
Maximilian Kolbe
Franciscan martyr who volunteered for starvation to save another's life, embodying redemptive love.
Zaštitništvo
Journalists, drug addicts, political prisoners, families, pro-life movement, concentration camp victims
Vrline i osobine
Životopis
Born Rajmund Kolbe in Poland (1894), Maximilian was a Franciscan friar, journalist, and missionary with extraordinary spiritual intensity. He established a massive monastery called Niepokalanów and used radio and print to spread Catholic devotion to Mary. When Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939, he continued his work until arrested in 1941. Imprisoned at Auschwitz, he ministered to fellow prisoners with quiet heroism. When the Nazis randomly selected ten men for execution by starvation in retaliation for an escape attempt, Maximilian volunteered to take the place of Franciszek Gajowniczek, a married man with children. Starved in Cell 18 for two weeks, he died praying and singing, maintaining supernatural peace while others succumbed to despair. He was executed August 14, 1941, by lethal injection. His voluntary self-sacrifice became a profound witness to redemptive love and the dignity of human life. Canonized in 1982, he represents the Church's cry against totalitarianism and exemplifies Christian love transcending hatred and death.