
a Gift, an Invocation and a Promise 
In 1997, as the world focused on the deaths
of Princess Diana and Mother Teresa,
another
significant passing went almost unnoticed.
Austrian psychiatrist Viktor Frankl
died
on September 2 at the age of 93.
Search for Meaning
During World War II, Dr. Frankl was imprisoned
at Auschwitz, where he was stripped of his
identity as a medical doctor and forced to
work as a cheap laborer. All his notes, which
represented his life's work were destroyed.
His father, mother, brother and his pregnant
wife died in the camps. Immersed in this
great suffering and loss, Frankl began to
wonder why some of his fellow prisoners were
able not only to survive these horrifying
conditions, but to grow in the process.
A psychiatrist who personally has faced
such
extremity is a psychiatrist worth listening
to. He discovered a link between prisoners
loss of faith in the future and a dangerous
giving up. He emerged from Auschwitz
believing
that "Everything can be taken
from man
but one thing : the last of all human
freedoms
- to choose one's attitude in any given
set
of circumstances." The most basic
human
motivation, he concluded, is the will
to
meaning. Give man a meaning and he
will survive!
As Nietzsche put it, 'He who has a
why to
live for, can bear almost any how.'
Behavior
is driven by a need to find meaning
and purpose.
The Mystery of the Cross
On Sunday, October 11, Pope John Paul
II
is going to canonize a Discalced Carmelite
Sister who also lived the atrocities
of Auschwitz.
Her life story is remarkable confirmation
of what Doctor Viktor Frankl discovered.
Born into an Orthodox Jewish family on October
12, 1891 in Breslau (Germany), now Wroclaw,
Poland, Edith Stein renounced her faith when
she was a teenager and became an atheist.
In her twenties she already had made a name
for herself in the cultural circles of the
University Gottingen. Her deep, analytical
mind and unwavering character ("Everything
about her is true") urged Edmund Husserl,
the 'father' of phenomenology, to appoint
her as his assistant at the University of
Freiburg. There she obtained her doctorate
in philosophy with a thesis on the problem
of Empathy.
At Gottingen and Freiburg she came
into contact
with the Catholic faith. Her ardent
search
for truth ('my only passion') led her
to
a deep encounter with the autobiography
of
the Spanish mystic St. Theresa of Avila.
This fusion of truth and love in Jesus
Christ
transformed her. She was thirty years
old
when she was baptized. Her family were
extremely
resentful of this step; her mother
cried
bitterly when Edith told her of her
decision
to become a Catholic.
While teaching at a Dominican girls'
school
in Speyer (1922 - 1932), she translated
various
works of Saint Thomas Aquinas and of
Cardinal
Newman to familiarize herself with
the Catholic
thought.
She was also invited all over Europe
to give
lectures on the vocation of women in
contemporary
society. Edith Stein was acclaimed
for her
innovative approach to the topic of
woman
in modern life. All this, however,
had to
stop because of the vicious anti-semitic
legislation passed by the Nazi government.
When she was forty one, Edith entered
the
Carmelite convent at Cologne, taking
the
religious name Theresa Benedicta of
the Cross.
There she completed her metaphysical
work
'Finite and Infinite Being', an attempt
to
synthesize the diverse philosophies
of Aquinas
and Husserl.
In 1938, with the Nazi threat growing,
she
was transferred to the Carmelite convent
at Echt in the Netherlands. This proved
insufficient
to ensure her safety. On July 26, 1942
the
Nazi Commissioner, irritated with the
stand
the Catholic Church took against the
deportation
of the Jews, ordered the arrest of
all non-Aryan
Roman Catholics.
With her sister Rosa, also a convert,
Edith
Stein was seized by the Gestapo and
shipped
in a cattle truck to the concentration
camp
at Auschwitz. One week later, she was
sent
to the gas chamber, where she died
with her
sister. The laconic official notice
of her
death reads like this :
Number 44074 : Edith Theresia Hedwig
Stein,
Echt
Born - October 12, 1891, Breslau
Died - August 9, 1942.
The vision or The Marriage of the Lamb
"Without a vision, people perish,"
says Proverbs. Conversely, people with
vision
will thrive. A vision provides hope!
And
hope gets your mind and spirit moving
in
a positive behavior.
This is what Doctor Viktor Frankl believed.
This is what Edith Stein lived. She
was able
to go beyond reality while remaining
anchored
in this reality.
What was the vision of Edith Stein?
A very
important question for us all because
we
too need to develop a mental vision
for our
life that will give us strength, direction,
and purpose. Her vision is permeated
with
a living faith. Charles Krauthammer
in Time
magazine wrote an essay titled "Will
it be coffee, tea or He?" The
subtitle
is "Religion was once a conviction.
Now it is a taste." Of course
he was
underscoring the naive commitment behind
much of religion today.
Edith always believed in her Jewish
heritage.
Many interpreted her conversion to
the Catholic
faith and her entry into Carmel as
a flight,
an absurd attempt to escape the Nazi
vindictiveness.
She knew this was false. In fact she
never
let her vows or her baptism give her
a slightest
advantage over her persecuted race.
"Come,
let us go for our people," was
the last
expression she said in Carmel as she
encouraged
her disorientated sister Rosa to follow
the
Gestapo.
She just wanted to go beyond words.
She just
wanted to do something. And what she
did
was to unite her historically determined
cross of membership in the Jewish people
with the cross of Jesus Christ. In
Jesus
Christ she found it possible to give
a redemptive
meaning to suffering. "If you
follow
Christ, it could cost you your life,"
she once wrote. She was prophetically
right.
Her Jesuit friend, Father John Hirschmann
in an address he delivered in Berlin,
in
1979, spoke of how Edith was haunted
by the
dilemma of who will atone of what is
happening
to the Jews in the name of the German
people.
Let us not forget that Edith herself
was
a German!
One answer is to answer hatred with
hatred.
"Although we know that God is
merciful,
please God do not have mercy on those
who
created this place. God of forgiveness,
do
not forgive those murderers of Jewish
children
here." This was the prayer of
the Nobel
prize-winner Elie Wiesel who suffered
Auschwitz
as a child . This reaction is understandable
and logical.
Edith Stein answered differently. Very
differently.
She realized that if the victims, instead
of letting their wounds produce new
hatred,
would willingly carry the sufferings
of their
fellow victims and of their torturers,
then
they would unleash a powerful energy
which
will save many. "Bound to Him,
you are
omnipresent as he is."
"Had not Jesus," Edith used
to
argue, "when he prayed for those
who
hated him, those who crucified and
pierced
him, turned his wounds into the symbol
of
love that proved to be stronger in
the end?"
Auschwitz unfortunately is still alive.
Look
at Ruanda and its genocide , ex-Jugoslavia
and its ethnic cleansing, the millions
of
abortions and drug victims... But luckily
Edith Stein is also alive in many who
"want
to be married to the Lamb by allowing
themselves
to be fastened to the cross with him".
A love which suffers the cross will
ultimately
overcome all egotism and conceit. This
is
the real vision.
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
notice
is included.
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