Josaphat Kotsylovsky

Blessed
Josaphat Kotsylovsky
Eparch of Przemyśl
Church Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church
Appointed 29 January 1917
Term ended 17 November 1947
Predecessor Konstantyn Czechowicz
Successor Ivan Choma
Orders
Ordination 9 Oct 1907 (Priest)
Consecration 23 Sep 1917 (Bishop)
by Andrey Sheptytsky
Personal details
Born 3 March 1876
Pakoszowka, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria,  Austria-Hungary
Died 17 November 1947
near Kiev,  Ukrainian SSR
Sainthood
Beatified 27 June 2001
by Pope John Paul II
Josaphat Kotsylovsky after arrest by NKVD 1946
Stryi. The relics of the blessed of Josaphat Kotsylovsky.

Blessed Josaphat Joseph Kotsylovsky (Ukrainian: Йосафат Йосиф Коциловський) was a Ukrainian Greek Catholic bishop and martyr.

Kotsylovsky was born 3 March 1876 in the village of Pakoszowka (then Austria-Hungary, now Poland), of the Lemko Region.[1] Kotsylovsky was of Lemko origin, and Ukrainian national orientation.[2] He studied theology in Rome and graduated in 1907, later that year on 9 October he was ordained to the priesthood.[3] Soon after, he was made vice-rector and professor of theology at the Greek-Catholic seminary in Stanislaviv.[1]

On 2 October 1911 he entered the Order of Saint Basil the Great.[4] On September 23, 1917, Kotsylovsky was ordained bishop in Przemyśl by Andrey Sheptytsky.[5] As bishop, he worked to improve the church's educational system and supported monastic orders. He also took steps to combat the rising Russophile movement by appointing Ukrainian priests and funding Ukrainian language journals.[2]

At the end of World War II, Communist Poland assisted the Soviet Union with the liquidation of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. In September 1945 the Communist regime in Poland arrested Kotsylovsky, then released him and arrested him again in 1946.[4] They then handed him over to the Soviet Union. He died on 17 November 1947 in a prison camp near Kiev.[1][3]

He was beatified by Pope John Paul II on June 27, 2001.[1][6]

The relics of the blessed of Josaphat Kotsylovsky kept in the church of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Stryi.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Biographies of twenty five Greek-Catholic Servants of God at the website of the Vatican
  2. 1 2 Paul R. Magocsi, Ivan Ivanovich Pop. Encyclopedia of Rusyn history and culture. University of Toronto Press, 2002. p 252
  3. 1 2 'Beatification of the Servants of God on June 27, 2001 at the website of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church
  4. 1 2 Alan Butler, Paul Burns. Butler's lives of the saints. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2005. p78
  5. "Bishop Bl. Josaphat Joseph Kocylovskyj (Kotsylovsky), O.S.B.M.". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
  6. Basilian Martyrs and Confessors. St. Nicholas Ukrainian Catholic Church, Winnipeg Canada.

External links

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