From Hanna Chrzanowska Website

Blessed Hanna Chrzanowska – a Lay Nurse Raised to the Altars

The First Person from the Circle of Karol Wojtyła Was Beatified

Share this Entry

For the first time in history, a lay nurse was beatified. A Polish woman, Hanna Chrzanowska, who died in 1973, was announced blessed this Saturday, April 28, at the World Sanctuary of Divine Mercy in Krakow.
Hanna Chrzanowska organized a unique system of parish home care over chronically ill, which covered hundreds of people living in a communist country in conditions extremely degrading human dignity. The care system was based on professional nurses supported by nuns, students, the family and neighbors of the sick. In this way, Chrzanowska also became a pioneer of hospices in Poland. Clerics and priests were also involved in the help, which allowed them to have a close contact with poor, sick and needy people.
Hanna Chrzanowska, in her youth distant from the Catholic faith, experienced a deep conversion before the Second World War. A home-based care over chronically ill began in 1957. Organizing this system of care, she worked closely with the priest, and later Bishop, Archbishop and Cardinal, Karol Wojtyła, a future Pope, Saint John Paul II. She was under his strong spiritual influence, as evidenced by the preserved correspondence between them. During the funeral of Chrzanowska, Cardinal Wojtyła emphasized that she was the incarnation of Christ’s blessings, “especially the one which says Blessed are the merciful.” As a pope, he already told the postulator of the process of beatification of Chrzanowska: “This is a very important matter. Watch it.”
Sister of our God
The first person from the circle of Karol Wojtyła was beatified.
“She was always very close to my heart”, said St. John Paul II during the meeting with the Szlenkier family – relatives of Hanna Chrzanowska, a lay nurse who was beatified this Saturday, April 28, in Cracow.
She worked closely with Karol Wojtyła in the years 1957-1973, and with their unique personalities, they had positive impacts each upon the other.
For Wojtyła, Chrzanowska was a living incarnation of the content of the Second Vatican Council: a lay person, a high-class professional, who draws from the depths of Christian spirituality, living in close relationship with Christ and practically realizing this relationship through her service to the sick. Thanks to Chrzanowska, the Archdiocese of Cracow had a well-developed system of the service of active love through parish care over the sick. It included hundreds of people confined to beds, abandoned, poor and neglected. Hanna Chrzanowska introduced Wojtyła into this world by contacting him with the whole depth of human misery, while at the same time teaching a practical approach to the sick people so that they felt real care and help.
In turn, Wojtyła became a spiritual authority for Hanna Chrzanowska, before whom she discovered the greatest secrets of her soul, as evidenced by the preserved correspondence between them.
There are several ongoing processes of beatification of people related to the Pope, who made the proclamation of a universal vocation to holiness one of the priorities of his pontificate. Two candidates for altars come from Poland: Jan Tyranowski, a tailor, who introduced young Wojtyła into the secrets of interior life, and Jerzy Ciesielski, husband and father of the family, one of the members of the youth milieu around Wojtyła, so-called Uncle Karol’s Family. In France, the trial of prof. Jérôme Lejeune, genetics and defenders of life, who worked closely with John Paul II in 1978-1994. Hanna Chrzanowska is the first beatified from the circle of the people close to St. John Paul II.
Courtesy of BP KEP
***
Pope Francis on April 29, 2018, recognized Hanna Chrzanowski, declared blessed on April 28, 2018, in Krakow.
«Yesterday Hanna Chrzanowska, lay faithful who dedicated her life to the care of the sick, in whom she saw the face of suffering Jesus, was proclaimed Blessed in Krakow,» the Pope said after praying the Regina Coeli with the crowds in St. Peter’s Square. «We thank God for the witness of this apostle of the sick and let us make an effort to imitate her example.»

Share this Entry

ZENIT Staff

Support ZENIT

If you liked this article, support ZENIT now with a donation