|
There was a home eight blocks (about 1 kilometer) from where the A-Bomb went off in Hiroshima Japan. This home had a church attached to it which was completely destroyed, but the home survived, and so did the eight German Jesuit missionaries who prayed the rosary in that house faithfully every day. These men were missionaries to the Japanese people, they were non-military, but because Germany and Japan were allies during WWII they were permitted to live and minister within Japan during the war.
Not only did they all survive with (at most) relatively minor injuries, but they all lived well past that awful day with no radiation sickness, no loss of hearing, or any other visible long term defects or maladies. Naturally, they were interviewed and examined numerous times (Fr. Schiffer, a survivor, said over 200 times) by scientists and health care people about their remarkable experience and they say "we believe that we survived because we were living the message of Fatima. We lived and prayed the rosary daily in that home."
Fr. Arrupe, a Basque, had his vocation come about when he was a medical student and witnessed a miraculous healing at Lourdes. After the bombing of Hiroshima, he set up a makeshift hospital and cared for more than 200 wounded and dying people.
For his book "Hiroshima," written not long after the event, John Hersey interviewed one of the Jesuit priests, Fr. Schiffer, IIRC, and five other survivors.
All eight priests were still living in 1976 when one of them addressed a Eucharistic Conference in the U.S.
Additionally, a Franciscan Friary had been built in Nagasaki by St. Maximillian Kolbe. The Lord told him to build it behind the crest of a hill and the hill sheltered it from the blast.
Given the times we live in, I am starting to pray the Rosary daily again, beginning today, the Feast of St. Dominic!
|