Antanas Milukas


Antanas Milukas was a Lithuanian Roman Catholic priest, book publisher, and newspaper editor.
As a student at the Sejny Priest Seminary, was involved in the publication and distribution of the illegal Lithuanian publications. He was searched by the Tsarist police for violating the Lithuanian press ban and fled to United States where he completed his education at the St. Charles Borromeo Seminary. Ordained as a priest in 1896, was parson in various Lithuanian parishes in Pennsylvania and New York. In addition to his pastoral duties, Milukas was a member and co-founder of numerous Lithuanian American organizations and societies as well as a prolific Lithuanian-language book publisher and newspaper editor. Together with Julija Pranaitytė, Milukas published some 190 Lithuanian books. These included three-volume photo album compiled by Milukas and exhibited at the World's Fair in Paris, history of Lithuania translated into English by Milukas and distributed to diplomats at the Paris Peace Conference, 1919, four volumes on the history of Lithuanian Americans written by Milukas. He established and edited the quarterly cultural magazine ' and edited the Catholic ' for forty years. He assisted in editing Varpas and Tėvynės sargas and Žinyčia.

Biography

Milukas was born in Šeštokai, Suwałki Governorate, Congress Poland. After graduating from a primary school in Rudamina and the Gymnasium in Marijampolė, he enrolled into the Sejny Priest Seminary in 1899. At the seminary, he was an active participant in the Lithuanian National Revival. He organized a handwritten Lithuanian-language weekly newsletter, initially known as Knapt. It grew from 8 pages to 24 pages and changed titles to Visko po biskį and Viltis. He contributed articles to the banned Lithuanian press, including Varpas and Ūkininkas, and was involved in its smuggling and distribution. In 1891, he was expelled from the seminary when prohibited publications were found in his dormitory. He was also searched by the police in connection with the Sietynas case.
To avoid the police, he fled to Tilsit in East Prussia where for a few months he helped to edit and publish Varpas. With financial assistance from priest, Milukas arrived to Plymouth, Pennsylvania, where he took over the editorial duties of Vienybė Lietuvninkų. After a year, in 1893, he enrolled in the St. Charles Borromeo Seminary to finish his studies. Upon graduation, he was ordained as a priest on 30 May 1896 by Archbishop Patrick John Ryan. He was assigned to the Lithuanian parish of St. George in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania. In 1901–1902, he studied canon law at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. There he met Julija Pranaitytė and invited her to United States starting their life-long collaboration on Lithuanian publications. In Fribourg, he also learned about the, a women's congregation that worked on publishing and distributing Catholic press, and brought the idea to United States and prompted Maria Kaupas to establish the Sisters of Saint Casimir in 1907.
Upon his return to United States, he was appointed to a Lithuanian parish in Brooklyn, New York. He worked at the Church of St. Mary of the Angels, a former Methodist church located at the end of the Williamsburg Bridge. In 1907, he organized the Lithuanian parish in Girardville and Gilberton, Pennsylvania. He was parson of Lithuanian parishes in Philadelphia at the Church of St. George and in Maspeth, Queens at the Transfiguration Roman Catholic Church. The Maspeth church burned down twice, in 1919 and 1925. First, Milukas rebuilt the church, but the second time he moved it to the former St. Stanislaus Kostka Roman Catholic Church. In 1931, the Lithuanian government awarded Milukas the Order of Vytautas the Great in recognition of his dedication to Lithuanian causes and on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of his public work and his 60th birthday. He later was a chaplain at the St. Catherine's Hospital in Brooklyn and at the St. Francis Sanatorium for Cardiac Children in Roslyn, New York. He died in Brooklyn on 19 March 1943.

Works

Milukas was active in Lithuanian American public life, becoming co-founder and member of numerous societies and devoting his time to Lithuanian publications. He organized the Bishop Motiejus Valančius Library Society, which published 10,000 copies of his book on how to learn to write in Tilsit in 1893. In 1894, he was co-founder of the Society of Laurynas Ivinskis which organized the Lithuanian exhibition at the World's Fair in Paris in 1900. Milukas created a poster showing the difficult cultural and educational conditions in Lithuania and exhibited his three-volume Lietuviškas albumas, a photo album with explanatory text in Lithuanian and English, which was awarded a gold medal at the fair. In 1900, he co-founded the Motinėlė Society, which provided financial aid to Lithuanian students.
In 1907, he was elected as the "spiritual leader" of the Lithuanian Roman Catholic Union of America and claimed that he outranked the chairman of the union. 23 priests signed a protest letter against such claims and forced Milukas to resign in 1909. The conflict pushed Milukas out of the Catholic leadership into the margins of Lithuanian American cultural life. During World War I, Milukas and other Lithuanians petitioned President Woodrow Wilson to proclaim the Lithuanian Day when all across United States donations would be collected for the benefit of Lithuanian war refugees. On 1 November 1916, Lithuanians collected $176,863. After the Żeligowski's Mutiny in 1920, Milukas established a charitable society for the Relief for the Little Martyrs of Vilnius to support Lithuanian orphans and schools in Vilnius Region and published anti-Polish works.
Together with Julija Pranaitytė, Milukas published some 190 Lithuanian books. The books included folk tales collected by Jonas Basanavičius, epistolary novel Viktutė by Marija Pečkauskaitė, poetry of Pranas Vaičaitis, works by Kristijonas Donelaitis,, Antanas Baranauskas, Antanas Strazdas, Motiejus Valančius. He translated and published The History of the Lithuanian Nation and Its Present National Aspirations based on articles originally published in Žvaigždė by Antanas Jusaitis. The book was gifted to President Woodrow Wilson and other diplomats during the Paris Peace Conference, 1919. It was a popular book and required a second edition within three months. This edition included a facsimile of a thank-you letter from President Wilson. He wrote and published two major books on Lithuanian Americans, two-volume Pirmieji Amerikos lietuvių profesijonalai ir kronika and Amerikos lietuviai XIX šimtmetyje. In total, the circulation of Miliukas' books exceeded 500,000 copies, but it was not a profitable activity and Milukas died in poverty.
He edited various Lithuanian newspapers, including Vienybė Lietuvninkų and Garsas Amerikos lietuvių. In 1898 he established quarterly cultural magazine ' and edited it until it ceased publication in 1906. While studying in Switzerland, he assisted Juozas Tumas-Vaižgantas with editing Tėvynės sargas and Žinyčia. When Tumas could no longer edit Žinyčia, Milukas merged the magazine with Dirva. In 1903, he purchased ' published in Brooklyn and edited it until his death. Initially it was a weekly, but became a monthly in 1923 and quarterly in 1926. Until 1909, it was the official periodical of the Lithuanian Roman Catholic Union of America.