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OTHER
CARMELITE SAINTS AND THEMES
Saint Raphael Kalinowski: An Introduction to his Life and
Spirituality
By Szczepan
Praskiewicz, OCD. Translated by Thomas Coonan, Michael Griffin, OCD,
and Lawrence Sullivan, OCD. Biography and anthology of the Polish
engineer and freedom fighter, exiled to Siberia, who became the
restorer of Carmel in Poland and the first Carmelite friar canonized
since John of the Cross. Includes 12 photos.
ISBN
0-935216-53-7
ICS Code: RK
68 pages, paper, $8.95.
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Little known outside his native Poland, Joseph Kalinowski
(Raphael of St. Joseph, O.C.D.) was born in 1835 and became, by
turns, an engineer, a military officer, a leader in the 1863
insurrection against Russian domination, an exile in Siberia, a
tutor, and eventually a Discalced Carmelite priest. He died in 1907
at the Carmelite monastery he had founded in Wadowice, the city
where Karol Wojtyla-the future Pope John Paul II who would later
beatify and canonize him-was born only 13 years later. Today Raphael
Kalinowski is remembered especially as a man of boundless charity in
the Siberian prison camps, a restorer of Carmel in Poland, a skilled
confessor and spiritual director, and a tireless promoter of Marian
devotion and of unity between the Eastern and Western Churches. In
1991, he became the first Discalced Carmelite friar canonized since
St. John of the Cross. This booklet offers a concise introduction to
one of the pope's favorite saints, and includes a brief biography of
Saint Raphael Kalinowski, a synthesis of his spiritual message, 12
photos, and (for the first time in English) selections from his
writings.
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