BLESSED MARIA JULIA (nee Stanislawa) RODZINSKA, OP was born on 16 March 1899 in Nawojowa, Poland. She was one of five children of Michał and Marianna (Sekuła). Michal was an organist for the parish church, a talented composer and man-of-all-trades who took on various jobs to make ends meet. His wife Marianna helped where she could, but a long-term illness took her life when Stanislawa was only 8 years old. Times must have been tough for the whole family(two boys and two girl), as Michal battled rheumatism in his fight to provide for his children. Two years later, Michal died, leaving Stanislawa and her 3 siblings orphans.
At
the age of ten the future blessed and her four year old sister became wards of
the Dominican Sisters in Nawojowa. The two boys were taken in by relatives.
As a qualified teacher, she carried out her ministry in Mielżyn, Rawa Ruska and Vilnius (now Lithuania) for 22 years.
After the outbreak of World War II, she secretly taught Polish language, history and religion, and conducted humanitarian activities.
She also assisted the archbishop in saving Jews from capture by the Gestapo and provided for retired priests who otherwise would have been left impoverished.
Due to the inhumane conditions of
concentration camps, prisoners often lost their sense of morality for the sake
of their own survival. However, Sr. Julia jeopardized her own life to
show mercy to her fellow prisoners in the dark and tormenting cruelty of
Stutthof.
Sister Julia died of exhaustion and disease on 20 February 1945 in Stutthof, two months before the concentration camp was liberated by the Red Army. Her naked body was discarded on a pile of corpses, but someone honored her by placing a little cloth over her body. The words of those who survived Bl. Julia perhaps tell it best: “Not only Catholic compatriots mourned her death, but also Russians, Latvians, and others.” The Jewish women did not hesitate to call Sr. Julia a martyr and a saint. “She gave her life for others, died sacrificing herself; she was the Angel of goodness.”