The Archbishop
of Vilnius believes that Lithuania
has a “big message” for the world.
Amazingly
enough Archbishop Gintaras Grušas ((pronounced
“Grushas”) was born in Washington,
D.C., in 1961, to a family of
Lithuanian origin. He spent the first half of his life in the United States,
becoming heavily involved in Lithuanian Catholic organizations.
He was
active at the Lithuanian parish of St. Casimir in Los
Angeles and with the Catholic Ateitis
Federation, as well as serving as head of the World
Lithuanian Youth Association from 1983 to 1987.
He studied
mathematics and information technology at UCLA, before working at IBM.
“I’m very thankful for my American experience
and all that it gave me. I’m also very thankful for my Lithuanian heritage and
roots. And I think it’s a blessing to have the mix. They’re actually quite
different views of the world,” he said.
“My first
language, however, was Lithuanian. When I was born, my mother didn’t speak
English, so it was my mother tongue in a very strict sense. So I’m very much
both (Lithuanian and American). I think on two channels.”
Feeling
called to the priesthood, he read theology at the Franciscan
University in Steubenville, Ohio.
He then studied for two years at Rome’s Pontifical Beda College,
adding Italian to his three other languages: English, Lithuanian, and French.
The
archbishop of the country’s capital, Vilnius,
points out that the city witnessed one of the most momentous events in
20th-century Catholic history, for it was there that the Polish nun St. Faustina Kowalska experienced many
of the visions of Jesus that she recorded in her Diary.
The city
contains the original Divine Mercy image, the only one that St.
Faustina saw before her death in 1938 at the age of 33.
“The convent where
St. Faustina lived and saw the revelations is still open. It’s a convent, but
it’s also a pilgrimage site. The four cities that are associated with St.
Faustina -- Warsaw, Kraków, Płock,
and Vilnius --
were given the mandate during her canonization by St. John Paul II to carry the
banner of Divine Mercy out to the world. So, as the bishop of Vilnius, I have that mandate as well.”
“This is a
time with the pandemic. Praying for God’s mercy is ever so much important. Also
works of mercy towards our neighbors: that is a message that Pope Francis
repeats very often and reminds us of.”
(Image: Stephen Whatley)
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