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St. Maximilian
was born Raymond Kolbe in Poland, January 8, 1894. In 1910, he
entered the Conventual Franciscan Order. He was sent to study
in Rome where he was ordained a priest in 1918.
Father Maximilian
returned to Poland in 1919 and began spreading his Militia of
the Immaculata movement of Marian consecration (whose members
are also called MIs), which he founded on October 16, 1917. In
1927, he established an evangelization center near Warsaw called
Niepokalanow, the "City of the Immaculata."
By 1939, the City had expanded from eighteen friars to an incredible
650, making it the largest Catholic religious house in the world.
To better "win
the world for the Immaculata," the friars utilized the most
modern printing and administrative techniques. This enabled them
to publish countless catechetical and devotional tracts, a daily
newspaper with a circulation of 230,000 and a monthly magazine
with a circulation of over one million. Maximilian started a
shortwave radio station and planned to build a motion picture
studio--he was a true "apostle of the mass media."
He established a City of the Immaculata in Nagasaki, Japan, in
1930, and envisioned missionary centers worldwide.
Maximilian was
a ground-breaking theologian. His insights into the Immaculate
Conception anticipated the Marian theology of the Second Vatican
Council and further developed the Church's understanding of Mary
as "Mediatrix" of all the graces of the Trinity, and
as "Advocate" for God's people.
In 1941, the
Nazis imprisoned Father Maximilian in the Auschwitz death camp.
There he offered his life for another prisoner and was condemned
to slow death in a starvation bunker. On August 14, 1941, his
impatient captors ended his life with a fatal injection. Pope
John Paul II canonized Maximilian as a "martyr of charity"
in 1982. St. Maximilian Kolbe is considered a patron of journalists,
families, prisoners, the pro-life movement and the chemically
addicted.
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