Honorific Prefix: | Saint |
Andrew Bobola | |
Honorific Suffix: | SJ |
Birth Date: | 1591 |
Death Date: | 16 May 1657 |
Feast Day: | 16 May |
Venerated In: | Roman Catholicism |
Birth Place: | Strachocina, Sandomir Palatine, Lesser Poland, Crown of the Kingdom of Poland, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. |
Death Place: | Janów, Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth |
Titles: | Martyr of Poland |
Beatified Date: | 30 October 1853 |
Beatified Place: | Rome, Papal States |
Beatified By: | Pope Pius IX |
Canonized Date: | 17 April 1938 |
Canonized Place: | Vatican City |
Canonized By: | Pope Pius XI |
Patronage: | Poland; Archdiocese of Warsaw |
Major Shrine: | Shrine of Saint Andrew Bobola, Warsaw, Poland |
Andrew Bobola, SJ (Polish: Andrzej Bobola; 1591 – 16 May 1657) was a Polish missionary and martyr of the Society of Jesus, known as the Apostle of Lithuania and the "hunter of souls".[1] He was beaten and tortured to death during the Khmelnytsky Uprising. He was canonized in 1938 by Pope Pius XI.
Bobola was born in 1591 into a noble family in the Sandomir Palatinate in the Province of Lesser Poland of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland, then a constituent part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. In 1611 he entered the Society of Jesus in Vilnius, then in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the other part of the Commonwealth. He subsequently professed solemn vows and was ordained in 1622, after which he served for several years as an advisor, preacher, superior of a Jesuit residence, and other jobs in various places.
From 1652 Bobola also worked as a country "missionary", in various locations of Lithuania: these included Polotsk, where he was probably stationed in 1655, and also Pinsk, (both now in Belarus). On 16 May 1657, during the Khmelnytsky Uprising, he was captured in Pinsk, and then killed in the village of Janów (now Ivanava, Belarus), by the Cossacks of Bohdan Chmielnicki.
Several descriptions of Bobola's death exist, with these invariably involving him being subjected to a variety of tortures before being killed:
In contrast to the above, a Russian examination of Bobola's corpse in January 1923 found no traces of gross mechanical violence on the surviving parts of the corpse that could establish cause of death.[4]
Bobola's body was originally buried in the Jesuit church in Pinsk. It was later moved to their church in Polotsk. By the beginning of the 18th century, however, nobody knew where Bobola's body was buried. In 1701 Father Martin Godebski, S.J., the rector of the Pinsk College, reputedly had a vision of Bobola. This caused him to order a search for the body. It was reportedly found completely incorrupt, which is recognized by the Church and its supporters as evidence of holiness.
On 23 June 1922, the coffin with the relics of Andrew Bobola was opened in Polotsk and an examination was carried out. In December 1922, the coffin with the corpse of Andrew Bobola was delivered to Moscow and placed in the hall of the Popular Exhibition on Health Protection of the People's Commissariat for Health. In January 1923, he was examined by a special commission and an act was drawn up, according to which the corpse of Andrew Bobola is a naturally mummified corpse, which is in the stage of slow decomposition. The results of the examinations were published in 1924 in the journal Revolution and Church. Later described by an American journalist as a "remarkably well-preserved mummy", to the Museum of Hygiene of People's Commissioners of Health in Moscow. The whereabouts of the remains were not known to the Catholic authorities, and Pope Pius XI charged the Papal Famine Relief Mission in Russia, headed by American Jesuit Father Edmund A. Walsh, with the task of locating and "rescuing" them. In October 1923—as a kind of "pay" for help during famine—the remains were released to Walsh and his assistant director, Father Louis J. Gallagher, S.J. Well-packed by the two Jesuits, they were delivered to the Holy See by Gallagher on All Saints' Day (1 November) 1923.[5] [6] In May 1924, the relics were installed in Rome's Church of the Gesù, the main church of the Society of Jesus.[6]
Since 19 June 1938 the body has been venerated at a shrine in Warsaw,[7] with an arm remaining at the original shrine in Rome (see photo at left).
Declared blessed by Pope Pius IX on 30 October 1853, Bobola was canonized by Pope Pius XI on 17 April 1938.[7] His feast day was originally celebrated by the Jesuits on 23 May, but it is now generally celebrated on 16 May.[8] In 2002, the Bishops' Conference of Poland declared Bobola a patron saint of Poland.[7]