A modern
saint who had a great devotion to the Eucharist is KARL LEISNER.
Blessed Karl was born in 1915 in Bavaria, the first-born of a family of five.
In his parents he saw the example of a real Christian faith lived out in the
everyday life. When he began grammar school in Kleve,
North Germany, he joined the Catholic Youth
Movement where he enjoyed the companionship of friends with whom he could share
the adventure of long mountain hikes as well as learning more about the Scriptures
and gaining a deep love of Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament.
From an
early age Bl. Karl kept a dairy, which shows, that in spite of difficulties, he
tried to make his daily life pleasing to God. After leaving school in 1934,
Karl decided to study for the priesthood at the seminary in Munster.
Throughout Germany the
Nazi ideology was taking hold and the Hitler Youth Movement was having a great
influence on young Germans. The Bishop of Munster decided that the role of
leader of the Catholic Boys Movement was becoming too dangerous for a layman
and from the seminarians he chose Karl to run the youth movement.
Karl took
this work very seriously and in addition to his studies he undertook long
journeys by motorbike through the countryside to encourage and lead the
Catholic Boys groups entrusted to him, helping them to remain faithful to God
in an increasingly Godless and threatening society. The state authorities
resented the work of the Catholic Youth movement and the Gestapo began to watch
Karl's movements.
Sent to
study in Freiburg for two terms, Karl met
Elisabeth, eldest daughter of his landlady. Sharing his ideals he found in
Elisabeth a friend with whom he would have liked to spend the rest of his life.
For months he struggled to make up his mind where his vocation lay. Was God
calling him to be a priest or to marry Elisabeth?
Finally in March 1939 he
wrote in his diary, "It was a fight to the death, but I am called to be a
priest - and for this call I am going to sacrifice everything." Elisabeth
understood and supported him in his decision.Karl was
ordained a deacon on 25th March 1939 and was to be ordained a priest in a few
months time. During the spring Karl was found to be suffering from tuberculosis
and was sent by his doctor to recover at a nursing home in the Black Forest. It was there that he was arrested by the
Gestapo because of a comment he made when he was told by a fellow-patient that
there had been an attempt to assassinate Hitler. Karl was immediately
imprisoned in Freiburg then taken to Sachsenhausen concentration camp from
which he was transferred to Dachau
in December 1940.
Allotted a
new name, "Prisoner 223562", the young deacon was sent to barrack
number 28. Over 2,600 Catholic priests, many of whom were deported from Poland, as well
as a large number of seminarians and Protestant ministers were kept in
terrible conditions. Overcrowding, starvation, forced labor and disease took
their toll. Karl's tuberculosis deteriorated and he was sent to the camp
"infirmary" where up to 150 of the sick were left to die. For many of
these fellow-sufferers Karl was a sign of hope in a world of despair.
His
kindness and patience were striking. In letters to his family he remembered
birthdays, recalled happy events of the past and tried to spare his parents the
pain of knowing his true state of health. This was not difficult as letters were
censored and prisoners were forbidden to give bad news. Faithful to the Rosary
and the Divine Office, Karl's love for God grew stronger in spite of his
circumstances. Mass was celebrated each day in the camp by the priest prisoners
and Karl was able secretly to reserve the Blessed Sacrament in the infirmary so
that the dying might receive Holy Communion.Still a
deacon, Karl longed to be a priest. In September 1944 an unexpected event
occurred when Bishop Piguet of Clermont-Ferrand in France was brought to Dachau, arrested in May for assisting people
to escape from the Germans. Suddenly Karl's hope became a possibility. Thanks
to the help of a young postulant from a nearby convent who acted as messenger,
the necessary permission was obtained from Karl's own Bishop and preparations
were made for Karl's Ordination to the priesthood by Bishop Piguet.
Although
the Ordination was to be kept secret it was fitting that the ceremony should be
honored with the greatest possible dignity. Fellow prisoners made an Episcopal
ring and crosier and Karl was ordained a priest on Gaudete Sunday 17th December
1944 in the chapel in Dachau
concentration camp.
A number of Protestant ministers who had heard of the plan
for Karl's Ordination had saved biscuits and coffee sent by relations to give
him a secret reception after the Ordination Mass. The new priest, however, was
now so gravely ill, he was only able to stand with difficulty, and it was not until the
Feast of Saint Stephen, 26th December that he could offer his first and only Mass.
Bl. Karl's
state of health worsened in subsequent weeks. He was dying. The Liberation of
Dachau by the Americans took place on 29th April 1945 and Karl was taken, with
the help of the brave local parish priest to a nursing home at Planegg in a
forest ten kilometres south-west of Munich.
Here, at last was peace for Karl. The dreadful images of the concentration camp
began to fade. Filled with gratitude for the kindness of the nursing nuns who
cared for him, Karl wrote in his diary, "I am a free man! Alleluia! ... My
human dignity has been given back. Flowers on the table. The Crucifix on the
wall." He entrusted everything to Our Lady. Looking out at the forest
Karl's heart rejoiced, "Here the body and soul can be restored. I can pray
well again. In the silence God speaks even though I am exhausted."
These days
of peace continued and the medical care was excellent but Karl's tuberculosis
was now far advanced and his condition worsened. At last, having made the
difficult journey, his families were able to visit him after his long
imprisonment. They found him so weak that his mother had to help him eat. And
yet he was happy. The last words written in his diary were, "Bless also,
oh, Most Holy One, my enemies!"His
strength was leaving him but in his periods of consciousness Karl showed great
interest in the people around him. To his mother he confided the truth, "I
must tell you something, but don't be sad. I know that I am going to die soon,
but I am happy". Conscious and in pain Karl received the Last Rites on August 12 and died that same day.
Karl
Leisner was beatified on Sunday 23rd June 1996 in Berlin by Pope St. John Paul II. His feast day is August 12.
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