- (800) 621-3723
- info@pna-znp.org
The PNA is a fraternal insurance benefit society that is not just for Americans of Polish heritage. It is open to everyone.
Since 1880, when the PNA began providing insurance protection for Americans of Polish origins and ancestry, their families, friends and neighbors, nearly two million men, women and children across our land have benefited from belonging to our great PNA family — both by owning quality life insurance and by taking advantage of our many excellent fraternal programs.
What is more, today the PNA is a fraternal insurance benefit society that is not just for Americans of Polish heritage. It is open to everyone.
The PNA didn’t just happen! It was formed by men and women like you — hard-working people who wanted the very best for their families and friends, most of whom back in 1880 were immigrant newcomers to America, this great land of freedom and opportunity.
Their objectives, like ours today, involved building a fraternal insurance society to promote the betterment of our members by:
In addition to our fine array of insurance and annuity products there are the many benefits that flow from belonging to our great PNA family.
One can look at our PNA fraternal programs, along with our insurance and annuities, as the foundation for a better and more enjoyable life – for you and your family!
Of course, our primary duty is to serve our members and we do this in a number of ways. Most important is in our commitment to offer an excellent array of permanent or whole life insurance, universal life insurance, and term insurance plans to meet the varying needs of all our members-whatever their family situation, age, income, financial needs, and future objectives.
And significant too — PNA stands for service in terms of our quality sales force and people who work in our national home office in Chicago. These professionals believe in providing accurate and useful information on the insurance and annuity needs of our members and future members. And they are dedicated to delivering service that is prompt and helpful. Our sales force and our PNA home office staff want to help you – and that’s a fact!
Just look at our record.
Since 1880 nearly two million men, women and children have belonged to the PNA!
Today, we are more than 230,000 members strong and this means the PNA is the largest ethnic fraternal insurance society in the United States.
We are rightly proud of our history of unbroken growth and rising strength, for it tells everyone that they can count on the PNA to meet their various insurance needs!
The Polish National Alliance of the United States of North America, popularly known today as the PNA or the Alliance, is the largest of all ethnically-based fraternal insurance benefit societies in this country. On December 31, 1996 the PNA counted 230,359 life insurance and 6,873 annuity holders in its ranks. Its members held a total of $721,660,990 of insurance with the PNA. The PNA is licensed to do business in 37 states and the District of Columbia. The total assets of the Polish National Alliance are $304,805,343.
According to data collected by the National Fraternal Congress of its 105 member organizations, the PNA is the 8th largest of all fraternals in membership, the 13th largest in assets, and the 18th largest in the total amount of insurance it provides its members. By far the largest of all fraternal insurance benefit societies created by Americans of Polish origins, the P.N.A. has members in every state of the Union and possesses 916 local lodge groups that help it carry out its mission.
The Polish National Alliance offers a full range of life insurance products to its members, including permanent and term insurance, single premium insurance, and universal life insurance. The PNA also offers excellent annuity plans. At the same time, the Alliance provides its members with a wide range of valuable fraternal benefits.
The PNA was formed in 1880 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Chicago, Illinois by immigrant patriots, whose aim was to unite the members of the Polish immigrant community in America of that time behind the twin causes of Poland’s independence and their own advancement into the mainstreams of American society. In 1881, the PNA set up its own newspaper, Zgoda [Harmony] to promote its objectives to the larger community. In 1885, it established an insurance program for the material benefit of all who wished to join the Alliance. And from the early 1890s onward, it created a variety of programs aimed at enlightening the members of the Polish population in the United States about their heritage and their citizen rights and obligations as Americans. To further advance these aims, the PNA established its own daily newspaper in Chicago, Dziennik Zwiazkowy, known today as The Polish Daily News.
Early on, the PNA granted student loans and scholarships to deserving members so they might advance their educational pursuits. In 1912 it founded its very own educational institution, Alliance College, in Cambridge Springs, Pennsylvania. Through its 75 years of operation, Alliance College received approximately $20 million of assistance from the PNA and graduated more than five thousand students.
Since the closing of the school, the PNA’s commitment to education has remained strong, for example, in the past ten years alone, the Alliance has distributed more than $1.2 million in scholarships to meritorious college and post graduate students who belong to the PNA, in order to help them achieve their academic goals.
In 1900, the PNA granted full membership rights to women interested in belonging to the Alliance. This action took place fully twenty years before the passage of the 20th amendment to the U.S. Constitution granting women the right to vote and hold public office.
Throughout its history, the Polish National Alliance has taken an active part in the civic life of the United States, by working on behalf of the well-being and advancement of the Polish immigrants to America, their offspring and descendants, by encouraging that they become U.S. citizens, vote, and take active roles in this country’s public affairs.
It has encouraged Polish people to build their social institutions, including parishes and schools, and to active support their further development. Most of the monuments that celebrate the lives and achievements of the great American Revolutionary War patriots from Poland, Thaddeus Kosciuszko and Casimir Pulaski, exist thanks to the leadership and support of the PNA and its members.
Throughout its history, the Polish National Alliance has been a staunch promoter of Poland’s independence, lost from 1795 to 1918. In World War I (1914-1918), the PNA worked closely with many other organizations to achieve this goal, which was realized at the very end of that conflict. In World War II (1939-1945), the PNA again worked actively for Poland’s independence. When this goal was not fully realized, due to the country’s occupation by the Soviet Union against its people’s will, the PNA and its members worked hard to persuade the leaders of the United States government of the justice of Poland’s restoration to freedom.
In 1944, the PNA had played a key role in forming the Polish American Congress, a nationwide ethnic federation, to advance the cause of Poland’s freedom. After the War and all through the next fifty years and more, the PNA has remained a central force in the work of the Polish American Congress, a fact well recognized by the leaders of the democratic Polish state, which was established in 1989 following the collapse of the communist dictatorship.
From the World War I era to the present, the Polish National Alliance and its members, together with the entire Polish American community, have given generously to help meet the material and medical needs of Poland’s people. This aid has been estimated to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars. In addition, the PNA helped thousands of refugees from World War II devastated Poland in resettling here to build new lives for themselves and their children.
Today, the Polish National Alliance is proud of its record of serving the insurance needs of the more than two million men, women and children who have been in its ranks since 1880. It is proud of its work on behalf of all Americans, Polish and non-Polish alike, in promoting citizenship participation in the life of the United States. It is proud to promote the enlightenment of its members and their fellow Americans about the heritage of Poland–through its biweekly publication, Zgoda, its daily newspaper, Dziennik Zwiazkowy, its radio station in Chicago, WPNA, its two banks, its website, its involvement in the Polish American Congress, the National Fraternal Congress and other organizations, and the benevolent and charitable activities of its members throughout the country.
Clearly, the motto of the PNA, “In Unity there is Strength,” fittingly characterizes the nearly 122-year-long heritage that is the Polish National Alliance.
[Last updated May, 2003.]
* For more information see Donald E. Pienkos, “P.N.A.: A Centennial History of The Polish National Alliance of The United States of North America” (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984).