I have been blessed with some of the best friends on God's green earth.
There's nothing I love more than bragging on my friends.
Talented, smart, funny, committed, loyal, curious, and kind. Those are a few of the words that kinda sum up characteristics they have in common.
John Messer is all of these things and so much more.
I met him back in the 70s. He was dating a good friend of mine. I was going through a divorce.
John and his then partner, Michael, became part of a family I chose - and was lucky enough to have them choose me, shelter me, feed me.
I knew I was always welcome at their door, no matter the day, or the time.
They hosted glorious dinner parties, introduced me to the symphony, live theater, fine restaurants.
There were raucous times as well which included crazy wild clothes, make-up, bright lights and dancing.
Vacations at the beach, trips to the mountains, hot tub nights.
If I wasn't able to get home to Maryland for holidays, I knew I could count at a place at their table for birthdays, Thanksgiving, Christmas. If my Mom and Dad made it to Atlanta for those holidays, they were included around the table. They knew I was in good hands with John Messer; they loved him as if he were a son.
Over the years things changed, of course.
But John was still there. We became separated by miles as we moved away from Atlanta, but the strong ties will always remain. We may not chat as often as we once did, but I have never ever for one minute stop believing that he's there if I need him.
My Dad died before I met Donald, so John was the one walk me down the aisle when Donald and I got married. He hosted our wedding reception.
He flew into Atlanta to host the memorial service for my mom.
And he has lived life to the fullest more than anyone I know.
He's a world traveler. He's always learning new things whether it might be photography lessons, wine classes, piano lessons, yoga, cooking classes including following his dream of becoming a Cordon Bleu Culinary School graduate.
And he volunteers. Lordy, does he volunteer.
He has always volunteered his time and energy to causes he believes in. From being central to the opening of a home for AIDS patients in Atlanta to his current on-going activities of volunteering his time as a chef for not-for-profit fundraisers, ESOL instructor for immigrants living in the state of Maine, Board Member of an immigrant advocacy not-for-profit in Maine, and a volunteer in refugee camps in the EU.
I never know where his next note might arrive from - India where he's visiting orphanages where he's feeding and teaching children. Greece where he's working with refugees. Or, most lately, Poland, where he is once again working with refugees.
He has agreed to allow me to share some of his notes and photos.
WITH APOLOGIES for some pretty awful formatting issues that I take partial blame for and blame the rest on Blogger. I did try to remove some of the repeats, but then more than I wanted to remove would also disappear.
If photos don't load, try refreshing the page. If they still won't load <sigh> my apologies. Enjoy the notes.
And thanks for stopping by!
And now . . . Here's John!
Dear family:Day One: Arrived last night in Warsaw, 25 hours after catching the bus in Portland to Boston Logan, checked in, drank Polish vodka, went to sleep. Beautiful mid-size hotel. The building was originally the residence of a well to do Jewish family.. built in 1903…..it’s not clear what happened to the family during the war. The Allied forces bombed it in 1944…the Polish government took it over after the war…restored it and converted it into a Polish Socialist Government building. In the 1970’s, the original family sued and recovered the property.Got up early and had the best scrambled eggs ever. They were almost orange. I asked the young man at the front desk if he had any ideas on where I might go to volunteer with the Ukrainian refugees. He stared into space for a long pregnant moment and then replied, “I have no idea.” So I left the hotel and walked about 2 miles to the PGE Norodowy Stadium, the largest soccer stadium in the EU, where many of the Ukrainian refugees in the city are living. I kept asking around and knocking on office doors until I found the World Central Kitchen food trucks, and, with the help of Google Translator, was able to meet the site manager, Adam, whose English was pretty good. He said he didn’t need anymore volunteers, but he gave me the name and phone number of one of the World Central Kitchen Country Managers in Poland. I went to some other food trucks at the stadium and left several cards. I felt a bit like some guy out of work knocking on doors…which was ok. By the time I walked back to my hotel, I was frozen and jet lagged, so I crashed for several hours.When I awoke, I texted the country manager for WCK and headed out by foot to the Central Rail Station. There I was interviewed and asked to come back at 6 pm to work the 6 to midnight shift in a “gastro tent". But then I got a text from Kate, the WCK country manager. She said they had just posted openings at their main kitchen (read: industrial strength kitchen) at the border in Przemyśl, pronounced SHEH-muh-shl….so I jumped online and grabbed slots through Sunday, April 10th….flying home on the 11th.Checked out of the hotel, got a cab to the car rental office…waited an hour to speak to someone who told me that they had no cars…even though I had a reservation. Oy. By then it was 5 pm, and I had a 4 1/2 hour drive to my hotel in Rzeszów (pronounced JHA-shov) as there are no rooms in Przemyśl. I was pissed, cold and hangry so I went back to my hotel and re-checked in. Will pick up an Avis rental at the airport in the morning and head out.I don’t imagine that I will be sending detailed emails each day as each day is an 11 hour shift, and Rzeszów is one hour away from Przemyśl…but I will send photos and much love.More later.
Day 3….my team was charged with two tasks…making 5,000 sandwiches and coring and slicing one ton of apples. I was asked if I would wash the apples. “Sure”…turns out this entailed dumping each crate into a large strainer, washing it with a powerful water hose, shaking the water out and schleping it each persons station to keep them supplied with apples. My back is sore.
The housing situation is absolutely insane here in Przemyśl…
On Apr 1, 2022, at 9:43 PM, John Messer wrote:Wonderful day working with lots of different chefs.
On Sunday I’ll be moving to the town where I work, cutting out 2 hours of
driving each day.
The town where I work has a wonderful piece of history.
When the Einsatzgruppe made their first attempt to round up the
Jews of the town at the beginning of Operation Barbarossa,
a German officer stop them, blocking their way across a bridge….
alleging that he must keep them as laborers…saving many lives.
Yad Vashem named him Righteous Among Nations.
<IMG_5417.jpg>
<IMG_5418.jpg>
| Apr 5, 2022, 2:53 PM (21 hours ago) | |||
John Messer
On Apr 5, 2022, at 8:37 PM, John Messer wrote:This is a bcc email.Sorry for the lack of emails. I am so exhausted when I get
to myapartment at night, I can barely get the beer to my mouth
before I fall asleep. But every morning I awake with all the
energy in the
World…I can’t remember such a sustained “high” in
my life.
I fell like pinching myself. Here I am with about
100 strangers, and
suddenly everyone is best friends, cooperating and
working towards a
common goal….. to feed cold, traumatized, displaced
persons from
Ukraine.
So many stories, not so many photos. I will sit her with my 12 inch
tall mug of beer and send a few photos a few at a time with a
caption for each in a couple of successive emails.
Sorry, but they are not going to be in any necessary order.
Here we go…..The weather….dear heavens…the weather has been so horrible.
John Messer<IMG_5462.jpeg>
It is either really cold and pouring down rain or even colder and
snowing. And while most people are coming across the eight
crossings into Poland by bus, many come by foot…
with luggage and children and occasionally a dog.<IMG_5520.jpeg><IMG_5474.jpeg><IMG_5517.jpeg>
| Apr 5, 2022, 2:59 PM (21 hours ago) | |||
On Apr 5, 2022, at 8:37 PM, John Messer wrote:This is a bcc email.Sorry for the lack of emails. I am so exhausted when I get to my
apartment at night, I can barely get the beer to my mouth before
I fall asleep. But every morning I awake with all the energy in the
world…I can’t remember such a sustained “high” in my life.
I fell like pinching myself. Here I am with about 100 strangers,
and suddenly everyone is best friends, cooperating and working
towards a common goal….. to feed cold, traumatized, displaced
persons from Ukraine.So many stories, not so many photos. I will sit her with my 12 inch
tall mug of beer and send a few photos a few at a time with a
caption for each in a couple of successive emails.
Sorry, but they are not going to be in any necessary order.
Here we go…..The weather….dear heavens…the weather has been so horrible.
John Messer<IMG_5462.jpeg>
It is either really cold and pouring down rain or even colder and
snowing. And while most people are coming across the eight
crossings into Poland by bus, many come by foot…
with luggage and children and occasionally a dog.<IMG_5520.jpeg><IMG_5474.jpeg><IMG_5517.jpeg>
| Apr 5, 2022, 3:11 PM (21 hours ago) | |||
On Apr 5, 2022, at 8:37 PM, John Messer wrote:This is a bcc email.Sorry for the lack of emails. I am so exhausted when I get to my
apartment at night, I can barely get the beer to my mouth before
I fall asleep. But every morning I awake with all the energy in the
world…I can’t remember such a sustained “high” in my life. I fell
like pinching myself. Here I am with about 100 strangers, and
suddenly everyone is best friends, cooperating and working
towards a common goal….. to feed cold, traumatized, displaced
persons from Ukraine.So many stories, not so many photos. I will sit her with my 12
inch tall mug of beer and send a few photos a few at a time with a
caption for each in a couple of successive emails. Sorry, but they
are not going to be in any necessary order. Here we go…..The weather….dear heavens…the weather has been so horrible.
John Messer<IMG_5462.jpeg>
It is either really cold and pouring down rain or even colder and
snowing. And while most people are coming across the eight
crossings into Poland by bus, many come by foot…with luggage
and children and occasionally a dog.<IMG_5520.jpeg><IMG_5474.jpeg><IMG_5517.jpeg>
| Apr 5, 2022, 3:23 PM (21 hours ago) | |||
On Apr 5, 2022, at 8:52 PM, John Messer wrote:<IMG_5553.jpeg><IMG_5543.jpeg><IMG_5565.jpeg><IMG_5557.jpeg>
1 comment:
What a wonderful person. His time in Poland seems unreal, but it is good to see the refugees well taken care of. I refreshed and refreshed, but no pix. That's o.k. as I got the gist of them anyway. Thank you so much for sharing this.
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