In his Angelus, November 1, the Holy Father said regarding the saints: The Beatitudes show us the path that leads to the Kingdom of God and to happiness: the path of humility, compassion, meekness, justice and peace…The joy of the Christian is not a fleeting emotion or a simple human optimism, but the certainty of being able to face every situation under God’s loving gaze, with the courage and strength that come from him.”
The following martyrs knew this courage, that can only come from Christ.
The first of more than 2,600 Catholic priests killed under the Nazis was FATHER OTTO NEURURER, who was beatified at St. Peter’s Basilica on November 24, 1996, by Pope St. John Paul II.
Otto Neururer was born in
On March 3, 1939, Father Otto was sent to Dachau, the first concentration camp established by the Nazis, to a section known as the “priests’ barracks.” Here he was routinely tortured, but this would not be his last stop. On September 26, 1939, he was sent to Buchenwald, which was under the command of Martin Sommer, aka “the Hangman of Buchenwald.” This would be Father’s last stop.
A prisoner came to Father Otto and asked for baptism. The priest could not decline and performed the sacrament as requested. Father Otto suspected that it might be a set-up, but he couldn’t refuse administering baptism, in case it wasn’t. It was a set-up, and Sommer decided to make an example of the priest. He ordered him taken to the “punishment block” and hanged upside down.
The chaplain who witnessed Father Otto’s torturous death reported that he never complained. The priest lived for 34 hours, and even toward the end, he could be heard mumbling his prayers. He died on May 30, 1940 at the age of 58.