Carmelite Priest Aimed to Be Love, Reveal Love, Give Love
"There are close to 700 faithful who receive Holy Communion and this is a reason for joy," the bishop wrote.
Father Häfner "dedicated himself seriously to his obligations and duties," Ambrossi said. "But it was inevitable that his pastoral zeal would put him in conflict with the Nationalists, to the point that, a priest as good and truly available to all as he was, became a political 'enemy.'"
The religious priest's pastoral initiatives annoyed the Nazi regime. On Oct. 3, 1941, he was detained briefly, and on the 31st of the same month, arrested and taken to Dachau concentration camp, where he was branded with the number 28 876.
Ambrossi observed that Father Häfner did not have "the intention to combat head-on the National Socialist regime."
"But," he continued, "the fact is that the complete observance of his priestly ministry led him inevitably to become a victim of the convictions of his conscience, that is, of his pastoral obligations."
Even in the concentration camp, Father Häfner said that in life there could be no enemies.
His aim was "to be love, to reveal love, to give love, so that men will have life and have it in abundance," the postulator said.
The Carmelite in Dachau showed a total abandonment to God, Ambrossi affirmed, such that "we are truly before a martyr of reconciliation, a priest soaked in a profound love of the cross, a most credible witness of the faith."

.jpg)
0 comments:
Post a Comment