"I want to die in place of this prisoner."
FOR MILLIONS the bleak image of the gates of the Nazi extermination camp
at Auschwitz-Birkenau have come to symbolize an age of genocide. The commemoration
of one Christian man who died there, in light of the destruction of five
million Jewish lives between 1941-5, may give us reason to hesitate. But
Maximilian Kolbe, who died as prisoner 16770 in Auschwitz-Birkenau, is
much remembered in the Christian Church. He offered his own life to save
a fellow prisoner, Franciszek Gajowniczek, condemned to death by
the camp authorities after a successful escape by a fellow prisoner.
Kolbe was born on 8 January 1894 in Zdunska Wola. His parents were devout
and nationalistic. At the age of eighteen he went to Rome to study philosophy
and theology. In October 1917 he and six other students formed a new body,
Militia Immaculatae, which promoted devotion to the Virgin Mary,
worked to secure converts and to perform good works.
Kolbe returned to Poland to lecture at the Fransciscan seminary at Cracow.
In October 1927 Prince Jan Drucki-Lubecki gave to the movement a plot
of land near Warsaw to develop their work: this became Niepokalanow, the
city of the Immaculatae. Here the community flourished, publishing prolifically,
and soon its influence spread across Poland. Its journal was not uncontroversial.
A number of issues contained antisemitic articles, but they were not written
by Kolbe himself, and he was known to censure the other editors
for such work.
In 1930 Kolbe travelled with four of his brothers to Japan, to Nagasaki.
There they bought a second plot of land, formerly a cemetery for untouchables.
They built a house there and published another journal, provoking curiosity
and interest in the city.
Six years later Kolbe returned again to Poland. By now Niepokalanow was
producing nine journals with huge print runs. Kolbe viewed it not as a
business, but as "a modern workshop of the improvement of man".
When war broke out, he sent his brothers away, but remained there himself.
He was soon interned. He resisted pressure to apply for release, but was
for a time free. He was detained again. At Auschwitz he was known discreetly
to give his own food to other prisoners, even as his own health crumbled,
to hear confessions and, in the face of stern prohibitions, to celebrate
mass. It was late in July 1941 that a prisoner in his own block escaped,
and now Kolbe stepped forward to make his sacrifice.
In the starvation cell six of the ten who had been selected died within
two weeks. Kolbe was still fully conscious when, on the eve of the Assumption
of Mary, 14 August 1941, he was killed by lethal injection.
The cell where he died is now a shrine. Maximilian Kolbe was beatified
as Confessor by Paul VI in 1970, and canonized as Martyr by Pope John
Paul II in 1982. His image may be found in churches across Europe.