She was born
on the 16th of March 1899 in Nawojowa, a town near Nowy Sącz. She was baptized
and given the names: Stanisława Marta Józefa. Her father was an organist. He
also worked in a savings bank and in the District Office. There were four other
children in the family. When Stanisława was 8 her mother died and two years
later so did her father. After her parents’ death, the Dominican Sisters from a
nearby convent run by Sr Stanisława Lenart took care of her. There she finished
school and then she started her studies in the Teachers’ Seminar in Nowy Sącz
but she didn’t complete because she began her religious formation in Wielowieś.
On the 3rd of August 1917 she assumed the habit together with a new name: Maria
Julia. Since the 4th of September 1918 she continued her studies in the Holy
Family Teachers’ Seminar in Kraków, from which she graduated in May 1919.
After having
completed her studies Sister Julia Rodzińska began to work as a tutor, mainly
among orphaned children. She made her monastic vows on the 5th of August 1924.
She continued her education; in 1925-1926 she completed an Advanced Teachers’
Course and at the age of 27 she was named the director of the State Primary
School of Our Lady of the Gate of Dawn in Vilnius. Her health was poor already
then. She suffered from a very serious stomach disorder due to which she had a
difficult operation in 1937.
After the
Soviet army occupied Vilnius the situation of the Dominican Sisters
deteriorated. In September 1940 the sisters who worked as teachers and tutors
were dismissed from work. At first, they tried to work as technical personnel
but finally in 1941 the Home for Orphans entered in hands of the Lithuanian
authorities and Sister Julia left the convent forever. The schooling work done
by the Dominican Sisters since 1922 has terminated.
The
Dominicans did not leave Vilnius. Together with Sister Julia, they stayed on
Parkowa Street and in the convent of the Nuns of Visitation on Rossa Street. In
these conditions sister Julia continued to teach in secret, also during the
German occupation, until she was arrested in 1943.
On the 12th
of July 1943 Sister Julia was arrested by the Gestapo on a charge of political
activity and collaboration with the Polish partisans. She was imprisoned in
Łukiszki in Vilnius and for almost a year she was kept in an isolation cell.
Then she was transported to the disciplinary camp in Prowieniszki near Kaunas
but soon she was evacuated together with other prisoners to Stutthof
concentration camp. She arrived there on the 9th of July 1944 and was given
number 40992. Together with a group of women from the Vilnius intelligence she
was assigned to block no. 27 in the “Jewish Camp”. The conditions were hard to
describe. Filth, vermin, overcrowding in the barracks (three or four women
slept on one bed on a three-storey bunk bed), low-calorie food rations given
out in extreme conditions, unbearable physical work, limited access to water,
lack of hygienic products, necessity to satisfy one’s physiological needs in
public – these are only some of the elements of the indirect extermination used
in the camp. An additional torment was the inhumane treatment carried out by
the functional prisoners, mainly German criminals, and SS men.
In these
conditions sister Julia did not lose her hope for survival. She shared her hope
and spiritual strength with other prisoners. In the camp it had a special meaning
because the inhumane treating distorted the prisoners’ psyche and changed the
moral norms of many of them. In the barrack, where mostly Jewess lived, Sister
Julia organized and led the prayers. She also constantly reminded the prisoners
about the religious values. Religious observances were strictly prohibited and
punished in the camp. Therefore this was one of the forms of moral resistance
of the prisoners to what was happening in the camp. Sister Julia was never
guided by nationality or religion on her way of helping others. She was kind to
all the needful. She was known as the one who consoled and encouraged all the
adrift and miserable. She knew that one prisoners, whose wife was living in the
“Jewish Camp”, was about to commit suicide. She sent him notes until he assured
her that he wouldn’t take his life. According to the testimony of this
prisoner, he survived the camp thanks to Sister Julia, who awoken his hope for
survival and overcame the fear of the life in the camp.
In November
1944 a new typhus epidemic had place in the camp. The illness spread mainly
among the prisoners in the Jewish part of the camp. The authorities of KL
Stutthof isolated the “Jewish Camp” from the rest of the camp and left the
women without any help. Risking her own life, Sister Julia Rodzińska undertook
the task of helping the Jews from block XXX, who were dying alone. When the
majority avoided this “death block” fearing the infection, Sister Julia took a
decision that meant the acceptance of death among those who she helped. She
organized water to drink, dressings and medicines that where available in the
camp. She served the needful even when she got infected with typhus and was
suffering from serious illness.
The
Dominican Sister, Julia Rodzińska, died on the 20th of February 1945 in block
no. 27. Her body was burnt on a pyre. An amazing testimony about the heroic
conduct and the martyr’s death of Sr Julia has been beard by Eva Hoff, a
prisoner of KL Stutthof, a German Jewess, who survived the marine evacuation
and after the war settled in Sweden. There, she gave an oral and written
account of the life and the circumstances of the death of Sr Julia in KL
Stutthof. The account has been confirmed by other prisoners of KL Stutthof and
Reverend Franciszek Grucza who heard Sr Julia’s confessions and gave her
Communion.
On the 13th
of June 1999, during his pilgrimage to Poland, the Holy Father John Paul II
beatified 108 martyrs of World War II. Sister Julia Rodzińska, the Dominican
nun, was among them.
On the 12 of
June 2006 the Primary School in Nawojowa has been named after blessed Sister
Julia Rodzińska.
Text based
on the publications:
1.
Elżbieta Grot - „Błogosławieni męczennicy obozu Stutthof” wyd. Państwowe Muzeum Stutthof
Gdańsk 1999,
2.
Mirosława Justyna Dombek OP – „Moc w słabości” wyd. Wydawnictwo Karmelitów
Bosych 31-222 Kraków, ul. Z. Glogera 5, 1998.
ws
Tłumaczenie:
Katarzyna Flis
Place the burning body of Julia Rodzińska |
Exhibiton of the Stutthof Museum |
Exhibiton of the Stutthof Museum |
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