
80 Years Later: Remembering the Catholic Martyrs Killed in Auschwitz During World War II
The Auschwitz martyrs’ legacy of holiness continues to be a source of inspiration for Catholics worldwide.
The Auschwitz martyrs’ legacy of holiness continues to be a source of inspiration for Catholics worldwide.
COMMENTARY: Pope St. John XXIII was central to maintaining the memory of World War II’s persecuted Jews.
'In all the long years since my liberation from these hells on earth, I have not stopped telling what I experienced then, what I was a victim of and an eyewitness to.'
Born in Hungary in 1931, Edith Bruck survived the Nazi concentration camps in Auschwitz and Dachau, where she was sent with her parents, two brothers, and a sister at the age of 12.
The pope said that God sows seeds in us every day, but whether they take root depends on how prayerful and open our heart is as we approach the Scriptures.
‘I want to remember in my heart all the victims of the Holocaust. May their sufferings and their tears never be forgotten,’ the Pope tweeted Jan. 27.
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