Działalność Domu Rekolekcyjnego OO. Jezuitów w Czechowicach-Dziedzicach w okresie międzywojennym
Author:
Cieślak SJ, Stanisław
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 104, Studia ad Bibliothecarum Scientiam Pertinentia 9 (2011), s. [200]-218
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Subject:
JezuiciCzechowice-Dziedzice
historia
Date: 2011
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In 1905 Jesuits from the Galician Province of the Society of Jesus opened the Retreat House in Czechowice which was
the first establishment of this type on the Polish lands. Until the outbreak of World War I many people, both
clergymen and laymen including numerous workers from the neighbouring Upper Silesia, participated in the retreats
in Czechowice. After the end of war the Jesuits resumed their retreat activity. Year by year, more and more people
participated. The House had a library of spiritual works. The Jesuits cooperated with Wydawnictwo Apostolstwa
Modlitwy in Krakow which provided books and magazines dealing with the topic of retreat. For some time, the House
functioned as the place of the third probation i.e. the place where young fathers spend the last period of monastic
formation before making their final vows. Apart from retreat, the Jesuits from the House in Czechowice organized
various courses and meetings as well as worked as people’s missionaries in the entire Poland. The visit of the
apostolic nuncio, Archbishop Francesco Marmaggi was
a sign of appreciation of their work. The Jesuits also practiced pastoral activity at St. Joseph’s Retreat Chapel
where various religious communities, including Sodalities of Our Lady and Apostleship of Prayer, were created. The
last important event in which they participated were the celebrations connected with the return of St. Andrew
Bobola’s relic to Poland. On 10th April 1940 Gestapo arrested the Jesuits form the Retreat House who were taken to
the concentration camp in Dachau near Munich. Not all of them returned to Poland after 1945 when the Retreat House
resumed its activity.