Jerzy Popiełuszko
Blessed Jerzy Popieluszko was
born September 14, 1947, on a farm in the small village of Okopy located in
North Eastern Poland. His parents Wladyslaw and Mariana were devout Catholics
and he was baptized Alphons Popieluszko two days after his birth. Blessed Jerzy
was a fragile child but as his parents stated he made up for any physical
infirmities in strength of character.
The country into which Blessed
Jerzy was born was one suffering from the aftermath of the reign of terror by
the Nazi’s and the ongoing persecution of the Church by the Communists since
the country’s occupation by the Russians in the Second World War. Okopy, the
geographical center or “heart” of Poland was a rural village and thus its
school system was not as deeply infiltrated with the sociology of the communist
regime, but nevertheless Bl Jerzy suffered for his Faith while yet in school.
Each morning before classes began Bl Jerzy would walk three miles to serve
Mass, and then after classes were over in the evening, would return to the
Church to pray the Rosary. His spirituality was ridiculed and he was accused by
his teacher of praying too much.
As a precaution due to the
harassment he received Bl Jerzy kept secret his intention to join the seminary
for fear that if it were known the results of his exams would be altered. After
graduating high school in 1965 while his friends were at the school ball, Blessed
Jerzy Popieluszko was on a train headed for the seminary in Warsaw. He had
chosen Warsaw due to its closeness to the monastery of St Maximilian Kolbe, a
favorite saint of Bl Jerzy. Although against the agreement of 1950 between the
Church and State, after one year of seminary training Bl Jerzy was drafted into
the military for a two year tour in a special unit for clerics in Bartoszyce.
The plan for drafting clerics
into the service was to indoctrinate them with the communistic ideal and cause
them to lose their vocation. In spite of bitter persecution ensuing from the
practice of his Faith, Blessed Jerzy Popieluszko firmly defied the authority’s
attempt to marginalize Catholicism. On one occasion, when Bl Jerzy refused to
crush his rosary beneath his heel he was cruelly beaten and placed in solitary
confinement for a month. Also on account of his refusal to remove a medal from
about his neck he was forced to stand for hours in the freezing rain. He was
also made to crawl around the camp on his hands and knees as a punishment for
saying the rosary. The results of this barbarity were that on the completion of
his two year tour, Bl Jerzy had to undergo a life threatening surgery to undo
the damage done to his heart and kidneys from his beatings. The recovery caused
his ordination to be delayed, but on May 28, 1972, he was ordained with his
name changed from Alphons to Jerzy by Cardinal Wyszynski.
Blessed Jerzy Popieluszko was
first stationed taking care of several small parishes where his work was greatly
appreciated. In January of 1979 he collapsed while saying Mass, and was sent to
stay in a hospital to recover. Afterwards, he was given the duty as chaplain
for the medical niversity of St Ann in Warsaw. A year later he was transferred
to his last parish, St Stanislaus Kostka in Warsaw.
When Solidarity met in the Lenin
shipyard in the summer of 1980, Bl Jerzy was the chaplain sent to the striking
workers. The success of Solidarity helped to inspire Bl Jerzy, and every month
afterwards he would offer a Mass for the Homeland and give a sermon to inspire
people to follow the maxims of the Gospel, primarily by abandoning violence. Bl
Jersey also organized a relief effort to help the families suffering from the
loss of their jobs and livelihood as a result of defending the Faith, or the
government having declared martial law. The government grew more and more
frustrated with Bl Jerzy as more and more people flocked to him, and at the
monthly Mass for the homeland had guards stationed at every block corner to watch
him. Bl Jerzy went out of his way to be kind to these guards, calling them his
“Guardian Angels” and even bringing them coffee in the cold Polish winter.
On December 13, 1982, a bomb was
left on Bl Jerzy’s doorstep which would have killed him if he had answered the
door. The next year, in August of 1983, the police opened a formal case against
him and in December he was summoned to the prosecutor’s office. While detained,
the police broke into his house to fill it with explosives and anti-government
propaganda so they could have a cause to arrest him and launch a slur campaign.
While imprisoned with hardened criminals, Blessed Jerzy Popieluszko stayed up
all night speaking with a murderer, and finally hearing the man’s confession.
After being released from prison, Bl Jerzy was interrogated 13 times between
January and June of 1984. In September he was planning his annual pilgrimage to
Jasna Gora when he received threats warning him, “If you go to Jasna Gora you
are dead.”
On October 13, 1984, an attempt
was made on his life by means of a staged car accident, though Bl Jerzy was
saved due to his excellent driving ability. On October 19, 1984, after offering
Mass in Bydgoszcz, Bl Jerzy left with his driver for the 161 mile return trip
to Warsaw. Thirty minutes into the drive the car was flagged down by two
uniformed men for a traffic check near the village of Tourn. The uniformed men
were actually officers of the security service and, on asking Waldemar
Chrostowski, the driver, to hand over the keys to the car, handcuffed him and
forced him into the back seat of their vehicle at gunpoint. Bl Jerzy was then
grabbed and brutally beaten senseless with fists and clubs and thrown into the
trunk of the car, which then sped off.
A few miles later Waldemar
Chrostowski managed to escape the car and ran to the local Church to alert the
authorities. Meanwhile, the two officers stopped the car to fasten down the
trunk and gag Bl Jerzy, who was shouting and had almost managed to pry open the
trunk. Bl Jerzy momentarily escaped them and ran into the woods, but was soon
recaptured and beaten so savagely that his face and hands were unrecognizable.
He was then driven to a reservoir on the Vistula River. Bl Jerzy’s hands and
feet were tied with a noose fastened around his neck so that if he straightened
his legs it would suffocate him. His mouth was stuffed with cloth, blocking the
airway, and his nose was closed with sticking plaster. Finally, having tied a
bag of rocks to his feet, they threw him into the reservoir.
The body of Bl Jerzy was not
discovered until ten days had passed, and his funeral was held on November 2.
An autopsy revealed that he may have still been alive when thrown into the
reservoir.The cause for his beatification began in 1997 and in 2008 Blessed
Jerzy Popieluszko was elevated to the statues of Servant of God. On December
19, 2009, Pope Benedict signed the decree recognizing the martyrdom of Bl Jerzy
Popieluzko. On August 6th, 2010, in the presence of his mother, who was over
100 years old, Bl Jerzy was solemnly beatified.
The last public words spoke by
Blessed Jerzy Popieluzko during the meditation on the rosary October 19, 1984,
give a summary of his life and may serve as a guiding star in ours. “In order
to defeat evil with good, in order to preserve the dignity of man, one must not
use violence. It is the person who has failed to win on the strength of his
heart and his reason, who tries to win by force…Let us pray that we be free
from fear and intimidation, but above all from the lusts for revenge and
violence.”
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