Thursday, March 31, 2011

Love without Limits


Father Maximilian Kolbe (1894-1941) was a saintly Franciscan priest of Poland. He was arrested and imprisoned by ‘Gestapo’, the German secret police under the Nazi regime. Later he was shifted to the Nazi concentration camp of Auschwitzin Poland.


One day, one of the prisoners in the concentration camp was found to be missing. The authorities assumed that he had escaped, though later it was found that he had died by drowning in the camp latrine. It was ruled that instead of the missing prisoner, ten prisoners from the same barracks should be starved to death, to deter further attempts for escape. Of the ten prisoners selected to be killed, one was Franciszek Gajowniczek. Hearing the sentence of doom, he cried out desperately, “Oh, my poor wife, my poor children! I shall never see them again.” The prisoners present were in tears seeing this scene. Kolbe was an ascetic priest without a family.


Hearing the loud lamentations of Franciszek, Kolbe boldly stepped forward and said, “I am a Catholic priest. Let me take his place. I am old. He has a wife and children.”


The request of Father Kolbe to die instead of Franciszek was granted. The ten prisoners including Kolbe were shut in a closed chamber and left to die by starvation. Kolbe strengthened the prisoners and led them in prayer and singing of hymns. The prisoners died one after another by dehydration and starvation. Kolbe stayed alive, enlightening them by his words and prayer.


Finally, on 14th August, 1941, Kolbe was killed by injecting poisonous carbolic acid into the vein in his left hand. He readily raised his hand for receiving the deadly injection, with a prayer on his lips. The cell in which Father Kolbe was killed is now a shrine, a source of inspiration to innumerable pilgrims.


Franciszek Gajowniczek died at the age of 95 in 1995; 53 years after Kolbe saved him. He could witness the public proclamation of Kolbe as a saint by Pope John Paul II on 10th October, 1982.


Maximilian Kolbe was a martyr of charity, love and sacrifice. He followed the words of Jesus Christ, “The greatest love a person can have for his friends is to give his life for them”.

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© By Dr. Babu Philip, Professor, Cochin University of Science & Technology, Fine Arts Avenue, Kochi-682016, Kerala, India and Leo. S. John, Maniparambil, Ooriyakunnath,Kunnumbhagom, Kanjirappally, Kottayam-686507, Kerala, India.

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