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By Pete Stidman
Special to the Reporter
Polish-Americans are
slowly trickling out of Dorchester's Polish
Triangle, say members of the neighborhood. They are
trading in or renting out their three-deckers and
single-families for quieter, roomier layouts in the
suburbs. The Polish-American Citizens Club (PACC)
has been a little too quiet.
But on the Dorchester
Avenue side of the triangle, opposite Boston Street
and Columbia Road, a trio of Polish storefronts are
doing better than ever. All of them are relatively
new to the area, joining Polish-owned anchors DJ's
Market and Boston Street Deli over on Boston Street
in the last ten years or so. Even the Boston Street
shops are doing well. With Polish still heard on
the streets, four thriving markets and a new
restaurant, one might think the triangle is as
Polish as it ever was, but apparently the teeming
customers come from out of town.
"It's like virtual
reality Poland," said Maciej Oltarzewski, who helps
his wife Grace promote a series of musical and
cultural events in the PACC. "More and more Poles
are moving out. Downtown Boston has to move in this
direction. It's easy to predict. In ten years it
will be even more attractive to these people, some
who are not too rich, to sell these houses and move
somewhere else."
The Oltarzewski's call
Wrentham their home.
Teddy Jurczuk, owner of
the Boston Street Deli on Boston Road, agrees with
Oltarzewski that the exodus is happening, but he
would like to reverse it. He says he'd be
interested in buying the PACC building and setting
it in a new, upscale direction.
"If I made it nice I
think more Polish people would come back," said
Jurczuk. "I'd put rooms for new arrivals in the
basement. The Italian club in the North End is way
different. The Polish club just ruins them, the
drinking. I want it to help people."
Jurczuk hails from Milton
these days, although he said he has many friends
and family-members who still live near his shop.
Joe Kulcheski, president
of the PACC, did not return phone calls for this
article and bartenders on duty at the club declined
to comment on its status.
The club donates the use
of a hall to Mr. and Mrs. Oltarzewski's events, and
the acts brought in by the pair have attracted
hundreds of Polish-Americans hungry for live music.
"We have rock and roll,
Polish music but not many polkas. That's like
old-old," said Grace Oltarzewski while putting
final touches on glittery decorations for a New
Years Eve 2007 celebration Sunday. "And polka is
from the Czech Republic, not Polish."
Along with a team of
generous volunteers, the couple runs Pro Musica
Inc., which rents the hall above the bar at PACC. A
steady flow of musicians with long lists of
European credentials, but not as widely known in
the U.S., visit the hall every third Friday.
Next up on the Prom
Musica roster is Bogdan Holownia, a premier jazz
pianist from Poland. He headlines a Jan. 19 show at
the club; doors open at 7:30 p.m. The Warsaw Voice
descr
The PACC's dark,
wood-paneled interior is lit up by beer-sign neon
and a widescreen TV. Last Saturday at noon, college
football players battled across it and three men
sat quietly at the bar nursing beers. But for the
red and white flags and the white eagle on the
front door, it could be any vintage bar in the
city.
Jurczuk's idea for
installing basement rooms to house recent
immigrants in the club, however, might not attract
many guests either. Poland's shrinking unemployment
rates and its European Union membership garnered in
May of 2004 are opening up plenty of job
opportunities for Poles on their home continent.
The relatively few who still relocate to Boston are
educated professionals such as engineers and
medical researchers, and they are often fluent in
English already.
The same year Jurczuk's
father, Geno Jurczuk, bought DJ's Market down the
street in 1981, martial law had just been declared
in Poland as part of a government reaction to
Solidarity. The ensuing violence pushed a large
wave of Polish-Americans onto Boston's shores.
Earlier waves around World War II and the turn of
the century have added up to over 320,000 self
described Polish-Americans in the 2000 census.
Boston's Polish triangle
had a different character in those days, said the
younger Jurczuk. There were fewer cars, everybody
knew everybody and DJ's was a gathering
point.
"Before, it wasn't just
for the food. It was fun," agreed his sister Alina
Morris, who took over DJ's from Geno with yet
another brother. "It was where to get a job or a
place to stay. People would come straight from the
airport with their suitcases in hand. Mainly, it
was just meeting other Polish people, a hangout."
Dorchester Avenue, has a
slightly different flavor. Our Lady of
Czestochowa's parking lot fills to capacity every
Sunday. Suburbanites in leather jackets and
fur-lined parkas hurry to find a place in city's
only pews where Catholic mass can be heard in
Polish. If they arrive even a minute after 11 a.m.,
they will have to settle for standing room in the
aisles or just outside the doors.
After Father Jerzy
Auguscik finishes Mass, the congregation slowly
splits up, some walking a few doors down to
Café Polonia, others crossing the street to
the Baltic European Delicatessen or heading South
to Euromart just blocks away.
In both markets stacks of
Polish light rye bread disappear from the shelves
and long lines form in front of the chrome stocked
with kielbasa and other fresh meats.
"This is pretty nice,"
said Arthur Jurczyk of Natick after loading up a
few bags at the Baltic. "You get the same food, the
cravings you developed when you were a kid. Most of
the people here speak Polish and you often see
people you went to school with."
In Café Polonia,
the only Polish restaurant in Boston, the
churchgoers rub shoulders with a more diverse
patronage in search of pierogis, kielbasa, and
babka breads.
"It's funny because in
the store about 80 percent of our clients are
Polish-speaking, whereas in the restaurant, 80
percent of our clients are not Polish-speaking,"
said owner of both the Baltic, Café Polonia,
and co-owner of a regional bi-lingual newspaper
called the White Eagle, Darek Barcikowski. "There
isn't a culture in Poland of people going to
restaurants."
"We live in Quincy.
There's a lot of criminals around here," said one
Euromart shopper while his family laughed at him.
"This store was robbed twice and that one down
there [pointing towards the Baltic] nine
times."
After walking off, he
came back in his car and rolled down the
window.
"It's New Year's Eve, so
I am only joking," he said.
But the joke had a
fraction of fact to it. Barcikowski said that the
Baltic had been robbed at least four times circa
2005, maybe more. But after media attention focused
on the mini crime wave, things calmed down .
Barcikowski didn't think crime was prompting people
to move.
"It has mostly to do with
socio-economic status," he said. "People are making
money and moving on. That area of Dorchester has
been relatively calm over time."
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