On June 20, 2017, we will celebrate for the first time the memory day of Fr. Władysław Bukowiński as a Blessed. We remind you that his beatification took place on 11 September last year. That was the first beatification of the Roman Catholic Church in Kazakhstan and the first beatification that took place on this country's land. On that occasion, we publish a biography of this Blessed, which, perhaps, some of you already know.
Bukowiński recalled that moment himself: “When I was in the prison yard in a hail of bullets, I was surprisingly calm. My entire 36-year-old life condensed to that moment. I also gave absolution to the people lying next to me. My mind was working with great intensity. I experienced the end of the present and a glimpse of eternity. This experience was indescribable and beautiful, it was absolutely impossible to forget. I do not know what would have happened to me if I felt the pain of a wound, but there was no pain in my body. My spirit soared freely between the present and the eternal, as it had never been before or after in my life.”
Fr. Bukowiński had been lying unconscious for a long time under the corpses until the Germans appeared in the prison and he regained consciousness and got out from under the bodies. Fr. Władysław left the prison extremely emaciated and exhausted, but despite this, he continued to fulfill the ministry entrusted to him as dean at the Lutsk Cathedral.
After the re-occupation of Lutsk by the Red Army, in the night from the 3rd to the 4th of January 1945, Fr. Władysław Bukowiński was re-arrested and imprisoned with other priests in the NKVD building in Lutsk. After eighteen days of investigation, the priests were taken to Kowel, and from there to the prison of the NKVD in Kiev. The investigation continued until June 1945. In it, all the priests were accused and later sentenced in absentia to ten years in prison camps. He spent the following years (1946-1950) in Chelyabinsk camps, where, aside from hard work, Fr. Władysław also carried out his priestly ministry in secret. The next 4 years were spent at the copper mine in Zhezkazgan. Even there, he tried to use every opportunity for his apostolate. While everyone was asleep, he celebrated the Eucharist, kneeling on the benches which served at the same time as an altar and wearing a prison uniform instead of a chasuble.
Exile to Karaganda
On August 10, 1954 Fr. Władysław Bukowiński was released from the camp and sent to Karaganda, where he worked as a watchman at a construction site and at the same continued to provide pastoral care in secret.
The key moment of his vocation took place in June of 1955. It was then that he declined the offer to return to Poland, to his historical homeland, and decided to obtain Soviet citizenship and remain faithful until death to the local faithful. He made this decision with full awareness of the serious consequences this choice could have.
In May 1956, having obtained a passport and freedom of movement throughout the Soviet Union, Fr. Władysław left his job as a night watchman and from that moment on completely devoted himself to pastoral care, which he still had to do secretly. Fr. Bukowiński settled on the outskirts of Karaganda living with the Polish Mader family. He then began to help other priests, making trips across Kazakhstan and Central Asia.
Altogether Fr. Władysław made eight mission trips to remote regions of Kazakhstan and several times visited Tajikistan.
In June 1956, Fr. Bukowiński went to the outskirts of Alma-Ata. There he visited the resettled Poles who hadn’t seen a priest for twenty years. Here is what he wrote on this subject: “In one village, the local “patriarch” Mr. Lewicki greeted me with a short appeal in presence of the gathered people. It was, perhaps, the most moving speech addressed to me in my whole life. Mr. Lewicki said, ‘We were taken to these mountains and left here, and everyone forgot about us. No one remembered us. A spiritual father has come to us, who are orphans, we are orphans.’ The respected “patriarch” was crying, the whole gathered people were crying, and the father was crying with them. But these were good tears.”
On the next two mission trips, made in 1957-1958 and also in 1968, he went to Tajikistan. There he went to an area where most of the people were Germans, resettled from Odessa, about whom Fr. Bukowiński had heard while still in Karaganda. He was the first Catholic priest who visited those places. Besides that, Fr. Władysław also visited the Ukraine, where he joined in the work of the local priests. He also made trips to Aktyubinsk and Semipalatinsk. But the mission trip to the east, to Semipalatinsk in 1958, was interrupted by police intervention.
On December 3, 1958, Fr. Bukowiński was arrested for his religious activity (at that time he was trying to register the Catholic community in Karaganda). From March of 1959 to June of 1961, he stayed in a labor camp in the village of Chuna, near Irkutsk, where he worked clearing forestland. From April to December 3, 1961, he was imprisoned in Sosnovka, in the Mordovian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (ASSR). All told, Fr. Bukowiński was held in prisons and labor camps for thirteen years, five months, and ten days.
After being set free, Fr. Władysław returned to Karaganda and continued his pastoral ministry. Together with the Greek Catholic Bishop, Alexander Hira, Fr. Władysław founded the Third Order of St. Francis in Kazakhstan, where people took their vows and prepared for monastic life.
In 1965, Fr. Władysław Bukowiński received permission to visit his relatives in Poland for the first time.
On June 3, 1965, after about thirty years of wandering, he came back home. There he met with family and his old friends, but did not want to stay, because he thought that his place was in Karaganda.
He returned two more times to Poland, in 1969 and 1972. Above all this was to improve his health, which had been undermined by years of imprisonment and heavy pastoral work.
During these visits to Poland, Fr. Bukowiński met with Cardinal Karol Wojtyła, who took a keen interest in his pastoral care in Kazakhstan. Pope John Paul II later reminisced about those meetings during his visit to Astana in 2001.
Fr. Władysław Bukowiński stressed that a sick priest is also a pastor. That is why, after two months spent in a Krakow hospital, on April 19, 1973, he returned to Karaganda. He said that even in his grave he will continue with his apostolate.
Władysław Bukowiński