz book, it provides names, and contact information for the attendees. Of course, the buzz book was on printed paper the color of which all associate with water. It is however, a lighter blue than the dark uniform blue of the seasoned citizen females in the F&F class. Even though I attended before its publication date, I was not listed, perhaps they wanted to see if I would see it through, or would I be scared off. Stu said I would be in the next iteration.

When I got home, I pulled the list out of the cinch pack I use. I had biked that Friday, as it does not make sense to drive the 3,543 feet (I measured it using Google Maps) from home to the pool in decent weather, and set the sheet on the counter. As I went to hang up my suit and towel to dry in the basement, the seamstress-spouse looked at the buzz book and recognized most persons listed. Then, in a definite schadenfreude sort of way, had to pronounce that I am the youngest member of the F&F. I cannot help but think she was getting back at me from my first day when I could not help poke fun at the bunch of Marie Barone look-a-likes and their navy blue swim suit uniforms and the foam dumbbells. I am sure this is because she is one of their compatriots, part of the sisterhood sticking up for each other. And of course she recognized most every name, because they all seem to know her as a seamstress or by Facebook. And, yes, I have had women say "Oh, I recognize the name from Facebook!" I am known as Toni's husband. I had never thought she was so well known. 

When I left for the pool on Monday, 3/4 (it is generally held three times a week M-W-F) the seamstress said to have fun at swim lessons. Little did she know one of our exercises was holding on to the bulkhead and flutter kicking, just like swim lessons 60 or so years ago. We did this after we did our varied movements of moving foam dumbbells in the water in different directions. Holding both dumbbells down at my side makes my feet depart the pool floor, as if I am in a state of levitation. J was on the other side of the bulkhead, and spotted me while we were doing prescribed movements, and looking through one of the large rectangular gaps in the bulk head just above water level, she said "peek-a-boo" to me. 

I think it was the day Stu recognized me as Toni's husband, that I had kept an eye on an elderly lady doing the freestyle, and she kept pretty much near the lane marker so I took to the center to avoid Mark holding court and joking with his harem. I stopped to say hi, when I got hit in the back. The lady had veered well off her chosen path, and was probably wondering, after she hit me, if a walrus had made its way into the pool. She came to a slow stand to apologize, before moving back to the edge and continuing the next 10 to 15 feet to the edge. When I got back to the other end, Stu said, "Yeah, you have to watch her as she does not see well and she all of a sudden drifts." I thanked him for the advice, and said that is why I wear my glasses, so I can see. I have to give the woman credit for she was doing lap after lap, and here I am worn out after one 25 yard swim. I tend to avoid the crawl due to my left shoulder. Stu, when leading the fitness part one day, told the group that the breast stroke is one of the best strokes for persons with bad shoulders. 

On Monday's as I go to swim with the ladies (the wife calls them my girl friends) and Mark, my wife is home finishing cleaning the house. I never know when I will get introduced to another floating female as Toni's husband, or a person who will recognize her on Facebook. A popular woman is she. At some point I am sure to come across someone that does not recognize her. Actually, I have no problem being known as Toni's husband. That means I am under the radar, which is a good thing for a guy who infects others with dullness. After having a job where most people I dealt with wanted me in a dunk tank, and the collection would pay an amount sufficient to buy off the city of Fitchburg debt, I can live with some level of anonymity. The last session for this season is Wednesday, March 13, as then the pool will close for over two weeks for a deep clean. Maybe April will bring somebody new to meet at the pool. 

Note: Unless otherwise noted, photos by author, March 2024.









Wednesday, March 6, 2024

Marriage Records

Recently, I became aware of, and joined, a couple Facebook groups relative to Irish genealogy. The first was IGP County Clare Ireland Genealogy, and from a post on that site I found out about and joined the Sweeney Gedmatch and Genealogy. My great grandfather and mother, John Charles Sweeney and Bridget Cleary, both are said to be born in County Clare. From the Clare group I received a response from Kathleen Scheg, who is doing research on the Howard line. Mary Howard is a 2nd great grandmother who married Michael Cleary, and one of their children was the earlier named Bridget. She provided me a marriage date of Mary's parents, John Howard and Anne Maloney. When I found the 1830 marriage record I quickly noticed a major difference in detail between the Irish records and similar era records in Bohemia. 

This Irish marriage record is sparse. It provides the date: 10 Feb 1830 (well, actually it just provides a 10, you have to look earlier for the month and even earlier for the year, which is pretty standard in many of the records), and then reads: "John Howard of Kilmurry married Anne Maloney of Carnaun." That is if the interpretation of place is correct. Let me compare this to a Bohemian (Austro-Hungarian Empire) parish record separated by less than two weeks.

Howard & Maloney Sacramental Marriage Record, 10 Feb 1830
Source: National Library of Ireland

Martin Havel, a brother to my 2nd great grandfather (making this Martin my second great great uncle, and not to be confused with my great grandfather Martin Hovel) has a marriage record from eleven days earlier. This record, in the Netolice Parish Register, Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, provides much more detail and is interpreted as follows: "Married 25 January 1830  Groom: Dolni Chrastany No 18, 30 years of age//Catholic//previously unmarried Martin Havel, farmer, son of Franz Havel, farmer in Dolni Chrastany No 18 and Theresia Nee Jiral in Dolni Chrastany No 18. Bride: Poderiste No 13, 28 yrs of age//Catholic//widowed Maria daughter of Mathias Vavra, farmer from Dvory and Maria nee (not stated) in Vcelna pod Boubinem No 17 in Vimperk dominion. Without dispensation (ie not required)" It also provided the witnesses to the marriage and officiant, but I did not have that information translated. This record provides both parent names, their occupation, states the bride is a widow, provides ages of bride and groom, gives the father's name of both, the mother's name of one, and Martin's occupation. With the village, name, and age, they are easier to find in baptismal and other records. Further, knowing that each father was a farmer and where they lived means I can find them in the land register. If a cottager, or a landless holder, they may not be in the land register. The farmers are also likely to be in the list of peasants--the Seignorial Register. Most records of this era provide the wife's mother's surname, but in this case, perhaps no one could recall the surname, after all she was a widow. The 1796 marriage in Netolice of Martin's dad and mother (my third great grandparents, Frantisek and Teresa) provides the same information. It also notes that Frantisek was from the Krumlov domain (whereas the marriage took place in the Netolice domain). 

2nd from bottom, Sacramental Marriage Record of 
Martin Hovel & Maria Vavra, 25 Jan 1830
Source: Trebon Archives

The Marriage record of Frantisek's parents, Mathias and Maria does not provide as much detail as the above, but still provides valuable information on where each is from and the name of the father, and the domain. 

2nd entry from bottom, Sacramental Marriage Record of
Frantisek Havel and Teresia Jiral, 25 Oct 1796
Source: Trebon Archives

Even if the Irish records went back further in time, there is difficulty not knowing at least the father's given name. Howard is a rather common surname in that area of Ireland, and hence finding the father would be difficult when parents names are not provided. One would need to find John Howard's baptismal record and then go from there. Yet, in that case you need to make sure you have the correct John Howard. As an example, in my Duscheck line I have a birth record that lists a father Jiri to my ancestor, but in looking for likely candidates through baptismal records, I find two Jiri Duscheck's in the same village born about 6 months apart, meaning I really don't know which Jiri continues the line and which one does not. That part of Bohemia does not, at least currently, have Seignorial or land records available which may help sort out the conundrum. 

Sacramental Marriage Record of Bartholomej Penicka and
Dorothea Matousek, 3 Feb 1654
Source: Trebon Archives

The oldest marriage records for my ancestors that I have are for two 8th great grandparents, both married on the same day, 3 Feb 1654, and recorded in the same parish book of Prachatice, St James the Greater Church. (The two were part of six marriages recorded in the Prachatice register for that Tuesday.) These records provide date, village, officiant, and couple. Each record provides the name of the father of the bride, such as "Dorota, daughter of Bartolomej MatouÅ¡ek of Zdenice." One record provides the name of the father of the groom, "Jiri son of Jan Konzal of Zernovice." Even in 1654 the Bohemian records provide more information than that in the 1830 Irish record. Of course, I suppose the purpose of a marriage, or baptismal record is to show the person was married or baptized, but when you have common surnames, and first names, such as John Howard, how would one know what John Howard was actually married or baptized? 

What I do know is that the religious records in Bohemia evolved and the church records were not only sacramental, but also served for a time as the official civil records. Even non-Catholic records were kept in the Catholic Church until1781. There was no duplication as we have today with both civil and sacramental marriage records. As we saw, however, from at least 1796 on, the Bohemian records contain a good level of detail for the genealogist. Research in Bohemia also benefits by other documents.

Second shown entry, Marriage of Jirik Konzal and
Marketa Matousek, 3 Feb 1654
Source: Trebon Archives

As my Bohemian ancestors were peasants, the domains kept other records which are very helpful. Two of importance are the Seignorial Registers, which began as an inventory of orphans, but later changed to almost an annual census. They often have ages, and sometimes the ages are right on and other times well off. Notes, of marriage, or change of holding or domain may also exist. A skilled translator is required for all records to assure you get the most out. Too often, I misread a name, or village which sent me on a wild goose chase. The Seignorial Registers can provide hints to birth and marriage records. Land Registers also provide clues to deaths via transfer of a holding, marriages, and heirs. My Hovel and Kamen (mother of my paternal grandmother) have their lines in southwest Bohemia, the area covered by the Trebon Archives. The Seignorial and Land Registers go back further in time than the Parish records. Parish record availability varies. In Lhenice (which covers the Havel ancestral village), parish records go back to 1694, whereas, in Prachatice the baptismal records go back to 1632, marriage to 1633, and death to 1651. The Lhenice church was around much longer than to 1694, so the records must have been destroyed or gone missing. Netolice records go back to 1654, and old handwritten indexes exist back to 1700. Older records are spotty and months may be missing. 

However, it was an Urbaria record, thanks to my translator, which records payments and taxes owed to the estate by the serf, that allowed my Hovel line to be taken back to my 10th great grandfather in Ratiborova Lhota,  Jan Bollfa  who was in the village by at least 1585 (as that is the record in which we find him). We know this is the person as when combined with information going back to 1603 from a few land register records, a chain of custody so to speak for the holding from Frantisek's father Mathias to Jan Bolffa. The key was when Bartos, son of Jan Bolffa, sold the holding to his brother Havel, who was the same Havel who is in my lineage. We know this from following sales back in time in the land registers. Having information on relationships of buyer to seller, as often recorded in the Krumlov domain, is greatly beneficial in historical family research. A good translator comes in handy in reading and translating the records given the varied anachronistic words and phrases. 

Rudy and Ida Hovel Sacramental Marriage Record
4 Feb 1913
Source: St Mary's Parish, Festina, IA

I do not have the sacramental marriage record of my Hovel great grandparents, Martin Hovel and Amelia Duscheck. However, I do have the civil marriage record for the state of Wisconsin and that record gets detailed down to the time of the ceremony (9:00 am). In order here is what is required on that civil marriage record: 1. date of registration, 2. The color, 3. full name of husband, 4. full name of wife prior to marriage, 5. occupation of said husband, 6. residence of said husband, 7. birthplace of said husband, 8. the place, town, township, and county where the ceremony was performed, 9. the time the marriage was contracted, 10. By what ceremony it was contracted, 11. name of the person performing the ceremony, 12. residence of person performing ceremony, 13. names of witnesses, 14. date of certificate of marriage; 15. Name of the father of said husband, 16. name of the mother of said husband, 17. name of the father of said wife, 18. name of the mother of said wife. A rather involved list that can certainly assist with genealogical research. 

Civil Marriage Record of Rudy and Ida Hovel
Dane County, WI 4 Feb 1913
Source: State of WI Historical Society Library

Let me turn to my paternal grandparents marriage record from 1913. The sacramental marriage record, in Latin, is pretty basic, giving names of the couple, the witnesses and officiant along with date. No idea of the parents of either or even where they were from, so not dissimilar from the Irish record. Recorded in the parish book, we know the parish in which they were married, St Mary's in Festina, Iowa. The civil record is much more detailed, giving name of person who provided the information, name of the couple, race, age, where each was born, current city, parents name (mother maiden name) and occupation. It provides the officiant, location and the witnesses along with date of marriage (4 Feb 1913) and date recorded (6 Feb 1913). Now, that is much more helpful. 

Civil Marriage Record of Rudy and Ida Hovel
Source: Winneshiek Co records, via Family Search
Fifth entry, each entry consists of two rows

The British occupiers of Ireland, it appears, did not keep civil records of births and marriages until 1865 (at least according to references provided at the Co Clare Facebook page). The Irish population to the British, as shown by their response to the Potato famine was one of indifference, and no regard for a population of papists. One can certainly see the penchant of the German speaking Austro-Hungarians, occupiers of Bohemia, for documentation. The Teutonic nature of the language carried over to the cultural forming a group of people in favor of paperwork for all not just the Brits select few. For Kilrush, the parish of the Howards, the baptismal records are  available for free at National Library only go back to 1827. I have been told that some paid sources have the records going back further. However, if prior records are as scant I have to wonder if a subscription to the service would be worth the cost. Hey, but I have to give the Irish some credit, at least we know that the John Howard and Anne Maloney marriage was the 79th entry in the book. 









Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Reading

A few months ago, the Fab Four, the name of my wife's book club, read Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, a work by a British author. My wife laughed a good amount when reading that work of fiction. I decided to put a library hold on that work. I tend to read more non-fiction than fiction, but will intersperse an occasional work of fiction. My wife commented that I need to read more fiction. Since, 2019 I have kept a log of the books I read, by title, author, and if it is fiction or non-fiction. I decided to tally up my findings, and I was a bit surprised at the results.

My wife has been encouraging me to read more fiction. She once said she likes it when I laugh while I read. I guess fiction can provide more opportunity for laughter than my choices in non-fiction. The book I read right before taking on Eleanor, was Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fate of Human Societies, by polymath Jared Diamond. This 470 page work was really quite interesting, but does not produce humor. The book essentially traces the geographic underpinnings to why some societies advanced (in Western sense) through technology and advancements in agriculture and others did not. Although trained in physiology, Diamond has also moved into evolutionary biology and geography. This book provides geographic and evolutionary biological reasoning to the fate of human societies. I am not sure that the geographic determinism model is as strong as he says, but he provides good reasoning. This book is in somewhat of a contrast to other books which base advancement more on an economic model. I think the two are tied together. Economies became more specialized and advanced due to agriculture and Diamond's reasoning on the geographic underpinnings of agriculture make a great deal of sense.

Eleanor cover

Eleanor, as a work of fiction was quite funny, even given the rather despondent nature of some of the occurrences in the work. Part is due to the formal language Eleanor uses, and her lack of  a "filter" or knowledge of appropriateness in social settings. In that measure, I am somewhat like Eleanor, but not near as bad. It only took three days or so to read Eleanor;  it was actually hard to put down.

Since, reading Eleanor, the wife and her book club, which she organized and leads, has read two works of fiction dealing with WWII, first was All the Light we Cannot See, and second The Nightingale. She says both are good books, but the latter was much better. I don't recall those fiction works, producing much laughter from her. She really likes reading historical fiction and right now  she is reading a book about female code breakers in London during WWII. I suggested that since she enjoys reading historical fiction about WWII, perhaps she should read some of the many works of non-fiction on WWII. Why read fiction when can get a true in-depth analysis of what occurred?  She could begin with an easy work such as The Longest Winter, about the Battle of the Bulge before working her way to more involved works, such as the Rick Atkinson trilogy on WWII. It is not like I am suggesting she read Clausewitz's tome. I have a number of books she can read that are the real deal. She, not so politely, declined my offer. She is so good at leading her book club I have suggested she run for Village Board or the School Board, her facial expression was more telling than the words she used. Her father was on his community's town board for many years. Red hair in her family is said to skip a generation, her maternal grandmother had it, but not her mom or any of her mom's siblings. Maybe the political gene skips a couple generations. Will Howie be the next politician in the Goff line?

Guns Germs and Steel cover

The statistics I just worked up from my log of 2019 to 2023 found that I read 197 books, with 30 of them, or 15.23% being fiction, the rest all non-fiction. A deeper dive yielded that I read the most books in 2019 when the wife and I were in a book club together, with the book club books being fiction. That was a book a month. That year I read 44 total books, with13 of them fiction. My highest year of reading was 2020 with 48 books, but only five fiction. My reading dropped, to 41 in 2021, with six fiction, only 33 in 2022 with 4 fiction, and 31 in 2023 with 2 fiction (or just .06% of my books read in 2023 were fiction). The pattern shows that perhaps fiction books are generally a faster read. I know in 2022 two of my books were in the Shelby Foote trilogy on the Civil War (the third in 2023), each a rather long book, the last almost 1100 pages. There were other long works in 2023, such as Masters and Commanders. War books do not produce much laughter. 

My current book, which was my wife's brothers, is a work of non-fiction but is funny, called Enslaved by Ducks. Some works of non-fiction can be funny. The wife reads mostly fiction, but does also read non-fiction, she recently finished a book about reducing waste. I wonder what percent of books she reads are non-fiction? She also reads many more books a year than I do. Probably because, as I spend time writing a blog post, she is reading. 








Wednesday, February 21, 2024

House Heating and Cooling

A year or two ago the wife signed our household up for a program (Smart Hours) through Alliant Energy, our electric and natural gas provider, that allows them to control our cooling and heating during peak demand periods. This is a story of that heat and cooling control.

First off, I am familiar with peak control of electricity, but seldom hear of peak control of heating (natural gas). Electric use is more peak demand problematic than is heating, due to air conditioning use, and the hottest part of the day being the time people return home from work, begin cooking, and doing laundry and other chores. Utilities employ costly natural gas powered turbines and fuel oil generators to meet peak electric demand. Many have a program with private businesses. I am familiar where MGE will provide back up generators to the business on the condition that they can be used by MGE for peak power generation to meet load demand. This program generated (pun intended) a great deal of concern among neighbors of a large data server complex that had several generators. Each addition of servers posed the most difficult of issues of expansion for the data center and the most difficult to manage, particularly sound management. People realized that if the power was out it would be a unique circumstance, but they did not like the idea of large, noisy generators, the size of a semi trailer, running on a summer afternoon. I felt for the homeowners who had no idea such a facility would be placed near their home, but was due to the large influence businesses have on city decision making under the guise of economic development. It is not like they produce a great number of high paying quality jobs, as there are few workers at data centers, which reduces traffic load in the area.

Really, a normal temp of 70 for cooling?

Last week, on Thursday, 15 Feb 2024 we received notification that due the coming cold weather they would control our heat from 6 am to 8am. on Friday, 16 Feb. Alliant indicated they would first heat the house up to a normal temp before setting the thermostat to a lower temp than our normal 67 degrees. I thought they must be mistaken as the outside temps were anticipated to only get down to about 24 degrees, and wondered if they meant Saturday morning when it is projected to be 10 degrees. This made me wonder what kink was occurring in natural gas supply. 

When that large data farm was going in I suggested that they do a cogeneration type of facility, to transfer their excess heat to help heat adjoining buildings. The University of Notre Dame has its own data facility which heat is used for greenhouses owned by the city of South Bend, IN. It is doable, and the technology is readily available (heat tunnels like the UW Campus has had for a century or more). However, the representative of the owner said it would be a tier 4 secure data center, which would not allow the heat transfer. As is typical of business decisions, it turned out not to be a tier 4, but a lower tier 3 data center which has less security measures, and under which they could have done heat transfer. I think they simply did not wish to do it, and came up with such an excuse. Bait and switch tactic. Such co-use of a heat producing source could have benefited adjoining buildings, and reduced both electric, natural gas, and water use. Data centers are cooled 365 days a year, all day long, every day of the week. The large cooling equipment uses a great deal of water, which is not appreciated by the utility, but was appreciated by the economic development coordinator, and one need not guess who won out. 

A homeowner receives notification of an upcoming event

MGE one time owned 80 acres off of Seminole Highway in Fitchburg that was to be used as a fly ash dump. That never materialized, but then they wanted to put some large combustion turbines in, and right across Seminole Highway is the high-end subdivision Seminole Forest. They were in an uproar and MGE eventually pulled the request. I often wondered how many of the customers at that time had the device that allowed the utility to turn off their air conditioning unit as a demand reduction method? We had one in McFarland. A rate payer interested in conservation and reducing peak load would certainly have had that device.

It came to pass that Friday morning arrived and we got out of bed about 6:15 am, Our heat is set down at night to 64, and is programed to be at 67 at 6:45 am. Friday morning the temp stayed at 64, which made us wonder if they ever heated it up more, as they did not recognize that we set our heat back a few degrees at night, which the utility companies recommend, but many furnace manufacturers do not. The heat stayed at that temp until about 7:30 or 7:45 when it kicked in and started to warm up to our standard day time temp of 67.

We have had our thermostat turned up in the summer, but they cooled down the house before hand. This makes me wonder if it saves much electricity (or natural gas) on the customer end?  It reduces peak load for the utility, but does a homeowner see a greater energy expense by the company cooling the house down or heating the house up, and get it back to normal set temperature, or is more energy used to accommodate the temperature fluctuation? Our house temp with the AC is about 76 degrees. The problem is excessive load can cause issues with furnaces and air conditioners. We had an issue many years ago with our furnace when we turned the heat in the house down to about 60. The technician indicated that it is best not to turn it down that far, as it placed too much load on the furnace, to heat up the house at the same time as it is combating heat loss in extreme cold. At times it would have to turn itself off before it would start up again. I suspect the same situation happens with air conditioners. The entity that benefits is the utility by reduction of load. In reducing load for the energy provider are we increasing our costs? 

One week last year we went camping and the forecast was for temps in 90's to near 100. We got to our campsite in northeast WI, and had settled in. I bought a small load of firewood nearby because temps were supposed to be hot in that area of the state too. The fires would be limited for evening cooking and perhaps night enjoyment. The next day I went and bought a big supply as the temps at our location struggled to get to 60 degrees, while 80 miles away it was in upper 80's. It was that way for our whole four night camping trip. We went through all the firewood I had purchased a few miles from the campground. Some days the fire was going most of the time we were awake. It all goes to show how variable the weather is.

Alliant's Qualifications for Smart Hours

I had never expected to get that email from Alliant that they would be controlling our heat for a couple hours, particularly since it never occurred when we had that week of very cold weather in January. The Smart Hours program may benefit the utility more than the customer even though it is sold by the utility and conservation organizations as a cost saving measure to the homeowner. Although saving a utility the expense of large generators helps the rate payer, but its peak production demand measures are borne by all ratepayers, whereas this program perhaps only enrollees of the Smart Hours program bear a burden. The cooling and heating turn down do not bother me, and it makes me think I am doing my part, but I do wonder if it costs us extra. 


Note: Images from Alliant Energy website.













Wednesday, February 14, 2024

The Exorcist

The Exorcist was released in US Theaters on 29 Dec 1973. Whether or not it was released "In theaters everywhere!" I do not know. Much of the theater viewing occurred in 1974, or fifty years ago. The movie is based on a real life occurrence of an exorcism performed by two Jesuit priests near St Louis, MO. Recently, I came across a letter my mother had received from her brother Joe Sweeney dated 25 Feb 1974. I know my parents saw the movie, The Exorcist, based on the book of the same title. My uncle Joe, had been a Jesuit priest, but left the priesthood, and for a time he was employed in Texas with Amoco. This provides the connection to the real exorcism and this is that story.

Christmas 1972, Uncle Joe was in Kansas City for Christmas with friends from Amoco. Attending the same party was Fr Thomas Bowdern, a Jesuit priest whose brother, William Bowdern, was the lead exorcist in the Missouri case. The book by William Peter Blatty was first released in 1971;  I am not sure if Uncle Joe had read the book at the time of that letter, although he knew of the stor y, probably from the Jesuits and his education at Campion High School, Loyola University, and at seminary in West Baden, IN. Fr Wm Bowdern was asked to consult on the movie, but was forbidden by the Bishop. Fr Wm Bowdern was the rector at Campion, a private Jesuit run school in Prairie du Chien, WI, from 1937-1942, starting two years after my dad graduated from Campion in 1935. The real exorcism was of a boy 13 years of age, now revealed to be Ronald Edwin Hunkeler. At times he was referred to as Roland Doe. Ronald was baptized in the Lutheran faith. His mother was Lutheran, but his father was baptized Catholic, but a non-practicing as were his parents. A great deal of information is in a transcription of a diary kept by Fr Bishop of St Louis. Fr Bishop, consulted with the family after being asked by a cousin of the boy and that is how the whole thing started in St Louis. You can find a copy of the diary here.
Fr William Bowdern, SJ

Fr Wm Bowdern was assisted in the exorcism by Fr Walter Halloran. Halloran graduated from Campion four years after my dad, but also taught at Campion and Marquette University. Fr Mike Montague, SJ, who taught my Uncle Joe at West Baden Seminary in 1957, was with Walter Halloran at St Louis University at the time of the exorcism. Fr Montague had told my Uncle Joe, at a party years before the 1974 letter, that Fr Walt Halloran used to drive Fr Bowdern to a "small home in the country where the boy was kept." Fr Montague had told my uncle that "Walt would show up for breakfast sometimes all scratched up!" Uncle Joe goes on to say that "Evidently he was somewhat of an 'assistant' to the exorcising priest."  Fr Halloran's brother was a classmate at Campion with my Uncle Joe. Who knew that a small school in a small rural outpost in Wisconsin had such a deep connection to perhaps the most famous exorcism in the United States, if not the world.

The boy originally played with a Ouji board to contact a recently deceased aunt who was involved in the occult, and with spiritualists. The tale starts in January 1949. Normal during the day, things took a bad turn for the boy at night. Doctors, psychiatrists and other medical professionals were consulted, but to no avail. Two Lutheran ministers took on the task, along with a spiritualist, but they too struck out The ministers, in a rare bit of ecumenism, recommended a Catholic priest. Fr Hughes of Maryland, did not see the boy, but advised holy water, and prayers. The mother sprinkled holy water in the room and placed the jar on a shelf. Directly after placement on the shelf, she reported an unknown force threw the jar across the room, breaking it and spilling the holy water.

Walter Halloran
1939 Campion Photo

With little luck in Maryland, the family moved the boy to St Louis where the boy's mother was from and had relatives. It would be too lengthy and disturbing to report all manifestations witnessed, but let me review a few, many of which made the movie, some which did not. Scratches on the boy, bed moved violently, guttural sounds and a trance like state occupied the boy, X scratched on his chest, a pitchfork emblem emblazed on his thigh which moved to ankle. Urinating on the bed and in the room. In March 1949 the family was deciding whether or not to take the boy to St Louis, they found St Louis scratched on the boy, and later Saturday, as the day to take him. Why they obeyed such commands is another matter. A cousin of the boy inquired of his teacher, Fr Bishop, who viewed and did consultations with others, leading to the involvement of Mr. Halloran (he was still in formation and not yet ordained) and Father Bowdern. Bishop also assisted and kept the diary linked above. 

My uncle writes to my mother that "it was all hush-hush, and no one in the SJ community knew what was going on. Evidently, Fr Bowdern and "Mr" Halloran were sworn to secrecy ('sworn' at least in the sense of professional ethics prevented any mention of the case.)" My uncle notes that as the news articles say the exorcism was a  success. He goes on to say the "man today is happily married and has no memory of it all."  Ronald would go on to be an engineer with NASA, his name as the one involved only revealed after his death in 2020.

Halloran grave marker, Cavalry Cemetery
 Milwaukee, WI

Fathers Bishop and Bowdern and Mr  Halloran first met and said prayers on 7 Mar. and then again daily from 9 March to 15 March. For the intervention on 16 March, Bowdern had received permission for the Rite of Exorcism to be performed. Ronald decided to become a Catholic and on 23 March began instruction for entering the Church. On Friday, Apr 1, he was baptized, but the devil fought the baptism, which took a long time to complete. Prayers of exorcism continued after the baptism.  Due to the toll on the family it was decided to go back, by train, to Washington DC area. The entourage, including Fr Bowdern and another priest, left on Monday, 4 April, but by 7 Apr they had to return to St Louis due to doctors not wishing his placement in a medical institution run by the Daughters of Charity. Bowdern made arrangements at the Alexian Brothers Hospital in St Louis. Exorcisms continued daily at the hospital until Easter Monday, 18 Apr, when prayers, placement of holy relics and medals on the boy, against the desires of the demon, started to work. Eventually that night, the demon decided to depart the boy. According to the Bishop diary, the most extraordinary event occurred at 10:45 pm that night with the following: "In clear, commanding tones, and with dignity, a voice broke into the prayers. The following is an accurate quotation: 'Satan! Satan! I am Saint Michael, and I command you, Satan, and the other evil spirits to leave the body in the name of Dominus, immediately. -- Now! NOW! N O W!'"  A very violent seven to eight minute encounter occurred and then as accounted: "R, in a tome of complete relief said, 'He’s gone!'"

R, or Ronald, then described the battle that occurred between Michael the Archangel and Satan. Satan called in reinforcements, but the power of St Michael overwhelmed them all. (See p 28 of the above linked diary.)

My uncle, in concluding the section of the letter regarding The Exorcist, would state: "It is a movie of doubtful value, of strong and disturbing imagery ...not for the young and immature. You'd be out of your cotton pickin' head if you let Greg or Tom see it." We were 16 at the time, and certainly my twin brother was of a high level of maturity to have watched the movie, but we were almost a year shy of our 17th birthday for an R rated movie. I suppose it represented a dilemma for our parents as to allow Greg but not Tom to watch the movie. I have seen it a couple times, all on DVD. Uncle Joe also included a copy of an article written by Fr O'Malley, SJ, who played father Dyer in the movie, and was a consultant on the film. 

Ronald, in later life, had told a person he made it all up, he was simply a bad boy. I wonder why he all of a sudden became a good boy that Easter Monday? I don't think bad behavior changes that quickly. The events have several witnesses, many independent from the others, such as parents, aunts and uncles, Lutheran ministers and later Catholic priests. While Fr Hughes had been consulted by the Lutheran ministers in Maryland, he never saw the boy. Actual involvement of Catholic priests with the boy only came upon the family move to the St Louis area to the home of an uncle and aunt. His comment is an easy one to avoid getting involved.

Is not getting involved part of the devil's plan? I participated in five zoom sessions over the past five weeks on Laudate Deum (the Pope's Apostolic Exhortation on climate change), arranged by the Catholic Multi-cultural Center in Madison. It centered on the effects of climate change in various parts of the world, with speakers from Central America, Africa, and the US and the effects and efforts being used to combat climate change. On Monday, 2/12, we had a fifth session which allowed more discussion by the group on the document. During that group discussion, one person relayed the following story: The devil asked three little devils how they would convince people to have their soul destroyed. The first one said to tell people there is no heaven, which the devil dismissed as people have hope; the second said tell people there is no hell, which was dismissed as it would not long last; the third said to whisper to people there is no hurry. Getting over the reticence of climate change in much of the population requires a change of heart. And, perhaps simply saying he was a bad boy was Ronald's way of explaining what occurred, after all, he may have had no memory of it at all.

Evil is all around us today, although it has been common in history. The wars in Ukraine and Gaza are just two of varied ongoing conflicts. There are conflicts in Nigeria, Indonesia, India, and the Philippines, just to mention a few. The boy in Maryland may have or have not been possessed by the devil 75 years ago. If he did not it must have been quite an elaborate ruse given the observations provided by a variety of observers. Today there are many procedures, as well there should be, for an exorcism to take place, at least in the Catholic Church. Exorcisms are apparently practiced in some eastern religions, such as Buddhism. It may be human way of dealing with bad events. I am not sure what really happened with Ronald 75 years ago, but an exorcism was performed, and Jesuit Fr William Bowdern was the exorcist.