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Personal Accounts

July 15, 2021

Local Polish community weathered COVID-19 with help from St. Thomas Becket Catholic Church

By Liz Mika, Office Manager

Much of Mount Prospect’s Polish community gathers for worship and fellowship at the St. Thomas Becket Catholic Church in the northeastern corner of the Village.

The word came from the Archdiocese to close all churches due to COVID-19 on Friday, March 13, 2020. The last Mass celebrated that day was at 7 p.m. in Polish. This was a huge shock, especially to the faithful of Polish descent. They remember World War II, Communism and other persecutions to our faith, but the church had never before fully closed. 

We announced the sad news via our email blasts, Facebook, parish website, signs on the door and the media was blasting this, as well. Yet, there were many people who still stopped by and called to ask if it was really true. Our current pastor, Fr. Chris Kulig, started livestreams of Masses via our Facebook: on Saturday in English and on Sunday in Polish. Easter was only four weeks into the pandemic closure. The inability to be at church as a community during the three most Holy Days in our faith was especially tough on parishioners. 

When parishes first reopened on June 6, 2020, under strict Covid-19 guidelines, St. Thomas Becket was one of the first parishes in the Diocese to receive needed certification to safely reopen with limited capacity and with trained volunteers. Marks in church were set to show where parishioners could sit and stand. Since that first Sunday, reservations were taken to attend Mass to ensure everyone’s safety and limit attendance. Our volunteers wore construction vests when checking people in at the door. They sprayed guest’s hands with sanitizer, sat parishioners at least six feet apart, followed strict guidelines for receiving Holy Communion and enforced face masks. 

Each week, when the reservation link was opened, there was an incredible rush to register, especially for the Polish Masses. Our pre-pandemic attendance was 800+ per Mass, and the limit went down to 50, and then to 150! Christmas of 2020 was also interesting, as a very limited number of parishioners were allowed in the church under a strict reservation and safety system. 

Easter of 2021 was still under limited capacity of worshippers in the church. Holy Saturday is extremely big in the Polish tradition with the blessing of food baskets. We realized that the need would be great and to accommodate all, we held the blessing on the parking lot for over three hours straight! The cars just kept coming. We were told that the streets in the neighborhood were grid-locked with traffic. Our estimate is that we had over 1,000 cars, plus probably over 2,000 people on foot who stopped by to have their baskets and families blessed. 

To accommodate the rising needs for live Mass streams, in spring of 2021, St. Thomas Becket installed a state-of-the-art projection system in our overflow hall space and at the same time a connection to our Facebook Mass transmission. Before then, Fr. Chris used his cell phone to transmit Masses. 

With complete opening on June 11, 2021, the church is once again full to the brim. 

As a parish, we continued to collect food and share it with the Catholic Charities Food Pantry in Des Plaines and the St. Alphonsus Liguori Food Pantry in Prospect Heights. We continued to teach religious education to our youngsters via Zoom sessions. 

As for the staff, all but a few worked from home. Only the office manager and Fr. Kulig were always in to follow the frequent updates from the state and the Archdiocese. We did our very best to keep parishioners updated and current on all events. Mass at our parish was said and streamed every day, be it only with Fr. Kulig present when the pandemic began. 

This has been a tremendous trial for us all, but we are very happy to see most parishioners return to church, with smiling faces not hidden under masks. 

We are looking forward to resuming our regular activities, fundraisers and just being together as a family — a community of faith.

St. Thomas Becket parish was founded in the fall of 1969, more than 50 years ago. The first Sunday Masses were said on September 28, 1969, in the gymnasium of Maryville Academy. During the following week, arrangements were made with the local public school district to use Indian Grove Elementary School, which is directly across from where the parish now stands, for services. 

So, starting on October 5, 1969, and for more than nine years thereafter, Indian Grove was the “church” for weekend and some Holy Day Masses. Folding chairs, a portable podium and a collapsible altar were stored in the garage of a parishioner who lived next to the school. Each week, the church would be set up on Saturday afternoon and taken down on Sunday afternoon. During the first month, 247 families registered as members of the parish. 

With time, the neighborhood’s demographics changed. The English-speaking families had grown children who have moved away from home, and more Polish immigrants were moving to Mount Prospect and the surrounding suburbs. There was no Mass offered in Polish close by, so a group of parishioners approached then-pastor Fr. John Roller to ask if they could start one at St. Thomas Becket. The first Polish-language Mass was celebrated on December 1, 1996, with a couple hundred in that first Polish congregation. The present number is pushing the 1,000 mark!

Since 2004, the assigned pastors to this parish have been required to be fluent in Polish to accommodate the needs of the parish community. 

In August of 2019, renovations to the church were completed to adapt to growing membership, especially the Polish-speaking community. The long-standing circular church model  was restored to St. Thomas Becker’s original all-facing the altar and a new tile floor and new pews were installed. This allows for 245 more seats. Two new projection screens were also added. This proved to be especially helpful during the pandemic when we could not have any worship aides in the pews. 

Presently, there are two Polish Masses held each Sunday. Many celebrations, sacraments and liturgies are also celebrated in Polish.

Filed Under: Personal Accounts

June 30, 2021

St. Paul – Apart but Not Alone

When the Pandemic closed everything down on a Friday in March of 2020, the leadership team at St. Paul Lutheran Church sprang into immediate action. Just two days later, the church broadcast its first on-line service via Facebook Live. 

As the Pandemic wore on, the technology was upgraded from simply using an iPad to ‘point and shoot’ to volunteer congregational members who are professional videographers. 

Services were filled with all of the things people loved, sometimes including music ensembles brought together via Zoom.

No matter the tech being used, congregational members would greet each other in the comment section each week, allowing for a sense of fellowship even though they couldn’t gather in person. Yard signs were given out to show unity and to remind people that although they might be separated physically, as part of the congregation, they are never truly alone. 

Within a week of the shut down, the church started sending out nightly devotions to its members. These were led by pastors, DCE, music leaders, the school principal and later, teachers and students. Some were videos and some were written, but all provided Bible-based words of encouragement for the difficult and unprecedented time.

On-line Sunday School and VBS (Volunteers packed hundreds of bags with supplies for pick up.) were offered, as well as Parking Lot Communion and individual, in-person communion scheduled in ten minute slots on an evening and weekday morning. 

The sixth graders’ First Communion service was held outside on a gorgeous evening.

In November of 2020, after almost a year as Interim, leading the congregation through unprecedented change in the church and the world, Pastor Bo Graham was officially installed as Senior Pastor of St. Paul Lutheran Church. (He had previously served as Associate Pastor.)

The church’s Bethlehem Walk took on a new look for Christmas in 2020 with a drive-by Nativity. And the 2021 Easter Egg Hunt took to the road, visiting neighborhood houses of congregational members in ‘trick-or-treat’ style to deliver plastic eggs filled with goodies using a contactless ladder chute.

One of St. Paul’s most noteworthy community ministries, Breakfast with Baby, took on a new format as well. The ministry, which Pastor Bo received the Shining Star Open Arms Award for in 2019, provides diapers, clothing, fellowship, Bible study, and breakfast for those in need. Prior to the Pandemic, families were welcomed into the church for breakfast, Bible study, and children’s activities the second Saturday of each month. When the Pandemic struck, the volunteers who oversee this ministry quickly adapted the procedures. Through all seasons and weather conditions, they continued to pass out needed items and groceries in a well-organized, drive-through system, while fostering a sense of connection and community with those who visited. The ministry continues to thrive.

 Eventually things started to slowly open up again, and Pastor Bo and Vicar Valencia put together a fun video to show people what to expect when they returned to church in person: entrances and exits, temperature checks, masks, sanitizing, limited numbers, and assigned pews.


Through everything the Pandemic brought, the leadership and congregation of St. Paul Lutheran Church stood strong together: Apart but Not Alone.

Filed Under: Personal Accounts

June 28, 2021

Hanul Family Alliance Powered through COVID

Serving Korean immigrants . . . and others

The Hanul Family Alliance has been a part of the Mount Prospect community since 1999. Located at 1166 S. Elmhurst Rd., it serves the needs of the immigrant – primarily Korean – population through congregate dining and home-delivered meals for those over 60, public benefits application assistance, assistance in applying for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, home care services for those over 60, citizenship applications, mental health counseling, English as a Second Language (ESL) classes and other cultural and educational programs.

Hanul (which means “one large family” in Korean) Family Alliance was founded in Chicago’s Albany Park neighborhood in 1987 as a Korean American Senior Center to meet the needs of primarily limited-English-speaking Korean elderly. It opened a suburban location in Mount Prospect in 2004 and further expanded to Lake County in 2012.

Today, the agency annually serves over 10,000 individuals and families of all ages (1,000 from Mount Prospect alone) by providing a broad range of community services to meet the diverse needs of community members. Since 2006, Hanul also serves as a resource center for a wide variety of other nearby ethnic populations. 

“Our three different offices conveniently serve our Korean American community spread throughout the Metropolitan Chicago area,” explained Yihyun Kim, manager of the Mount Prospect office of Hanul. “We serve a large population of Low English Proficient Korean American older adults and also low-income immigrant families and primarily focus on promoting healthy aging, family wellness and community engagement.”

The COVID-19 pandemic of 2020-21 created challenges and barriers for Hanul staff and patrons, just as it did for everyone else – in the world! 

“Our staff had to resort to working from home and congregate dining for older adults was no longer allowed,” Kim related. “Instead of the daily congregate dining, we provided lunch pick-up services two days a week. Staff provided public benefits application assistance virtually and allowed clients to drop off necessary documents through a mail drop-in box at the office. Our in-person classes moved to Zoom and YouTube livestream. We knew these programs were essential to our most vulnerable community members and it was our mission to find innovative, yet safe, ways to deliver the programs to our clients.”

Hanul staff members dealt with increased call volumes. They also attended training to appropriately provide clients with additional services like applying for unemployment insurance, filing COVID-19 emergency cash fund applications, applying for rental and mortgage assistance and more. 

“There has been increased demand for assistance with these COVID-19-related programs and services and the number of clients we can serve has decreased since each case management takes longer when done virtually,” Kim said, so this had put added pressure on Hanul’s staff. 

Annual events like Hanul’s Purple Ball fundraiser, Korean Seniors Day and Youth Science Day were postponed, but they held their first-ever virtual fundraising gala which was very successful.

For more information about Hanual, visit their website at https://hanulusa.org/.

Filed Under: Personal Accounts

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Mount Prospect Historical Society
101 South Maple Street
Mount Prospect, IL 60056
847.392.9006
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The Mount Prospect Historical Society is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that is committed to preserving the history of Mount Prospect, IL, through artifacts, photographs and both oral and written memories of current and former residents and businesspeople.  On its campus in the heart of the Village, the Society maintains the 1906 Dietrich Friedrichs house museum, the ADA-accessible Dolores Haugh Education Center and the 1896 one-room Central School, which was moved to the museum campus in 2008, renovated and opened to the public in 2017, the 100-year anniversary of the Village.

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