Justinas Staugaitis

Justinas Staugaitis

Justinas Staugaitis (14 November 1866 near Šakiai – 8 July 1943, Telšiai) was a Lithuanian Roman Catholic bishop, politician, educator, and author. He one of the twenty signatories to the Act of Independence of Lithuania.

Staugaitis graduated from the Sejny Theological Seminary and was ordained in 1890. At that time, the use of the written Lithuanian language was prohibited, and his cousin Antanas Saugaitis participated in the underground movements that smuggled in such books and periodicals (see Knygnešiai). He then served as a curate in a number of parishes in Lithuania and Poland.

In Marijampolė, he founded an educational society, Žiburys (The Light), and was instrumental in founding several schools, an old age home, and an orphanage. From 1909 to 1912 he served on the editorial staff of the periodical Vadovas (The Guide). At the Vilnius Conference in 1917, he was elected to the Council of Lithuania, and signed the Act of Independence in 1918.

As a member of the Christian Democratic Party, he was elected to the Constituent Assembly in 1920, serving alternately as speaker or deputy speaker. In 1926 Staugaitis was consecrated Bishop of Telšiai, a newly formed diocese in northwestern Lithuania that had been part of the Samogitian diocese. He established a theological seminary in Telšiai and contributed numerous articles to periodicals, as well as writing several books. These included a history of the church, a history of the Lithuanian State Council, and a novel depicting the life of a loyal priest.

When the Jews of Telsiai turned to Staugaitis for help after the German invasion of the city in 1941, he refused to help them. He also actively participated in their degradation on 13 July 1941, two days before the mass murder of the Jewish men of the city.[1]

References

  1. "Telsiai". Retrieved 2016-07-25.
Catholic Church titles
new jurisdiction seceded
from the Diocese of Samogitia
Bishop of Telšiai
1926-1943
Succeeded by
Vincentas Borisevičius
new jurisdiction seceded
from the Diocese of Ermland
Prelate of Klaipėda (Memel)
1926-1939
Succeeded by
Maximilian Kaller
as Apostolic Administrator


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