The Diocese of La Crosse has opened the beatification cause of Wisconsin
priest Father Joseph Walijewski on March 19, a missionary known as a
humble man who helped the poor of Latin America.
“This guy was a saint,” Father Sebastian Kolodziejczyk, Executive
Director of the Casa Hogar Juan Pablo II orphanage in Lima, Peru, told
CNA April 1.
“He was all about doing God’s will as a priest,” Fr. Kolodziejczyk
said. “He was always working with the poor, sharing the hardships of the
poor people.”
Bishop William P. Callahan of La Crosse opened the cause for
beatification, another step on the priest’s path to possible
canonization. Canon lawyer Dr. Andrea Ambrosi will be the postulator for
the Wisconsin priest’s beatification cause.
An edict tacked to the front door of La Crosse’s Cathedral of St.
Joseph the Worker asked for anyone with positive or negative testimony
about the priest to give testimony to a diocesan tribunal investigating
his cause.
Fr. Kolodziejczyk, who worked with Fr. Walijewski and succeeded him as
orphanage director, said the opening of the beatification cause was not a
surprise to him or to those who knew the priest personally.
“With Fr. Joe, what you saw was what you got,” he said. “He was a man
without guile. He was very hardworking, very simple in his expectations.
He lived in a very simple room.”
Fr. Kolodziejczyk said the missionary was “unpretentious” and “very humble.”
Fr. Walijewski was born to poor Polish immigrant parents in Grand
Rapids, Michigan on March 15, 1924. He sold newspapers beginning at the
age of five, during which time he decided he wanted to be a priest.
In the face of academic difficulties, he promised God that he would serve in Latin America if he were ordained.
He was ordained for the Diocese of La Crosse in April 1950, served as a
pastor or assistant pastor at several Wisconsin parishes, and began
missionary work in Bolivia in 1956.
Fr. Walijewski founded Holy Cross Parish in the unpopulated jungles of
Santa Cruz, Bolivia. The parish he founded is now part of a high density
urban center, the Father Joseph Walijewski Guild says.
After further missionary work in Ecuador and pastoral work in
Wisconsin, he traveled to Peru to minister to earthquake victims in
1971. He became pastor of a new barrio called Villa El Salvador, located
on the outskirts of Lima. While there he helped organize breakfast
stations that fed 8,000 children per day.
He founded the Lima orphanage Casa Hogar Juan Pablo II, the House of
John Paul II, in 1987. The orphanage housed six to seven children with a
married couple in an apartment. The married couple would help teach
them life skills, while the orphanage helped catechize the children and
gave them access to the sacraments.
At the age of 76, Fr. Walijewski helped establish a home for the
elderly staffed by consecrated religious. Undaunted by age, he still
drove into the rain forest on Sundays to celebrate Mass for small
communities of Ashiko Indians.
He died aged 82 on April 11, 2006 at a Lima hospital after suffering
pneumonia and acute leukemia. He was a priest for 56 years of his life.
Fr. Kolodziejczyk said Fr. Walijewski was regarded as “a very holy
person.” When the priest died people from Villa Salvador took his body
on a tour through areas he used to work so that others could pay their
respects and say their goodbyes.
Thousands of people, including several bishops, attended his massive funeral procession.
“His priestly life was entirely at the service of the poor, and
everything that comes with it,” Fr. Kolodziejczyk said. “He was not just
preaching poverty, he lived it. It was not just something for show. He
was actually doing everything he was preaching in his personal life.”