Agreed.

I think we have one Ukrainian (90 years young), one Ruthenian, and the rest are a mix of modern day San Francisco. So we are not ethnically Russian but we are Russian by our parish heritage and we very much hold to that. We just had a two part series during agape about our history in Russia, and the path out of Russia and our earliest years in SF.
I think everyone knows these OCS responses and most know several more which others have mentioned as typical to hear in the language of the Church in the homeland. Of course we all know Kýrie, eléison but I have also learned a number of other “Greek” responses since the local Greek Orthodox protocathedral does their feast day liturgies (to a nearly empty house) all in Greek. I haven’t a clue what exactly is being said at most moments but I know the liturgy so I’m a happy camper just being there. (BTW it doesn’t seem to worry them that the place is nearly empty at those services… maybe they should change to English and hold the service at night to accommodate their Americanized faithful…no way!

)
There’s never any telling when the curtain is pulled aside whether Father will boldly begin in OCS, or English, and the occasional Arabic from his Melkite days. Personally, I’m always happiest when it’s OCS. I only know what he is saying at that point because I know the DL. We never get a lot of OCS but we do get sections of it and any major feast will begin in OCS and have plenty of it. Many of the parish (remember we’re really tiny) know festal greetings in OCS and Arabic, since Father uses all three languages for those greetings. At Pascha we have greetings in many other languages of course.

Our oldest choir member (a Christian Brother) who has been in the parish since its inception 50+ years ago will chant the hours in OCS. The rest of us are mostly limited there to the "Gospodi pomilui"s.
On Feast Days like the recent Nativity Holy Supper, our agape meal together is then guaranteed to have pirogi, mushroom soup, beets, etc. Truth be told there isn’t a middle easterner among us but we also have a heavy portion of middle eastern food. S’prazdnikom!