Album of the Deceased Marian Fathers and Brothers
† A LBUM OF THE D ECEASED F ATHERS AND B ROTHERS † 50 In 1996, Father VINCENT PARULIS , age 81, died in Worcester, Mass- achusetts. He was a religious for 64 years and a priest for 51. He served as a superior and a provincial councilor. During the last nine years of his life, he served as a pastor in his native town of Worcester. He is buried in the section reserved for the Marians in St. Casimir’s cemetery in Chicago. In 2003, Father PAUL JASIŃSKI (Yah-sin’-ski) died in Fawley Court, Great Britain. He was 80 years old. He had been associated with our Congregation since he the age of 13, as a student of the Bielany College. He became a Marian in 1939. In 1946, he went to study in Rome, where he was ordained to the priesthood in 1948. He was sent to serve in England and was a local superior and a minister for the Polish immigrants there. He served as general councilor and later as provincial of the Blessed Virgin Mary Mother of Mercy Province in Great Britain. He is buried in Henley-on-Thames. In 2006, Father BONIFACE SARUL (Sah-rool’), age 89, a member of the Polish Province, died in StoczekWarmiński. He was a priest for nearly 60 years and a religious for 67. He served in various Marian parishes and was the house superior in Stoczek until 1975, where he zealously supported the local clergy and generously contributed to the development of the Shrine of Our Lady, Queen of Peace in Stoczek. In 1996, the Archbishop of Warmia decorated him with the order “Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice.” He is buried in Stoczek Warmiński. m ArCh 24 On March 24, 1932, Father FELIX KUDIRKA , a member of the American Province of St. Casimir, died in Chicago at the age of 62. He was a priest for 32 years and a religious for 21. He made his novitiate in Fribourg, Switzerland, and accompanied Blessed George on his trip to the United States in 1913, where he assisted him in founding the first house of our renovated institute in Chicago. He remained in the U.S., organizing the religious life of the Marians and carrying out pastoral activity among the Lithuanian immigrants. In 1926, he was nominated vicar general for NorthAmerica and in 1930, became the first provincial superior of the American Province of St. Casimir. He is buried in the section reserved for the Marians at St. Casimir’s cemetery in Chicago. m ArCh 25 On March 25, 1965, Father ANTHONY MAŽUKNA , a member of the American Province of Saint Casimir, died unexpectedly at the age of 51 at the house in Marianapolis, Connecticut. He was a religious for 36 years and a priest for 25. He was the pastor for a Marian parish inMilwaukee and extended his pastoral activ- ity by directing spiritual exercises and preaching parish missions for 15 years. He is buried in the section reserved for the Marians in St. Casimir’s cemetery in Chicago.
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MjI2Mw==