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Christ on the Cross, Eugene Delacroix, 1853 |
Today the
Church celebrates the feast of Saint Maximilian Mary Kolbe, who was canonized
by Saint John Paul II in 1982.
A Polish
Franciscan with a deep devotion to Mary, Kolbe gave his own life for a fellow
prisoner at the Auschwitz extermination camp, taking on the man's punishment of death
by starvation because he had a wife and children. Not only this, but the saint also
gave life to others in the camp, reminding them of their dignity as persons and
that hope was not yet lost. Kolbe is particularly remembered for leading the nine
others condemned to starvation in Marian hymns and the Rosary as they awaited
their death.
St. John
Paul II had a deep devotion to Maximilian Kolbe, and his sacrifice in the heart
of darkness gave the late Holy Father much hope as he discerned his own vocation in war torn Poland.
Kolbe’s Christ-like gift of self stood as a model of priesthood for him, and the Franciscan's hope in the midst of hatred inspired a renewed respect for the dignity of
the human person in a place and a time in which it seemed to have been
forgotten.