“ On the Way to
“On the same summer day in 1942, St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (Edith Stein) and hundreds of other Catholic Jews were arrested in
One Jewish convert to Catholicism was LISAMARIA MEIROWSKY ( MARIA MAGDALENA DOMINIKA), born in 1904 in Graudenz, the daughter of the dermatologist Emil Meirowsky , who opened a practice in Cologne-Lindenthal in 1908 . After graduating from high school in
She also received her doctorate in 1933 from the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich. The title of the dissertation in the field of dermatology was “On the clinical picture of Erythema palmoplantare symmetricum hereditarium”.
She then went to Rome, specializing in the field of pediatrics. There she met the Dominican Franziskus Maria Stratmann. She converted on the feast St. Teresa of
In 1938, persecuted as a “ non-Aryan ”, she went to Utrecht in the
On July 26, 1942, the Archbishop of Utrecht, Jan de Jong, had a pastoral letter read out against the actions of the Germans against the Jews. In response to this, on August 2, 1942, 244 former Jews who had converted to Catholicism, including Lisamaria and the siblings Edith (St. Benedicta of the Cross) and Rosa Stein, were arrested by the Gestapo and deported.
In May 2014, in front of her last place of residence in Cologne-Lindenthal at Fürst-Pückler-Strasse 42, a memorial was laid by students from a high school in
The April issue of Magnificat featured the letter by Sister M. Magdalena
The April issue of Magnificat featured a letter by Sister M. Magdalena
You probably know that we are here and awaiting deportation to
If our suffering has become a little greater, our blessing is likewise doubly great, and a glorious crown awaits us in heaven. Rejoice with me. I go with courage and confidence and joy, as do also the sisters who are here with me; we are being allowed to bear witness for Jesus and to testify with our bishops on behalf of the truth. We go as children of our mother, the holy Church; we want to join our sufferings to the sufferings of our King, Savior, and Bridegroom, and to offer them in sacrifice for the conversion of many souls and thus before all else for the peace and the
In case I do not survive, you will no doubt have the kindness to write afterward to my beloved parents and brothers and to tell them that the sacrifice of my life was in their behalf. Convey to all of them my love and gratitude, and tell them that I ask forgiveness for every wrong and for the suffering that I have perhaps inflicted on them. Tell them also that my mother’s sister and my father’s twin sister went to the camps of
Tell Father Stratmann that he must not feel sad, but on the contrary join me in giving thanks to God for having chosen me, and sing a jubilant Magnificat. The work for peace we began together will come to consummation when, where, and as God wills it, and I shall collaborate as zealously and effectively as possible. Either through my insignificant suffering—and it is indeed nothing as compared with the eternity of joy that awaits us—or from beyond I shall always help him and stand beside him.
And now, sincere thanks for all the good you have at any time done for me, for all your merciful Christian charity. You have given me courage so often. Jesus lives in my heart and walks with us and gives me strength—he is my strength and my peace. May Mary protect you and may the love of God sanctify you always. Once again I humbly ask for your prayers and your priestly blessing.
In Jesus and Mary, Your sister M. Magdalena
Artist- Roman Halter (d. 2012) a Polish painter, sculptor, writer, architect and Holocaust survivor. He managed to escape from a cart while on a transport to Chełmno extermination camp. His mother, sister and her family died in Chełmno.