Ukrainian Refugees: A Polish Welcome
Author: Andrew Comiskey
March 23, 2022
Ania Bandura
Ania is a Polish journalist who interviewed me
for a Catholic journal last December before our training in Kraków. We met, she
met Marco, and the rest is romantic history.
I recently returned from the Polish-Ukrainian
border. Trains filled with 1,000-2,000 refugees, bound for safety in Poland
every few hours, sobered me. Unforgettable. Mothers' tears, uncertainty about
the future of their children, concern for their husbands who stayed to fight--their faces foretell the coming heaviness.
God’s Sacred Heart is grieved. War is far from His will.
But the present circumstances beg the question: what if God allowed this war so
that we could respond in love? A hard paradox for sure! War reveals much evil in
people; is it possible that God invites us to overcome evil with good?

I’ve seen many in Poland who have surprised
me. Especially those who are seemingly pagan, disconnected from their faith.
Yet they are activated by another’s need and do good to the oppressed. This war
has sobered my generation and is provoking us to lend a helping hand.
As evil lurks, the sleepy wake up to love another. The Holy Spirit is moving
human hearts—His Presence is stronger than Putin’s. I marvel at how Jesus’
Spirit is rousing us in these difficult days.
I spoke with Carmelite priests from Wadowice who were encouraged by long lines
of persons seeking the cleansing flood of confession. They are living in the
rhythm of mercy! This is powerful grace as to endure the times. May we
prevail over the hardships with greater Love. If even non-believers are moved
with pity for the displaced, how much more should we the faithful ache and act?
Please pray that we Poles might manifest our faith to all who have need of us.
Jesus and His Mother have been our hope at every turn of history. May we not
fail to act on that faith today.
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