BLESSED HILARY JANUSZEWSKI was born in1907 in Krajenki, Poland and was given the name of Pawel. He received a Christian education from his parents, Martin and Marianne. He attended the college in Greblin (where his family lived from 1915), continuing his studies at the Institute of Suchary, but had to abandon these due to his family’s economic difficulties. He took up other studies and in 1927 entered the Order of Carmel.
Hilary was
ordained priest on 15 July 1934. He obtained his lectorate in theology and the
prize for the best students of the Roman Academy of St Thomas and in 1935
returned to Poland to the monastery in Kracow. On his return to Poland, he was
appointed professor of Dogmatic Theology and Church History at the Institute of
the Polish Province in Cracow.
In 1939, he was appointed prior of the community, with Poland recently occupied by the Germans. One year later, these invaders decreed the arrest of many religious and priests.
On 18 September 1940 the Gestapo deported four friars from the Carmel in Kracow. In December, when other friars were arrested, Father Hilary decided to present himself in exchange for an older and sick friar. He was sent to the prison of Montelupi (Kracow), then to the concentration camp of Sachsenchausen and in April 1941 to the concentration camp of Dachau.
Together with the other Carmelites, among whom was Blessed Titus Brandsma (previous Blog), he, encouraged others, praying and giving hope for a better tomorrow. When there was an outbreak of typhus in another barrack, 32 priests presented themselves to the authorities to help the sick. Father Hilary joined this group.
He was heard to say “You know I will not come back from there, but they need us.” His apostolate lasted 21 days because, infected by typhus, he died on 25 March 1945, a few days before the liberation of the concentration camp. His body was cremated in the crematorium of Dachau.
Father
Hilary Januszewski was beatified by Pope Saint John Paul II on 13 June 1999,
during his apostolic visit to Warsaw (Poland) as part of the 108 Polish martyrs
of the Second World War, victims of Nazi persecution.
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