Zofia Czeska

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Died1 April 1650 (aged 66)
Kraków, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Beatified9 June 2013, Kraków, Poland by Cardinal Angelo Amato

Zofia Czeska-Maciejowska
Statue of Zofia Czeska at the Church of St. John the Baptist and St. John the Evangelist in Kraków, where she is buried in its chapel
Born1584
Budziszowice, Kazimierski, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Died1 April 1650 (aged 66)
Kraków, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified9 June 2013, Kraków, Poland by Cardinal Angelo Amato
Feast1 April

Zofia Czeska-Maciejowska (1584 – 1 April 1650) was a Polish religious sister and the founder of the Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary.[1] Czeska was widowed prior to her call into the religious life.[2][3] Her beatification was celebrated on 9 June 2013.

Zofia Czeska-Maciejowska was born in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1584 as one of nine children to Mateusz Maciejowska and Katarzyna Lubowiecka; one sister younger than her was Anna.[3][2]

Czeska married in 1600 to Jan Czeska and was widowed in 1626 childless at which point her religious calling flourished.[1][2] Czeska organised a school for girls in Kraków from 1621 until 1627 (at 18 Szpitalna Street) and then decided to found a women's religious institute that she titled the Sisters of the Presentation which she set up on 31 May 1627. Thus the institution that she had introduced was dedicated to the care and the education of poor and orphaned girls which she threw herself into with much apostolic vigor. In 1602 she joined a religious movement that the Jesuit priest Piotr Skarga founded.[3] Once she returned home after Mass and a man kidnapped her demanding the two be married; she refused and the man married her little sister Anna.

Czeska died on 1 April 1650 and her remains were interred in the basilica.[1] Her order continues to operate in both her native Poland and in Ukraine. In 2008 there were 126 religious in 18 houses and the order was aggregated to the Order of Friars Minor on 19 April 1938.

Beatification

References

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