First vows on 5 September 1911, his final vows on 1 November 1914.
(Reprinted with
Permission from
http://www.catholicforum.com/saints/saintm01.htm
The Maximillian is not afflilated with any religious or
political group.)
Second of three sons born to a
poor but pious
Catholic family in
Russian occupied
Poland. His parents, both
Franciscan
lay
tertiaries, worked at home as
weavers. His
father, Julius, later ran a
religious
book
store, then enlisted in the
army of Pilsudski, fought for
Polish independence from
Russia, and was
hanged by the
Russians as a traitor in
1914. His
mother, Marianne Dabrowska,
later became a
Benedictine
nun. His brother Alphonse became
a
priest.
Raymond was known as a
mischievous
child, sometimes considered
wild, and a trial to his parents.
However, in
1906 at Pabianice, at age twelve
and around the time of his first
Communion, he received a vision
of the
Virgin Mary that changed his
life.
I asked the Mother of God what was to become of me. Then she came to me holding two crowns, one white, the other red. She asked if I was willing to accept either of these crowns. The white one meant that I should persevere in purity, and the red that I should become a martyr. I said that I would accept them both. - Saint MaximilianHe entered the Franciscan junior seminary in Lwow, Poland in 1907 where he excelled in mathematics and physics. For a while he wanted to abandon the priesthood for the military, but eventually relented to the call to religious life, and on 4 September 1910 he became a novice in the Conventual Franciscan Order at age 16. He took the name Maximilian, made his fhilosophy at the Jesuit Gregorian College in Rome from 1912 to 1915, and theology at the Franciscan Collegio Serafico in Rome from 1915 to 1919. On 16 October 1917, while still in seminary, he and six friends founded the Immaculata Movement (Militia Immaculatae, Crusade of Mary Immaculate) devoted to the conversion of sinners, opposition to freemasonry (which was extremely anti-Catholic at the time), spread of the Miraculous Medal (which they wore as their habit), and devotion to Our Lady and the path to Christ. Stricken with tuberculosis which nearly killed him, and left him in frail in health the rest of his life. Ordained on 28 April 1918 in Rome at age 24. Received his Doctor of Theology on 22 July 1922; his insights into Marian theology echo today through their influence on Vatican II.
Maximilian returned to
Poland on
29 July
1919 to
teach history in the
Krakow
seminary. He had to take a
medical leave from
10 August
1920 to
28 April
1921 to be treated for
tuberculosis at the
hospital at Zakpane in the Tatra
Mountains. In January
1922 he began publication of the
magazine
Knight of the
Immaculate
to fight religious apathy; by 1927 the magazine had a press run of 70,000 issues. He was forced to take another medical leave from 18 September 1926 to 13 April 1927, but the work continued. The friaries from which he had worked were not large enough for his work, and in 1927 Polish Prince Jan Drucko-Lubecki gave him land at Teresin near Warsaw. There he founded a new monastery of Niepokalanow, the City of the Immaculate which was consecrated on 8 December 1927. At its peak the
Knight of the Immaculate
had a press run of 750,000 copies a month. A junior seminary was started on the grounds in 1929. In 1935 the house began printing a daily Catholic newspaper, The Little Daily with a press run of 137,000 on work days, 225,000 on Sundays and holy days.
to fight religious apathy; by 1927 the magazine had a press run of 70,000 issues. He was forced to take another medical leave from 18 September 1926 to 13 April 1927, but the work continued. The friaries from which he had worked were not large enough for his work, and in 1927 Polish Prince Jan Drucko-Lubecki gave him land at Teresin near Warsaw. There he founded a new monastery of Niepokalanow, the City of the Immaculate which was consecrated on 8 December 1927. At its peak the
Knight of the Immaculate
had a press run of 750,000 copies a month. A junior seminary was started on the grounds in 1929. In 1935 the house began printing a daily Catholic newspaper, The Little Daily with a press run of 137,000 on work days, 225,000 on Sundays and holy days.
Not content with his work in
Poland, Maximilian and four
brothers left for
Japan in
1930. Within a month of their
arrival, penniless and knowing no
Japanese, Maximilian was printing a
Japanese version of the
Knight; the magazine, Seibo
no Kishi grew to a circulation
of 65,000 by
1936. In
1931 he founded a
monastery in Nagasaki,
Japan comparable to Niepokalanow.
It survived the war, including the
nuclear bombing, and serves today as
a center of
Franciscan work in
Japan.
In mid-1932
he left
Japan for Malabar,
India where he founded a third
Niepokalanow house. However, due to
a lack of manpower, it did not
survive.
Poor health forced him to curtail
his
missionary work and return to
Poland in
1936. On
8 December
1938 the
monastery started its own radio
station. By
1939 the
monastery housed a religious
community of nearly 800 men, the
largest in the world in its day, and
was completely self-sufficient
including medical
facilities and a
fire brigade staffed by the
religious brothers.
Arrested with several of his
brothers on
19 September
1939 following the Nazi invasion
of
Poland. Others at the
monastery were briefly
exiled, but the
prisoners were released on
8 December
1939, and the men returned to
their work. Back at Niepokalanow he
continued his
priestly ministry, The brothers
housed 3,000
Polish refugees, two-thirds of
whom were Jewish, and continued
their publication work, including
materials considered
anti-Nazi. For this work the
presses were shut down, the
congregation suppressed, the
brothers dispersed, and Maximilian
was
imprisoned in Pawiak
prison,
Warsaw,
Poland on
17 February
1941.
On
28 May
1941 he was transferred to
Auschwitz and branded as
prisoner 16670. He was assigned
to a special work group staffed by
priests and supervised by
especially vicious and abusive
guards. His calm dedication to
the
faith brought him the worst jobs
available, and more beatings than
anyone else. At one point he was
beaten, lashed, and left for
dead. The
prisoners managed to smuggle him
into the camp
hospital where he spent his
recovery time hearing
confessions. When he returned to
the camp, Maximilian ministered to
other
prisoners, including conducting
Mass and delivering
communion using smuggled bread
and wine.
In July
1941 there was an escape from
the camp. Camp protocol, designed to
make the
prisoners
guard each other, required that
ten men be slaughtered in
retribution for each escaped
prisoner. Francis Gajowniczek, a
married man with young
children was chosen to
die for the escape. Maximilian
volunteered to take his place, and
died as he had always wished -
in service.
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