By Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service
POWIDZ AIR BASE, Poland, Jan. 31, 2014 – Defense Secretary
Chuck Hagel spent the last afternoon of his first official visit to Poland by
stopping at an air base where U.S. and Polish airmen work side by side, and
later at a historic church where his great grandparents were married in 1882.
At Powidz Air Base in central Poland, Hagel and Polish
Defense Minister Tomasz Siemoniak walked together into a hangar, a row of U.S.
and Polish airmen fanning out on each side of the microphone, with the American
and Polish flags in the background.
Rising up behind the flags was a hulking gray C-130
turboprop military transport plane with a sleek F-16 positioned at each end of
its 133-foot wingspan.
“I am grateful for the opportunity to be here today to wish
you all well and to thank you, all of you, Polish and American airmen working
jointly in … common cause,” Hagel said in English, stopping every few sentences
so his words could be translated into Polish.
“What you’re doing here is important … for our two
countries, it’s important for NATO, it’s important for freedom, and it is a
significant symbol to the world,” he said.
President Barack Obama and President Bronisław Komorowski
agreed in 2010 to strengthen the U.S.-Polish security partnership through
increased cooperation between both nations’ air forces. The first full-time
stationing of U.S. troops was established in Poland in 2012 with an aviation
detachment at Lask Air Base, about 90 minutes from Powidz.
In addition to strengthening cooperation, the aviation detachment
allows Poland to host other allied air force elements and serve as a regional
hub for air training and multinational exercises.
Hagel called it significant that the two countries are
working together, adding that the collaboration will lead to “expanding
opportunities for more jointness, more exercises and more opportunities.”
As Hagel and Siemoniak completed their remarks, the
secretary wished the airmen continued success and a productive 2014.
“On a more personal note,” he told them, “my mother’s family
is from this part of Poland and when I leave here in a few minutes I’m going to
a little village, Kiszków, where my great grandparents were married. So I feel
very familiar here and very comfortable.”
The Dabrowka Catholic church, nearly an hour by car from
Powidza Air Base, sits on the same site in Kiszków where Hagel’s maternal
grandmother’s parents were married. Their Polish names were Tomasz and
Katarzyna Kąkolewski, a senior defense official said.
Tomasz Kąkolewski, born in Wierzonka, lived in Turostów near
Kiszków and worked as a farmhand. Katarzyna Budnikowska, also recorded as
Budzińska, was born in 1861 in Lednogóra. She lived in Gniewkowo near Kiszków
and worked as maid.
In 1882 the couple married in the parish church in Dąbrówka
Kościelna, which burned down in the 1920s and was later rebuilt. They left for
the United States in 1888 and Katie, one of their daughters, was born in
Nebraska in 1894. Katie Konkolewski, Hagel’s grandmother, eventually married
Joseph Dunn, an American of Irish descent.
During his visit to the church today Hagel signed the guest
book.
"Thank you for this very memorable opportunity to visit
my family's history,” Hagel wrote. “It is very meaningful to my family and me.
God bless you."
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