38 martyrs killed by the Communist regime beatified in
Albania
(Vatican
Radio) Thirtyeight martyrs killed between 1945 and 1974 by the
Communist regime have been beatified in the city of Shkodër in northwestern
Albania.
The
ceremony took place in the Square of St. Stephen’s Cathedral and was presided
over by Cardinal Angelo Amato, Prefect of the Congregation for the
Causes of Saints.
In
his homily Cardinal Amato said: “While the persecutors dissolve like so
many black shadows which are lost forever in the darkness of eternal oblivion,
martyrs are guiding lights that shine in the sky of humanity,
showing the true face of man’s goodness, his profound identity created in
the image of God”.
The
canonical process for the recognition of the martyrdom and the official
approval of the witness and sacrifice for the faith culminated in a decree
promulgated by Pope Francis in April 2016 which gave the green light for the
beatification of the martyrs.
Saturday’s
beatifications double the number of Catholics declared blessed after having
died during communist rule in Eastern Europe.
Father
Anton Zogaj was
shot on a beach near Durres after refusing to divulge confessional secrets.
Father
Lazer Shantoja,
a nationally admired poet, was shot in the head after being forced to crawl in
excruciating pain when his arms and legs were broken under torture.
Archbishop
Nikolle Vincenc Prennushi of Durres, who died of torture and exhaustion in 1949,
two years into a 20-year hard labor sentence as an “agent of foreign
powers.”
Bishop
Frano Gjini of
Lezhe, who died in 1948 declaring his “spirit and heart are with the Pope,”
according to the execution record.
Father
Shtjefen Kurti was
sentenced and shot for “reactionary anti-state activities” in 1971 after
secretly baptizing another convict’s child at a labor camp.
Father
Giovanni Fausti,
Italian vice provincial of Albania’s Jesuit order, who was beaten and spat at
by communist onlookers during his trial and execution.
The
list also features two priests drowned in 1948 when their heads were forced
down in a prison cesspit with rifle butts; several foreign clergy, including
one who was shot for giving last rites to a wounded fugitive; and three lay
Catholics including 22-year-old Franciscan novice, Sister Maria Tuci,
who died in Shkoder’s civic hospital after being tied in a sack and tortured.
Archbishop
Angelo Massafra of Shkoder, President of the Albanian Bishops’ Conference
reportedly said the list of martyrs had been agreed upon after Church
consultations in 1994 and 2000, but added that many others could also be
declared blessed in future.
Around
130 Catholic priests were executed or died through imprisonment, alongside
thousands of lay Christians, under communist rule in Albania, which lasted from
1944 to 1991.
Catholics
currently make up a tenth of Albania’s population of 2.9 million, according to
a 2011 census, making them the second largest religious group after Muslims,
many of whom also died under communist rule.
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