
Martyrs Today 
It may be hard for some to believe
that two-thirds
of all the martyrs in Christian history
died
as recently as our twentieth century.
But facts are facts. In conjunction
with
the Jubilee Year 2000, the Pope established
a Commission on New Martyrs which for
the
last five years has been collecting
testimonies
from around the world of people who
died
for their faith in the last hundred
years.
Last year, the Commission published
its first
record with the names of - believe
it or
not - more than thirteen thousand Catholic,
Orthodox, and Protestant witnesses
of the
faith, and the project continues.
This is a staggering number. And it
may seem
far-fetched. Since when - some may
ask -
have Christians been a serious threat
to
anyone? In a culture that tells us
that religion
is a private matter, the very public
witness
of martyrdom can be somewhat embarrassing.
And so it is kept well hidden. Even
today
- in Sudan, North Korea and elsewhere
- Christians
are still dying for their faith.
This silence in the Christian world,
contrasts
sharply with the secular papers, which
constantly
speak of martyrs when they speak of
the suicide
killers in the Muslim world. However
the
Muslim 'sahid' is very different from
the
Christian martyr.
"The Christian martyr does not
commit
suicide to kill others," Andrea
Riccardi,
a professor of the history of Christianity
and Religions at the University of
Rome notes.
"The Christian martyr gives his
life
so that others will not die, so as
not to
abandon his own faith, and to support
other
believers, out of love. He does not
insist
on vengeance or claims.'
The testimonies are varied. On July
24, 1936,
near the start of the Spanish Civil
War,
Republican militiamen in Guadalajara
shot
three Carmelite nuns in the middle
of a street.
They had just left their monastery
when they
were caught. One was killed instantly.
The
other at first refused transport to
a hospital
by a bus driver who wanted to finish
her
off, the third wandered around dazed
until
another band of militia executed her.
Her
last words were 'Viva Cristo Rey!'
In one
week, in Madrid and Barcelona alone,
321
priests had been murdered.
Between 1950 and 1953 in Communist
North
Korea, "50 percent of the hierarchy,
one-third of the clergy, and at least
fifteen
thousand lay persons perished";
many
more died in the notorious Death March
to
the Yalu River.
Hundreds of thousands of Catholics
were murdered
in Mexico from the 1920s on. Priests,
nuns,
and lay people were tortured in Soviet
labor
camps and in German concentration camps.
Edith Stein and Maximilian Kolbe are
among
the most well known figures.
Sadistic brainwashing techniques were
developed
against Romanian Catholics, who nonetheless
kept attending Mass at a rate of almost
80
percent. "Accidents" befell
priests
in Lithuania. "Reeducation centers"
were established by the North Vietnamese.
Missionaries in Angola and the Trappist
monks
at Tibhirine were murdered for their
faith.
In Albania, Catholics-the only religious
group that refused to cede power to
that
Communist state were tortured, their
bishops
"forced to clean the streets and
public
bathrooms wearing clown outfits with
paper
signs across their chests saying, 'I
have
sinned against the people.'" In
1967
the Albanian government outlawed religion
altogether, and declared the traditional
family to be "reactionary."
Over
two thousand religious buildings were
closed
or destroyed, and almost all the clergy
were
imprisoned. Pope John Paul II has said
that
"history has never seen before
what
happened in Albania."
Under Soviet rule, the Ukrainian Catholic
Church was "the largest suppressed
group
of believers in the world." Today
this
persecution continues in North Korea,
China
and in Sudan.
The stories are overwhelming, all the
more
so because they all tell the same tale.
Simone
Weil once wrote that while imaginary
evil
is romantic and exciting, real evil
is "gloomy,
monotonous, barren, and boring."
For
all the perverse ingenuity of their
methods
of destruction, there is a terrifying
sameness
to the regimes. Robert Royal in his
book
'Catholic Martyrs of the Twentieth
Century:
A Comprehensive World History' recounts
page
after page of appalling stories of
interrogations,
torture, brainwashing, deception, and
killing
sprees-all aimed at wiping out faith
in anything
other than the State, and especially
faith
in a God who transcended the State.
The most moving passages however in
Royal's
book have to do not with torture but
with
the peace these people experienced
under
this terrible cruelty. "We were
never
so happy," said Father Alexandru
Ratiu,
who spent sixteen years in Romanian
prisons.
"We never felt the presence of
God so
intimately; and we never prayed more
seriously,
confidently, and effectively than in
those
prison barracks."
What does all this have to do with
us? A
lot, because we also are asked to give
testimony
of our faith! Saint Faustina recounts
in
her diary that once Jesus Christ told
her,
'there is but one price at which souls
are
bought, and that is suffering united
to My
suffering on the cross. Pure love understands
these words; carnal love will never
understand
them.'
Do we understand this? This is the
question!
(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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