Áron Márton

The native form of this personal name is Márton Áron. This article uses the Western name order.
Áron Márton
Bishop of Alba Iulia
Diocese Diocese of Alba Iulia
Installed 1938
Term ended 1980
Predecessor Adolf Vorbuchner
Successor Antal Jakab
Orders
Ordination 6 July 1924
Consecration 12 February 1939
by Andrea Cassulo
Personal details
Born (1896-08-28)28 August 1896
Csíkszentdomokos, Austria-Hungary
Died 29 September 1980(1980-09-29)
Alba Iulia, Romania
Nationality Hungarian
Sainthood
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church
Title as Saint Servant of God

Áron Márton (28 August 1896 29 September 1980), Servant of God, was the bishop of the Roman Catholic Church in Transylvania during World War II and the communist regime in Romania.

Early life

Áron Márton was born into a Székely Hungarian peasant family in Csíkszentdomokos, Transylvania, Kingdom of Hungary (present-day Sândominic, Harghita County, Romania). After graduating from secondary school in 1915, he was drafted into the Austro-Hungarian Army. He was involved in battles of World War I in different military theatres, and was injured several times. After the war he worked as farmer, then was employed as metal worker at a factory in Braşov.

In 1920, Márton began his theology studies in Alba Iulia. Following this, he became a chaplain, and later theology professor in various Transylvanian localities. He was also court chaplain and archivist at the Alba-Iulia Bishopric after 1930, and priest of the University of Cluj. He was appointed the Bishop of Alba Iulia by Pope Pius XI in 1938.

Speaking up for the Jews

Márton was one of the first intellectuals to openly oppose the preparations for World War II, which he was already doing in 1938. He stayed in southern Transylvania, which remained part of Romania after the Second Vienna Award. In a speech he gave in St. Michael's Church, during a visit to Kolozsvár (Romanian: Cluj) in May 1944, he condemned the prepared deportation of Romanian and Hungarian Jews (see Holocaust in Hungary).

A couple of days later, he wrote letters to the Hungarian Government, to the Police and other authorities, requesting the prohibition of the deportation. As a response, Márton was expelled from the city. For his activities during this period, he was posthumously awarded the title "Righteous Among the Nations" by the Yad Vashem institute in Israel (in 1999).[1]

Under the communist dictatorship

Áron Márton

In 1945, after the death of Cardinal Jusztinián Serédi, Pope Pius XII wanted Márton to become the next Cardinal in Hungary, but, as the Hungarian Communist Party strongly opposed him, József Mindszenty was chosen for the position.

Áron Márton stayed in his homeland Transylvania and continued to be a strong advocate for religious freedom and human rights. This made him a prominent enemy of the Romanian Communist Party and of the dictatorial regime it established in late 1947. The Bishop was arrested in June 1948 and was sentenced to life imprisonment; five years later, with the change of the political climate in Romania, the circumstances of his captivity became more bearable. He was moved into a villa in the outskirts of Bucharest, he was also given back his prayer book, but was not allowed to contact the outside world. He was ultimately released in 1955.

Márton subsequently decided to revisit his bishopric, being received by an enthusiastic crowd. This proved embarrassing for the authorities, and he was subsequently confined to house arrest. Áron Márton was not allowed to leave the bishopric building for the following 11 years, and only emerged in 1967. He was finally released as a result of negotiations conducted by the Austrian Cardinal König in Bucharest. Over the following years, as he was still cautious of possible harassment from the authorities, Márton was accompanied by groups of Székely volunteers on his pastoral trips.

References

  1. Áron Márton – his activity to save Jews' lives during the Holocaust, at Yad Vashem website
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