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Kazimierz Swiatek

Kazimierz Świątek (October 14, 1914 in Walga , Estonia), an ethnic Pole, cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. Archbishop of Minsk-Mahilyou and Apostolic Administrator of Pinsk.

After completing a seminary in Pinsk, Poland (now in southern Belarus), he was ordained a priest in 1939 and sent to the parish of Pruzhana in the diocese of Pinsk.

He was arrested by the KGB in April 1941 and imprisoned on death row in Brest. He escaped from prison taking advantage of the confusion caused by the German invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, and returned to Pruzhana.

In December 1944, the KGB arrested him for a second time. The following year he was sentenced to 10 years of hard labor in concentration camps and spent nine years in Siberia and the north of the USSR, working in the taiga and mines. After his release in June 1954, he returned to Pinsk.

In 1988 he was named a chaplain of Pope John Paul II. In 1991, he was appointed Archbishop of Minsk-Mahilyou and Apostolic Administrator of Pinsk. John Paul II proclaimed Swiatek cardinal in 1994.

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Last updated: 05-27-2005 12:43:55
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