One Catholic priest who did give his life to save another man:Maximilian Kolbe

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https://www.warhistoryonline.com/instant-articles/maximilian-kolbe-friar-died-prisoners-place-auschwitz.html

Extract [ please read the whole article]

Wartime Effects

After WWII had broken out, Kolbe and a few other priests remained in his hometown monastery where he organized a makeshift hospital. He was arrested in September 1939, briefly held for several months, and then released in December. The Germans gave him the option to sign the Deutsche Volksliste as he was half-German by birth and, could claim rights as a German under Nazi rules. However, he was very adamant he would not do so. The Germans allowed him to continue his publishing work although, on his release, he used it to begin printing anti-Nazi publications.

Kolbe set about doing more work to save his people, but this time, he did much more than establishing a hospital. He and other monks at his monastery worked to shelter refugees from the rest of Poland, and they hid as many as 2,000 Jews during the Nazi invasion.

In February 1941 the Gestapo shut down the monastery and arrested him and his fellow monks. He was sent to Pawiak Prison, before being transferred to Auschwitz.

Maximilian Kolbe first from left.

A Priest in Auschwitz

During his time in the concentration camp, Kolbe continued his role as a priest, but it caused problems for him. There were many instances where he was subjected to harassment and violence, including beatings and lashings. Once he had to be taken to the prison hospital.

In July 1941 several prisoners escaped from the camp, so the deputy commander picked ten men to be punished, to discourage others. They were placed in an underground bunker and not given food or water until they starved to death.

One of the men chosen was Franciszek Gajowniczek. He was a Polish army sergeant who had been captured in Slovakia. When learning about his fate, he reportedly cried out, “My wife! My children!” Kolbe volunteered to die in his place.

The assistant janitor at the camp later reported that Kolbe led the other prisoners who had been chosen in prayers when in the underground bunker.

Kolbe outlived the other nine prisoners. He remained calm throughout the experience and was found by his guards to be either kneeling or standing in the middle of the cell at all times. The guards eventually tired of waiting for him to die, and gave him a lethal injection of carbolic acid. He calmly took the injection, and his remains were cremated.”

Note:

At that time cremation was not allowed for Catholics so it is a double injury to deprive his family or religious order  of  a Requiem Mass and burial  for him in a Catholic graveyard

 

 

 

T

3 thoughts on “One Catholic priest who did give his life to save another man:Maximilian Kolbe

    1. I saw the man he saved on TV when he was 93.Kolbe seemed so wonderful.He said Mass every day for rhe dying men and prayed when they could only whisper.You see some Jews had converted to Catholicism and they didn’t know they were Jewish till Hitler’s men discovered it.I was impressed he did that for 9 days .There are some good people but few with such courage.

      1. what an extraordinary example of the goodness human beings are capable of – in the harshest of times. I will read up much more on this truly humane human being. Thank you, Katherine, for sharing this with me. It resonates and it hits home.

        Stay well my dear friend.

        Peace ✌

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