We, the
comrades of Unit 1012, will remember Franz
Jägerstätter, as one of the Catholic Resistance to Nazism and also a Christian
Martyr.
Blessed
Franz Jägerstätter, O.F.S.
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Martyr
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Born
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Franz
Huber
20 May 1907 Sankt Radegund, Upper Austria, Austria-Hungary |
Died
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9
August 1943 (aged 36)
Brandenburg-Görden Prison Nazi Germany |
Honored in
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26
October 2007, Linz,
Austria by Pope Benedict XVI
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Blessed Franz Jägerstätter, O.F.S., (in English also spelt Jaegerstaetter)
(20 May 1907 - 9 August 1943) (born as Franz Huber) was an Austrian conscientious objector during World
War II. Jägerstätter was sentenced to death and executed. He was later
declared a martyr
and beatified
by the Catholic Church.
INTERNET
SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_J%C3%A4gerst%C3%A4tter
Life
Jägerstätter was born in Sankt
Radegund, Upper Austria, a small village between Salzburg and Braunau
am Inn. He was the illegitimate child of Rosalia Huber, a chambermaid, and
Franz Bachmeier, a farmer. He was first cared for by his grandmother, Elisabeth
Huber. Franz's natural father was killed in World War
I when he was still a child, and when his mother married in 1917, Franz was
adopted by her husband, Heinrich Jägerstätter.
In his youth, Franz gained a
reputation for being a wild fellow, but, in general, his daily life was like
that of most Austrian peasants. He worked as a farmhand and also as a miner in Eisenerz,
until in 1933 he inherited the farmstead of his foster
father. In that same year, he fathered an out-of-wedlock daughter,
Hildegard Auer. On Maundy Thursday of 1936, he married Franziska
Schwaninger (1913–2013), a deeply religious woman. After the ceremony, the
bridal couple proceeded on a pilgrimage to Rome. The marriage produced three
daughters.
When German
troops moved into Austria in 1938, Jägerstätter was the only person in the
village to vote against the Anschluss in the plebiscite of 10 April. The local
authorities suppressed his dissent and announced unanimous approval. Although
he was not involved with any political organization and did undergo one brief
period of military training, he remained openly anti-Nazi. He joined
the Third Order of Saint Francis in 1940
and worked as a sacristan at the local parish
church, being deferred from military service several times. In 1940, aged
33, he had been conscripted into the German army and completed basic
training. Returning home in 1941 under an exemption as a farmer, he began to
examine the morality of the war and discussed this with his bishop. He emerged
from that conversation saddened that the bishop seemed afraid to confront the
issues.
Arrest and death
After many delays, Jägerstätter was
finally called to active duty on 23 February 1943. By this time, he had three
daughters with his wife, the eldest not quite six. He maintained his position
against fighting for the Third Reich and upon entering into the Wehrmacht on
March 1 declared his conscientious objection. His offer to serve as a paramedic
was ignored. A priest from his village visited him in jail and tried to talk
him into serving, but did not succeed. He was immediately imprisoned, first at Linz, then at Berlin-Tegel.
Accused of Wehrkraftzersetzung (undermining of military
morale), after a military trial at the Reichskriegsgericht he was sentenced to
death on 6 July and subsequently executed by guillotine
at Brandenburg-Görden Prison on 9 August
1943, aged 36. In 1946, his ashes were buried at the Sankt Radegund cemetery.
Legacy and beatification
Jägerstätter was criticized by his
countrymen, especially by those who had served in the military, for failing in
his duty as a husband and father. The municipality of Sankt Radegund at first
refused to put his name on the local war
memorial and a pension for his widow was not approved until 1950.
Jägerstätter's fate was not well known
until 1964, when US sociologist Gordon
Zahn published his biography, In
Solitary Witness. Thomas Merton, the famed Trappist monk and peace
activist, included a chapter about Franz Jägerstätter in his book Faith and
Violence (1968). A 1971 film treatment of his life by director Axel Corti
starred Kurt Weinzierl. His case was a topic of the annual Braunauer Zeitgeschichte-Tage
conference in 1995. The death sentence was nullified by the Landgericht Berlin on 7 May 1997. A Stolperstein
for Jägerstätter in Sankt Radegund was laid in 2006.
In June 2007, Pope
Benedict XVI issued an apostolic exhortation declaring Jägerstätter
a martyr. On 26
October 2007, he was beatified in a ceremony held by Cardinal José Saraiva Martins at the New Cathedral in Linz. His feast day is the day
of his christening, 21 May.
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