Communist-era Salesian priest beatified as martyr in Slovakia

Friday, Oct. 13, 2017
By Catholic News Service

WARSAW, Poland (CNS) — A Slovak Salesian priest who died from torture and radiation poisoning after forced labor in Czechoslovakia’s uranium mines is the latest communist-era martyr to be beatified.

Father Titus Zeman, who died in 1969, was hailed during a beatification Mass Sept. 30 in Petrzalka Park in the Slovakian capital of Bratislava by Cardinal Angelo Amato, prefect of the Vatican’s Congregation for Saints’ Causes, himself a Salesian.

The Vatican official said Blessed Zeman had been under “genuine persecution” in the years following World War II as the newly installed communist government arrested clergy and suppressed Catholic schools and associations, but that he had shown “love is stronger than hatred” during his priesthood.

Blessed Zeman helped the Christian community “master its plight with courage and determination,” with its faith “strengthened by the testimony and blood of many believers,” the cardinal said.

Born in 1915, the oldest of 10 children, Blessed Zeman discovered his vocation after surviving childhood illnesses. He joined the Salesians in 1932 and was ordained in 1940.

Following the forced April 1950 closure of religious orders, he helped smuggle more than a dozen seminarians out of the country in two separate missions, but he was captured and charged with espionage and treason during a third in April 1951.

The priest was condemned to death in February 1952 after interrogation and torture in prison, but he had his sentence commuted to 25 years of forced labor. Released after 13 years, he was barred from ministering and kept under tight police surveillance, dying from mistreatment during the short-lived Prague Spring reform movement.

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