Soon to be blessed (April 28 in Poland) HANNA HELENA CHRZANOWSKA was a Polish Roman Catholic Benedictine oblate who served as a nurse. She worked in her profession during World War II when
the Nazi regime targeted
Poles, tending to the wounded and the ailing throughout the conflict. She was awarded two
prestigious Polish awards for her good works. Her cause of sainthood began a decade after her death in 1973. Pope Francis declared
her to be Venerable in 2015 upon the confirmation of her heroic virtue.
She will be beatified on 28 April 2018
in Poland .
Hanna was born in 1902 in Warsaw.
She was part of an industrialist (maternal side) and a land-owning household
(paternal side) that maintained a long-standing tradition of charitable works.
Her parents were well known for this in their native Poland . Her home's religious
circumstances were also quite unique since half were Roman Catholic and the
other half was Protestant (descended from the Jauch house).
Her maternal grandfather Karol set up a technical school for aspiring artisans
while his wife Maria set up a health center for poor children in Warsaw .
She was
a relative of the Nobel laureate Henryk Sienkiewicz (on her father's side)
who was best known for writing the novel Quo Vadis.
Since
childhood she suffered from respiratory and immune system deficiencies
and spent a great deal of time in hospitals and sanatoriums in order to recover
from illness. In 1910 the family relocated from Warsaw to Kraków.
Hanna was curious and exuberant, attending
an Ursuline high
school and graduating with honors. During the Bolshevik Revolution she tended to
the wounded soldiers and later began studies at the School
of Nursing in Warsaw in 1920. It was also
around this time that she worked under the Servant of God Magdalena Maria Epstein.
She gained a scholarship to a nursing school in France in
1925 while later going on to work with the members of the U.S. Red Cross as
a nurse in a time when the profession was not so well respected.
She also
traveled to Belgium to observe the nursing profession there as part
of her education in order to gain greater experience and broader knowledge of the
field. During her time as a nurse she became a leading light in the field in
her region and a well known face in her local area due to her temperance
and her good works among the people whom she was dedicated to serving.
Hanna
became an instructor at the University School of Nurses and Hygienists in Krakow from
1926 until 1929 and also served as the editor of the monthly publication
"Nurse Poland "
from 1929 to 1939.
Drawn
to St Benedict and aspiring to follow his
example and the message of the Gospel in
an effort to draw closer to God she became an Oblate, with the desire to fuse her faith with her work as merciful
and charitable.
In 1940
during World War II she lost her father who died
during the Sonderaktion Krakau at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp and
her lieutenant brother Bogden died at the hands of Soviet soldiers on the
orders of Joseph Stalin in the Katyn
massacre. As the war continued she organized nurses for home care in
Warsaw and
helped to both feed and resettle refugees. At the conclusion of the war she
became the head of a nursing home where she attended to administrative duties
and cared for residents while working with nursing students. She also
served as the director of the School
of Psychiatric Nursing
in Kobierzyn until the Communists closed
it. She then moved into nursing the poor and the neglected in her own
parish area. She attained a scholarship to the USA from 1946
until 1947.
In 1966
she was diagnosed with cancer and despite several operations the disease spread. On 12 April 1973 she received the Sacrament of the Sick and the next day lost consciousness, dying a day later. Cardinal Archbishop of Krakow Karol Józef
Wojtyła ( the future St.Pope John
Paul II) celebrated her funeral.
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