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STORIES

Love Without Limits:
The Story of St. Maximilian Kolbe
"Pray that my love will be without
limits."
- Saint Maximilian Kolbe
in his last letter to his mother.
Maximilian Mary Kolbe (RM) was born in Zdunska Wola
(near Lodz), Poland, in 1894; died at Auschwitz (near Cracow), August
14, 1941; beatified by Pope Paul VI in 1971; canonized in 1982 by Pope
John Paul II.
Maxilian Kolbe was the son of Franciscan tertiaries,
who were impoverished weavers. He entered the minor seminary at Lwow in
1907 and became a Franciscan in 1910. When their children were grown,
his parents followed their natural inclinations and separated to become
religious. His mother first entered the Benedictines and later became a
Felician lay sister. His father was a Franciscan until he left the order
to run a bookstore at the Our Lady's shrine at Czestochowa. At the
beginning of World War I, he enlisted with Palsudski's patriots, was
wounded by the Russians, and hanged as a traitor to Mother Russia in
1914 at the age of 43.
Maximilian studied in Rome, where he was ordained
in 1919. Upon being diagnosed with tuberculosis, he returned to Poland
and took up the teaching of ecclessial history in a seminary. After he
came close to dying of the disease, he became even more zealous. He
founded a militant sodality and a magazine of apologetics for
Christians. When he moved the antiquated presses from Cracow to Grodno
circulation increased to 45,000. New machinery was installed, which was
run solely by priests and lay brothers. Following another attack of
tuberculosis, Maximilian re-established the presses near Warsaw at
Niepokalanow. Here Kolbe founded a Franciscan community that combined
prayer, poverty, and the production of a daily and weekly newspaper
using the latest technology.
As unlikely as it may seem, Kolbe's next act was
the founding of a Franciscan community at Nagasaki, Japan. In 1936, he
was recalled to Niepokalanow as the superior over 762 friars. When the
Germans invaded Poland in 1939, Kolbe sent most of the brothers home
with the warning that they should not join the underground resistance.
Those that remained were interned, released, and returned to the
monastery, which had become a refugee camp for 3,000 Poles and 1,500
Jews. The remaining friars continued to publish newspapers critical of
the Third Reich.
In 1940, the Nazis established a concentration camp
at Oswiecim in southern Poland--Auschwitz. Prisoner #16670, a Catholic
priest named Maximilian Kolbe, who had refused German citizenship, was
arrested on February 17, 1941, on the charge that he was a journalist,
publisher, and intellectual. The Gestapo officers who seized Maxilian
and four other brothers were amazed at how little food was prepared for
the brothers. They were sent to Auschwitz in May 1941.
Priests in Auschwitz were especially vilified. They
were given the job of moving loads of logs and were beaten when their
strength gave way under the heavy work. One of the savage guards once
horsewhipped Kolbe 50 times and left him for dead in a wood. The saint
recovered some of his strength, and continued to comfort his fellow
prisoners, insisting that everything, even sufferings, came to an end,
and the way to glory was through the cross. Father Kolbe also undertook
the task of moving the bodies of the tortured. Throughout his
internment, he continued his priestly ministry: hearing confessions in
unlikely places and smuggling in bread and wine for covert Masses. He
was conspicuous for his compassion towards those even less fortunate
than himself.
One day a prisoner escaped, which meant that men
from the same bunker must be selected to die. In reprisal the prison
guards chose ten men, whom they planned to starve to death. One was a
married Polish sergeant named Francis Gajowniczek. Maximilian Kolbe
begged the camp commandant to let him take Gajowniczek's place, "I
am a Catholic priest. I wish to die for that man." The request was
granted. "I am," argued the 47-year-old priest, "old and
useless; he has a wife and children" Maximilian Kolbe comforted
each one in the death chamber of Cell 18 as they prepared to die with
dignity by prayers, Psalms, and the example of Christ's Passion. Two
weeks later only four were left alive and Maximilian alone was still
fully conscious. His guards could scarcely bear the saint's composure,
and they speeded his end by injecting him with phenol.
Although Maximilian Kolbe had been a brilliant
scientist, mathematician, and religious journalist, he is remembered for
this last act of charity. Kolbe was epitomized the Polish religious and
the many unsung heroes of the concentration camps. Pope John Paul II,
previously archbishop of Cracow, canonized Father Kolbe in the presence
of the sergeant whose life had been saved (Bentley, Farmer).
Source: http://users.erols.com/saintpat/ss/0814.htm
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St. Michael the Archangel
St.
Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle; be our safeguard against the
wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray.
And do you, O prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God, cast
into Hell Satan and all the evil spirits who prowl about the world
seeking the ruin of souls. Amen.
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2002 Saint Michael Center for the Blessed Virgin Mary
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