The Polish
bishops’ conference has agreed to begin the canonization process for the parents
of Saint John Paul II.
The Polish
episcopate made the announcement Oct. 10, setting in motion the first steps for
the beatification of John Paul II’s father, KAROL WOJTYLA, and mother, EMILIA (Kaczorowska).
Karol, a
Polish Army lieutenant, and Emilia, a school teacher, were married in Krakow Feb. 10, 1906. The Catholic couple gave birth to
three children: Edmund in 1906; Olga, who died shortly after her birth; and
Karol Junior in 1920.
The family
was known to be faithful Catholics and rejected the increasing anti-Semitism of
the time.
“The
immediate family strongly influenced spiritual and intellectual development of
the future Pope,” the bishops’ conference said.
Emilia had
received a formal religious education. Before she died of a heart attack and
liver failure in 1929, she was a staple of faith for the house. At the time of
her death, Karol Jr. was a month away from his ninth birthday.
“Emilia Wojtyła graduated from the monastery school of the Sisters of Divine Love. With full dedication and love, she ran the house and looked after the sons Edmund and Karol,” the conference said.
His father
raised his sons alone until his death 12 years later. According to Catholic
Online, Karol was a prayerful man and pushed Karol Jr. to be hardworking and
studious. The father also took on family chores such as sewing his son’s
clothes.
“Karol
Wojtyła senior as a father was a deeply religious, hard-working and conscientious
man. John Paul II repeatedly mentioned that he had seen his father kneeling and
praying even at night. It was his father who taught him the prayer to the Holy
Spirit which accompanied him to the end of his life,” the conference said.
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