Maria Izabela Wiłucka-Kowalska

Maria Izabela WiłuckaKowalska
Archpriestess
Church Catholic Mariavite Church
Installed 1940
Term ended 1946
Predecessor Jan Maria Michał Kowalski
Successor Maria Rafael Wojciechowski
Other posts President of the Council of Major Superiors
Orders
Ordination 28 March 1929
Consecration 28 March 1929
Personal details
Birth name Antonina Wiłucka
Born (1890-10-28)October 28, 1890
Warsaw, Vistula Land, Russian Empire
Died November 28, 1946(1946-11-28) (aged 56)
Felicjanów, Płock County, Polish People's Republic
Buried Felicjanów
Denomination Mariavite Christian
Parents Adam Wiłucki
Maria Antonina née Horn
Spouse Jan Maria Michał Kowalski[1]
Children none[lower-alpha 1]
Sainthood
Feast day 3 September,
28 November
Venerated in Catholic Mariavite Church
Canonized 1946
Felicjanów
by popular acclaim
Shrines Felicjanów, Płock County, Poland

Antonina Maria Izabela Wiłucka-Kowalska (née Wiłucka, 28 October 1890  28 November 1946) was a Polish religious leader, who served as the first archpriestess of the Catholic Mariavite Church.[3][lower-alpha 2] Wiłucka-Kowalska was the first woman to receive the sacrament of holy orders in Poland and consecration as a bishop.

Positions held

Early life

Wiłucka was a member of the Polish landed gentry. She was the daughter of Adam Wiłucki and Maria Antonina née Horn. She attended the Russian gymnasium in Warsaw for several years, and then enrolled in Marta Łojkówna's pedagogical institute for women in Warsaw. She graduated in 1909.

The following year, she tutored children of a Polish landed gentry family in Polesie, Orda, at their estate in Perekale, Minsk Governorate for four years. One of the Orda proposed marriage. She became familiar with the English, French, German, and Russian languages, and she was musically talented.

Appointment

After the outbreak of the World War I and the death of the estate owner, with his family Ordów, she was deported to Crimea, where, after three years, in 1918, she returned to the Second Polish Republic, to his family in Warsaw.

In the same year, while she was with a family in Płock, she encountered Mariavitism and Feliksa Kozłowska, its founder. Soon afterward, despite her family's objections, she joined the Mariavite Sisters.

In 1920, she took the religious name of Maria Izabela.[lower-alpha 3] Wiłucka was Kozłowska's suggested successor as Superior General of the Mariavite Sisters,[7] which Wiłucka became after she professed perpetual vows on 8 September 1922.

In the same year, after the introduction of clerical marriage into the Old Catholic Mariavite Church,[lower-alpha 4] she married the charismatic leader of the church,[8] Archbishop Jan Maria Michał Kowalski on 3 October 1922, in one of the first secret mystical marriages – between a priest and a nun.[9][lower-alpha 5]

Bishop of the Old Catholic Mariavite Church

In 1929, after the introduction of the ordination of women in the Old Catholic Mariavite Church, Wiłucka-Kowalska and 11 other nuns were ordained in Płock on 28 March 1929. in Plock, and Wiłucka-Kowalska was then consecrated as a bishop.[10][lower-alpha 6] From that time, having the title of archpriestess, she was a member of the Old Catholic Mariavite Church synod of bishops, along with Maria Jakub Próchniewski, Maria Filip Feldman, and Maria Bartholomew Przysiecki. Her responsibilities included care of the priesthood of sisters.

In 1926, Wiłucka-Kowalska participated in an unsuccessful Old Catholic Mariavite Church bishops delegation to the Balkans and Middle East, where she presented the mission and activities of the Old Catholic Mariavite Church to Eastern Christian Churches.[11]

Bishop of the Catholic Mariavite Church

The schism of the Catholic Mariavite Church from the Old Catholic Mariavite Church, in 1935, forced Wiłucka-Kowalska and her husband, Kowalski, and their followers to move to Felicjanów.

She remained the Superior General of the Congregation of the Mariavite Sisters and participated in the management of the Catholic Mariavite Church, which separated from the main Mariavite denomination.

While her husband, Kowalski, served 18 months of a prison sentence beginning in July 1936 for his 1928 and 1929 convictions,[12][lower-alpha 7] Wiłucka-Kowalska exercised authority over the church.[16] From 1936 to 1939, she resumed publication of a fortnightly periodical, Królestwo Boże na Ziemi, in Felicjanów.

Following the arrest by the Gestapo of Kowalski in January 1940 and his deportation to the Priest Barracks of Dachau Concentration Camp, Wiłucka-Kowalska took over the management of the Catholic Mariavite Church until her death in 1946.

In March 1941, all the inhabitants of the church commune in Felicjanów were deported to Soldau concentration camp, then to a camp in the Modlin Fortress and then to Pomiechówek. After her release, Wiłucka-Kowalska lived in Plonsk, where some sisters were employed at a hospital. As far as possible, she led the Catholic Mariavite Church and maintained correspondence with her husband, who was imprisoned in Dachau concentration camp.

After the front passed through, in the spring of 1945 she returned to the destroyed Felicjanów. She died on 28 November 1946. She was buried in the park in front of the manor house in Felicjanów. After her death, she was regarded by Catholic Mariavite Church adherents as a saint.

Notes

  1. She had no biological children but was the mother of record for one male child, Michael, whose father was her husband, Kowalski, and whose mother was another bishopess at the commune, Dilecta, according to Peterkiewicz (1975, pp. 148, 190–191).
  2. The title archpriestess, a translation of arcykapłanka, is used throughout Peterkiewicz (1975).
  3. Kowalski created a covert inner church, the Philadelphic church of Love, after the death of Kozłowska. In the context of the covert inner church, Kowalski named her Abishag and the first of his mystical polygamous wives.[6]
  4. Górecki (2006) commented that mystical marriages – between priests and nuns – is one of three sensitive subjects within Mariavitism, along with worship of Kozłowska and common priesthood. Górecki notes that, in 1986, Catholic Church of the Mariavites Archbishop Maria Rafael Wojciechowski said that the term mystical marriage (małżeństwa mistyczne) originated outside of Mariavitism as a term of ridicule.
  5. Wiłucka-Kowalska had a role in procuring Mariavite mystical marriages. According to Peterkiewicz (1975, p. 91), she was Kowalski's accomplice by "welcom[ing] the new insider" and pacifying "guilty second thoughts" the selected nun may have. Peterkiewicz (1975, p. 225) pondered if Wiłucka-Kowalska was "filled with holiness" could she have "had a taste for the dark side of sex?" Wiłucka-Kowalska was, according to Peterkiewicz (1975, p. 141), "bullied and encouraged in turn" by the "overbearing" Kowalski.
  6. Peterkiewicz (1975, pp. 143, 237) noted that according to the Mariavite publication Królestwo Boże na Ziemi, on Easter, "31 March 1929 they witnessed 'the first Mass celebrated by a woman'."
  7. Kowalski was convicted in 1928 of sexual offenses against 5 underage girls and 3 women, under three separate penal code articles, crimes in which victims are "raped or forced in any other way to have intercourse with the accused." He was sentenced to 4 years imprisonment but that sentence was reduced first to 2 years 8 months and then to 1 year 4 months; another 6 month sentence, for a separate 1929 conviction for blasphemy, was added to that.[13] The 1928 verdict was upheld in 1929 and the appeal court commented "that Kowalski 'raises sexual intercourse to a religious cult'."[14] A witness testified that Wiłucka-Kowalska "had encouraged her, when she was still very young, to submit to his wishes."[15] Wiłucka-Kowalska was not prosecuted.

Citations

  1. Peterkiewicz 1975; Collinson 1994, p. 145: "the first of Kowalski's women and regarded by the law as his wife"
  2. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 142; Rybak n.d., p. 110.
  3. Peterkiewicz 1975.
  4. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 83.
  5. Rybak n.d., pp. 110–111.
  6. Peterkiewicz 1975, pp. 86, 140, 146–147, 151–152.
  7. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 52.
  8. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 2, paraphrased in Collinson (1994, p. 143) as "a personified religious fantasy for thousands of Polish women, grown to preposterous dimensions."
  9. Peterkiewicz 1975; Górecki 2006.
  10. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 142.
  11. Rybak n.d., p. 54.
  12. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 171.
  13. Peterkiewicz 1975, pp. 102–103, 113, 171.
  14. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 115.
  15. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 116.
  16. Peterkiewicz 1975, p. 175.

References

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