The founding president of C-RS was John Righetti who served until 2012 and is now president emeritus. He was succeeded by Jim Kepchar-Kaminski (2013-2015) and Maryann Sivak (2015–present). C-RS seeks to collaborate with all Carpatho-Rusyn organizations worldwide to disseminate historical, genealogical, linguistic and ethno-cultural information. In addition to its newsletter, the society created a website, blog and e-mail bulletin, C-RS Connection. Since 2004, the Carpatho-Rusyn Society Heritage Program has broadcast Carpatho-Rusyn music and information on
WPIT in the greater Pittsburgh area and worldwide via the web. The society currently hosts a genealogy forum on its website and is expanding its social media presence. Programs that have served both the Carpatho-Rusyn American and European communities include the highly successful Rusyn Heritage Tour. The society has promoted an annual two- week tour of the Carpatho-Rusyn communities in Poland, Slovakia and Ukraine. The tour experience is one of immersion in contemporary Rusyn culture as well as allowing for visits to ancestral villages and genealogical research. Since 2011, C-RS has supported and offered scholarships to the Studium Carpato-Ruthenorum, an annual international summer school for Rusyn language and culture held at
Presov University.
National Cultural Center In 2004, C-RS purchased the former
St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Cathedral at 915 Dickson Street in
Munhall, Pennsylvania and converted it into the Carpatho-Rusyn Cultural and Educational Center. The century-old building holds significance for those of Carpatho-Rusyn heritage. It was designed in 1903 by Hungarian-born architect
Titus de Bobula and was patterned after the Carpatho-Rusyn
Greek Catholic Cathedral of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross in
Uzhhorod (then Ungvár,
Kingdom of Hungary). In 1929, the building was chosen as the cathedral for the Ruthenian (Rusyn) Greek Catholic Exarchate in America. In May 2019, the society celebrated its 25th anniversary at its renovated cultural center. Professor
Paul Robert Magocsi, the world's foremost authority on Carpatho-Rusyns, gave the keynote address and received the society's highest honor, the
Michael Strank Award, named after the Carpatho-Rusyn-American Marine sergeant who helped raise the US flag at the
Battle of Iwo Jima. A native of Orjabyna (
Jarabina), Czechoslovakia, Strank was awarded US citizenship posthumously in 2008. Prior recipients of the Michael Strank Award were Orestes Mihaly (2009) and John Righetti (2014). ==See also==