Three Sundays ago (September 10th, 2023) a most remarkable Beatification occurred. Jozef and Wictoria Ulma and their seven children were declared “blessed” by the Catholic Church. They are blood martyrs of charity for having risked their lives to hide Jewish neighbors who were being hunted down for extermination by the Nazi German occupiers during World War II.
In 1939, on the eve of the German invasion of Poland, there were 4,500 people living in the village now called Markowa (southeastern Poland), 120 of them Jews. In 1942. the Nazi policy towards the Jews went from murderous persecution to outright, organized massmurder, Hitler’s so-called “Final Solution” to the “Jewish Question” in Europe. The wellpublicized Nazi penalty for anyone harboring Jews was death.
Jozef Ulma and his wife Wictoria were among those Poles who took the personal risk to hide Jews. They took in Saul Goldman and his four sons, Golda Gruenfeld, and Lea Didner and her daughter Reszla who was five or six-years-old.
For more than a year, their families lived as one: the men tanning hides and skins for sale; the children growing into the world together, reading, helping their mothers raise their children, performing chores. Jozef, a farmer by trade, was an amateur photographer and documented the daily workings of their domestic church… (“The Good Samaritans of Markowa, Poland”, by Nicholas Tomaino. Houses of Worship, Wall Street Journal, September 15th, 2023)
Betrayed by an informer to the Nazis, German officers and collaborationist Polish “Blue Police” raided the Markowa farm at 4 AM on March 24th, 1944. First they murdered the Jews. Then they took the Ulma family out front. They shot dead the parents. Finally, they shot dead all of the children: Stasia, 7; Barbara, 6: Wladyslaw, 5: Franciszek, 3; Antoni, 2; and Maria 1. After the marauders had looted the house and left, villagers came to give the victims a proper burial. There they discovered that Wictoria, who was seven months pregnant, had gone into labor during the execution and given birth to a baby son. In the beatification of the Family Ulma, this baby was included—the Catholic Church’s first such beatification of an entire family. A crowd of 30,000 people attended the Mass of Beatification in Markowa on September 10th.
In their family Bible, Jozef and Wictoria Ulma had underlined passages from the Parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:30-37). After Jesus’ words: “Which of these three, in thy opinion, was neighbor to him that fell among the robbers? But [the lawyer] said: He that showed mercy to him. And Jesus said to him: Go, and do thou in like manner”, was scribbled in the margin, “Yes!”.
Despite the massacre at the Ulma farm, not all of the Jews in hiding in Markowa were betrayed. Several days after Nicholas Tomaino’s essay, the following letter appeared in the Wall Street Journal:
My mother and her family were hidden during World War II by Antoni and Dorota Szylar, who were next-door neighbors to the Ulma Family. Even after the Ulmas were killed for protecting Jews, the Szylars continued to shelter my mother and six other family members for 17 months, knowing that they, too, would be killed if found out. It is a testament to the strong Christian faith of the Szylars that I am here today.
RUTH OSOWSKY HEISLER
Kew Gardens, N.Y.
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
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