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St. Clement Hofbauer
St.
Clement was born on the feast of Saint Stephen, December 26, 1751, in
Tasswitz, Moravia. He was the ninth of twelve children born to Mary and Paul
Hofbauer. Baptized the very next day, he was given the name of Hansl, or
John. He would be known that way for more than twenty years until he entered
a hermitage and took the name of Clement.
Hansl began to study Latin at the parish rectory. The pastor was a kindly
old priest who recognized the seeds of a priestly vocation in the young
Hofbauer. Daily the young student and the aging pastor would meet to study
the Latin language. It was to be the first step on Hansl's long road to the
priesthood. The period of study ended abruptly with the death of the pastor
when Hansl was just fourteen. The new pastor did not have time to help him
study Latin.
Unable to continue studying for the priesthood, Hansl had to learn a trade.
He was sent to become an apprentice in bake shop in 1767. In 1770 he went to
work in the bakery of the Premonstratensian monastery of the White Monks in
Kloster Bruck. At that time, the effects of war and famine were sending many
homeless and hungry people to the monastery for help. Hofbauer worked day
and night to feed the poor people who came to his door. While this was still
not the priesthood that he wanted so badly, it was an opportunity to help
God's people who were in great need.
In 1771, a trip to Italy brought Hofbauer to Tivoli. He decided to become a
hermit at the shrine of Our Lady of Quintiliolo and requested the hermit's
habit from the local bishop. It was at this time that Hansl Hofbauer
received the name of Clement Mary: Clement from the bishop of Ancyra in Asia
and Mary from our Blessed Lady. As a hermit, Clement prayed for himself and
for all the people in the world who forgot to pray. He worked at the shrine
and assisted the pilgrims who came. Clement did not find happiness, however,
and in less than six months he left Quintiliolo. He realized the need to
pray for people and saw this as good work, but it was still not the
priesthood that he wanted so badly.
He returned to the monastery of the White Monks at Kloster Bruck to bake
bread and to begin the study of the Latin language once again. Although he
completed his studies in philosophy by the year 1776, he could proceed no
further. The Emperor would allow no new novices for the White Monks, and so
Clement found the road to the priesthood once again.
At the age of twenty-nine, after being a baker in three places and a hermit
in two others, Clement entered the University of Vienna. Since the
government had closed all seminaries, students for the priesthood had to
study at government-controlled universities. Clement was frustrated by the
religious studies courses that were permeated by rationalism and other
unquestionable outlooks and teachings. Undaunted, he continued seeking the
truths of the faith and pursuing his dream of the priesthood.
During a pilgrimage in 1784, Clement and his traveling companion, Thaddeus
Huebl, decided to join a religious community. The two seminarians were
accepted into the Redemptorist novitiate at San Giuliano in Italy. On the
feast of Saint Joseph, March 19, 1785, Clement Hofbauer and Thaddeus Huebl
became Redemptorists, publicly professing to live the vows of poverty,
chastity, and obedience. Ten days later they were ordained to the priesthood
at the Cathedral of Alatri.
A few months after their ordination the two foreign Redemptorists were
summoned by their Superior General, Father de Paola. They were told to
return to their homeland across the Alps and establish the Redemptorist
Congregation in northern Europe. It was a difficult and unusual assignment
for two men so recently ordained. To Alphonsus, this spread of the
Congregation beyond the Alps was a sure proof that the Redemptorists would
endure until the end of time. To Clement, it was a dream come true.
Warsaw and St. Benno's
The political situation did not allow Clement to remain in his own country.
The Austrian Emperor who had closed over 1,000 monasteries and convents was
not about to allow a new religious order to establish a foundation.
Realizing this, the two Redemptorists moved on to Poland. It was February of
1787 when they reached Warsaw, a city of 124,000 people. Although there were
160 churches plus 20 monasteries and convents in the city, in many ways it
was almost a godless slum. The people were poor and uneducated; their houses
were in need of repair. Many people had turned from Catholicism to
Freemasonry. The faithful Catholics and their few good priests suffered
much. For the next 20 years Clement and his small band of Redemptorist
priests and Brothers shared in this suffering for the Lord and for the
faithful of Poland.
Poland was in the midst of great political turmoil at the time of Clement's
arrival in 1787. King Stanislaus II was virtually a puppet in the hands of
Catherine II of Russia. Earlier, in 1772, the First Partition of the country
had taken place -- with Austria, Russia, and Prussia dividing the spoils. A
similar partition was to occur again in 1793 and for a third time in 1795.
Napoleon and his great army of conquest marching through Europe added to the
political tension. During Clement's twenty- one years in Warsaw there was
hardly a peaceful moment.
On their journey to Poland, the two new Redemptorist priests were joined by
Peter (now Emmanuel) Kunzmann, a fellow- baker who had accompanied Hansl on
a pilgrimage. He became the first Redemptorist lay Brother form outside
Italy. Together they arrived in Warsaw without a coin in their pockets;
Clement had given the last three silver coins to beggars along the way. They
met with the apostolic delegate, Archbishop Saluzzo, who put them in charge
of St. Benno's Church to work with the German-speaking people of Warsaw. As
they learned the new language, the Redemptorists expanded their apostolate
to the people who lived in the area of St. Benno's.
When Clement saw a homeless boy on the street, he brought him to the
rectory, cleaned him up, fed him, and then taught him a trade and instructed
him in the Christian way of life. When the number of boys grew too large for
the rectory, Clement opened the Child Jesus Refuge for his homeless boys.
To keep the boys fed and clothed, he had to beg constantly. He did so
unashamedly. Going into a bakery to buy a loaf of bread he came upon a
master baker without an assistant. Clement spent the day working at the
dough trough and the oven, using all his old baking skills. He got bread for
his boys that day and for many days to come.
On another occasion, legend has it that he went begging to a local pub. When
Clement asked for a donation, one of the patrons scornfully spat beer into
Clement's face. Wiping off the beer, he responded, "That was for me. Now
what do you have for my boys?" The men in the bar were so astounded by the
Christlike response that they gave Clement more than 100 silver coins.
When the Redemptorists first opened their church they preached to empty
benches. The people had many things that took them away from God, and they
found it hard to put their trust in these foreign priests. It took several
years for the Redemptorists to win over the hearts of the people; but in
time St. Benno's became the thriving center of the Catholic Church in
Warsaw.
In 1791, four years after their arrival, the Redemptorists enlarged the
children's refuge into an academy. A boarding school had been opened for
young girls under the direction of some noble Warsaw matrons. The number of
orphan boys continued to grow steadily. Money to finance all this came from
some regular benefactors and many other people who were willing to help in
different ways; but Clement still had to beg from door to door seeking help
for his many orphans.
In the church, Clement and his band of five Redemptorist priests and three
lay Brothers began what they called the Perpetual Mission. Instead of having
just a morning Mass in the church on a weekday, they had a full-scale
mission every day of the year. You could attend St. Benno's every day and
know that you would hear five sermons in both German and Polish. There were
three high Masses, the office of the Blessed Virgin Mary, public visits to
the Blessed Sacrament, the Way of the Cross, vespers, prayer services, and
litanies. And priests were available for confessions all hours of the day
and night.
By the year 1800 the growth could be seen both in the work at the church and
in the Redemptorist community. Reception of the sacraments jumped from 2,000
(in 1787) to over 100,000. The number of men serving at St. Benno's had
grown to 21 Redemptorist priests and seven lay brothers. There were also
five novices and four Polish seminarians.
All this work was done under less than ideal conditions. The three
partitions of Poland brought about great bloodshed. Kosciusco, the great
Polish freedom fighter, had his moments of glory but the people could not
hold off the foreign attackers indefinitely. The battles reached Warsaw
during Holy Week of 1794. The Redemptorists, along with all the other
residents of that city, found their lives to be in constant danger. Three
bombs crashed through the roof of the church but did not explode. Throughout
the battles, Clement and his companions preached peace. This only served to
increase the cries of protest against the Redemptorists who were already
labeled as traitors.
Almost from the start, they had been attacked on two fronts. Politically
they were foreigners. They could mix with the people and do much good, holy,
priestly work. They could care for hundreds of orphans, celebrate thousands
of Masses, and bring tens of thousands closer to God, but the German
Redemptorists remained a foreign element in a country that was constantly at
war.
The other attack was even more painful. It was a personal attack by the
people who turned from the Church of their baptism to become Freemasons.
They met together in their secret groups to plot against the Catholics, to
do harm to the priests, to stop public worship, and to close the churches.
The Redemptorists always had to be on the watch for ambushes. Their enemies
lay in wait to pelt them with rocks or club them with sticks. On one
occasion, death came to the door of the monastery in the form of a piece of
meat. Someone donated a ham to the Fathers. Four priests died from ptomaine
because of the poisoned meat. It was a terrible tragedy for Clement to
endure. He saw the number of Redemptorists shrinking rather than growing.
Providentially, four new men joined the community shortly after this
incident, but Clement could never forget his murdered confreres.
Even more shattering to Clement was the death of Father Thaddeus Huebl, his
classmate and dear friend. Huebl was called away on a phony sick call. Many
hours later he was tossed out of a fast-moving carriage after having been
tortured and beaten to a pulp. Several days later he died from his injuries.
It hurt Clement deeply to see his friend pass from his life. Now he would
have to march on alone.
The attacks continued. The Redemptorists became the butt of jokes in the
theaters. The local Polish priests even tried to stop the work being done by
the Redemptorists. After 20 years of building up the faith of the people in
Warsaw, they were attacked, waylaid, and harassed. In 1806 a law was passed
that forbade local pastors to invite the Redemptorists to preach missions in
their parishes. This was followed by an even more restrictive law that
stopped the Redemptorists from preaching and hearing confessions in their
own church of St. Benno's.
Clement appealed these actions directly to the King of Saxony who ruled
Poland at that time. While this man knew the good that the Redemptorists
were doing, he was powerless to stop the many Freemasons and Jacobins who
wanted the Redemptorists out of Poland. The decree of expulsion was signed
on June 9, 1808. Eleven days later, the Church of St. Benno's was closed and
the forty Redemptorists serving there were taken off to prison. They lived
there for four weeks and then were ordered to return to their own countries.
Vienna: a New Start
In September 1808, after being exiled from Poland, Clement reached Vienna.
He remained there until his death almost 13 years later. In 1809 when the
forces of Napoleon attacked Vienna, Clement worked as a hospital chaplain
caring for the many wounded soldiers. The archbishop, seeing Clement's zeal,
asked him to care for a little Italian church in the city of Vienna. He
remained there for four years until he was appointed chaplain to the
Ursuline Sisters in July 1813.
Attending to the spiritual welfare of the Sisters and the lay people who
came to their chapel, Clement's true holiness came even more to the fore. At
that altar his reverence made it plain that he was a man of faith. In the
pulpit he spoke the words that the people needed to hear. He preached so
that they could see their sins, realize God's goodness, and live their lives
according to the will of God. But if he was a lion in the pulpit, Clement
was a lamb in the confessional. He listened to the penitents' sins, gave
them a message of encouragement, asked God to pardon them, and sent them on
their way.
In those early days of the 1800s, Vienna was a major European cultural
center. Clement enjoyed spending time with the students and the
intellectuals. Students came -- singly and in groups -- to his quarters to
talk, share a meal, or get advice. A good many of them later became
Redemptorists. He brought many rich and artistic people into the Church
including Frederick and Dorothy von Schlegel (she was the daughter of
Mendelssohn, the founder of the Romanticist school); Frederick von
Klinkowstroem, the artist; Joseph von Pilat, the private secretary of
Metternich; Frederick Zachary Werner, who was later ordained and became a
great preacher; and Frederick von Held, who became a Redemptorist and later
spread the Congregation as far as Ireland.
In Vienna Hofbauer again found himself under attack. For a short time he was
prohibited from preaching. Then he was threatened with expulsion because he
had been communicating with his Redemptorist Superior General in Rome.
Before the expulsion could become official, Emperor Franz of Austria would
have to sign it. At the time the Emperor was on pilgrimage to Rome, where he
visited Pope Pius VII and learned how greatly the work of Hofbauer was
appreciated. He also learned that he could reward Hofbauer for his years of
dedicated service by allowing him to start a Redemptorist foundation in
Austria.
So, instead of a writ of expulsion, Hofbauer got an audience with Emperor
Franz. Quickly the plans were made. A church was selected and refurbished to
become the first Redemptorist foundation in Austria. It was to be started
without Clement, however. He took sick in early March 1820, and died on
March 15 of that year. Like Moses in the Hebrew Scriptures, he had brought
the people to the Promised Land but he himself did not live long enough to
enter it. He died with the gratifying knowledge that his second dream had
been fulfilled.
Clement Hofbauer was beatified on January 29, 1888, by
Pope Leo XIII. He was canonized a saint of the Catholic Church on May 20,
1909. In 1914, Pope Pius X gave him the title of Apostle and Patron to
Vienna. Today, more than 150 years after his death, the yearly feast of
Saint Clement is remembered in a very special way by the people of Vienna
and the six thousand priests and Brothers throughout the world who wear the
Redemptorist habit just as Saint Clement did.
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