Ladislaus Michael Zaleski

Wladyslaw Michal Bonifacy Zaleski
Titular Patriarch of Antioch
Native name Władysław Michał Bonifacy Zaleski
Orders
Ordination 1882 or 1885
Consecration 15 May 1892
by Archbishop Paul François Marie Goethals, S.J.
Personal details
Born (1852-05-25)May 25, 1852
Vilnius, Lithuania
Died October 5, 1925(1925-10-05) (aged 73)
Rome
Coat of arms Zaleski's coat of arms as displayed on the plaque marking his remains

Wladyslaw Michal Bonifacy Zaleski (also called Vladislovas Mykolas Zaleskis in Lithuanian or Ladislao Michele Zaleski in English, 1852 1925) was a Catholic archbishop, pioneer missionary, Apostolic Delegate to the East Indies and Latin Patriarch of Antioch.

Archbishop Ladislas Zaleski (left) and Bishop Aloysius Benziger, 1900
Archbishop Ladislao Zaleski (right, the two white-robed bishops in the center), 1914 at the Seminary of Mangalore, India
Plaque marking the remains of Zaleski near the altar of the Papal Seminary chapel
A plaque has been installed at the place where Pope John Paul II knelt to pray in front of his compatriot Zaleski's remains
The two plaques are in front of the altar of the Papal Seminary chapel

Youth and education

Zaleski was born in Vilnius (then under Russian rule). He was the son of Leon and Gabriela Zaleski of Dombrowiczów. Since there were no Polish schools in Vilnius, he did his primary and secondary schooling privately[1] and he graduated from high school in Kaunas. In 1880 he joined the Warsaw Theological Seminary, and he moved in 1881 for further studies at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. There he received his doctorate and received a diplomatic training, which he completed in 1885, while attending a course in theology at the Collegium Romanum.

Diplomat of the Holy See

After his ordination in 1882 or 1885 in Florence, he was sent on a diplomatic mission to Spain, and a year later for the first time went to the East Indies, accompanying Antonio Agliardi, the Titular Archbishop of Cesarea, and the first Apostolic Delegate in India. In 1887, Pope Leo XIII appointed him as his personal representative to the 50th anniversary of the reign of Queen Victoria. For a time, Zaleski remained employed in the Roman Curia, as consulter Eastern affairs at the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith (Propaganda Fidei). From 1889 to 1890 Ladislaus Zaleski worked at the nunciature in Paris. In 1890 he returned to India, where on 5 March 1892, he replaced Archbishop Andrea Aiuti as the Apostolic Delegate of the East Indies.

Apostolic Delegate to India

Along with the nomination for the Apostolic Delegate in the East Indies, Zaleski was elevated to the dignity of archbishop and was appointed as the Titular Archbishop of Thebes. The area of his official activities ranged from Afghanistan and the Himalayas in the north, to Ceylon and the neighboring islands of the Indian Ocean in the south. On the initiative of the Archbishop eight ecclesiastical provinces and twenty-seven dioceses were founded in the territory. Archbishop Zaleski resided in Kandy, where he founded a central seminary from which were 51 bishops and three cardinals over the years.[2] Zaleski also initiated the creation of many minor seminaries and ordained several bishops, including local priests Augustine Kandathil[3] (1911) and Alexander Chulaparambil (1914). Zaleski was almost constantly travelling on missionary work, even outside of his delegation, he visited, among others, China, Japan, Indo-China, Java and the Philippines. He was the most outstanding Polish traveler in this region in the late nineteenth century. During his tenure as the Apostolic Delegate, he broadened his polyglot skills having already mastered eight European languages, to which he added Tamil and Sinhalese.

"Archbishop Zalesky as Apostolic Delegate for the supervision of all Roman Catholic missions of the East Indies, that is, over an area that was about half as large as the whole of Europe, including Russia and in which 300 million people lived. His closest companion was Father Aloysius Benziger, who took care of the secretariat independently. In his hands came the letters from all parts of India, reports, requests, complaints, complaints and cries for help. He had to write their answers on the Indian bishops to enter into negotiations to assign missionaries to resolve difficulties. It was his job to keep Rome to date; him drafting the Inspectorate reports was transmitted. This Inspectorate reports presuppose that Father Benziger mitmachte the inspection trips. He learned in this way the whole of India to know the countries that peoples and States, their kings and princes, the different races and religions, the character of the individual tribes." - Friedrich Donauer: Auf Apostelwegen in Indien, der Schweizer Bischof Aloisius Benziger. Benziger Verlag, Einsiedeln 1944

Ladislaus Zaleski presided over several provincial synods in India, and worked hard to strengthen the local church hierarchy and promoted sustainable growth of the missionaries. Zaleski rediscovered the Indian priest Joseph Vaz (1651-1711), called as the apostle of Ceylon at the end of the nineteenth century and became a Blessed Joseph Vaz devotee and admirer, publishing an account of his life. He held him up as a model of the native clergy he had been sent to train, and proposed that a new Cause for Canonization be started for Vaz.[4][5][6] Zaleski's fellow Pole, Pope John Paul II would beatify Vaz in 1995. He also did some research about the 2012-beatified, Indian martyrs including Devasahayam Pillai (1712-1752), and promoted devotions to them. Archbishop Zaleski was the principal consecrator for Indian bishops Aloysius Benziger (bishop of Quilon), Augustine Kandathil and Alexander Chulaparambil.

Zaleski's mission ended in 1916, after almost thirty years of residence in Asia. After returning to Rome he was nominated as the Patriarch of Antioch by Pope Benedict XV. Pope Benedict considered in 1919 his candidacy for the nomination of Cardinal, but eventually in the consistory in the same year other Polish bishops received the scarlet - Edmund Dalbor and Alexander Kakowski. Zaleski was in Rome for the rest of his life, where he died on 5 October 1925. He expressed the wish that his remains come to rest among those for whom he had laboured. With the transfer of the Papal Seminary, which he founded, from Kandy to its new location in Pune, in India, the Alumni of the same Seminary, some of whom had known Zaleski, fulfilled his wish, when his remains were transferred in 1955. Mgr. Zaleski’s remains now rest in the Seminary at the floor of the altar in the new Chapel of the Seminary.[7] After his death, he was honored by naming one of Colombo's areas as 'Zaleski Place' (in 1937).[8] Throughout his life, Zaleski kept in touch with the home country, often emphasizing his attachment to Poland.

Botanist

Zaleski's stay in India was not limited to the pastoral and missionary activities. He was into botanical science, gathering a large collection of tropical plants. This collection, numbering about 35,000 images of flora Indo-Malay, went to the Department of Plant Systematics and Geography, University of Warsaw. Among other topics in his books of travel, Zaleski described Botanical Gardens at Buitenzorg (in Java) and Penang (Malaysia) and several exotic plants he encountered during his travels.

Publications

Patriarch Zaleski was the author of several travel and ethnographic works. His published works run into more than seven and a half thousand pages of print, and he left a further seven thousand pages of manuscripts. Some books announced under pseudonyms, including the History of Ceylon from 1913 as G. Francis, and under the pseudonym 'Pierre Courtenay' he published several books of adventure for young people. He was also accomplished in poetry.

Bibliography

References

Further reading

External links

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Andrea Aiuti
Apostolic Delegate to India
15 March 1892 - 7 December 1916
Succeeded by
Pietro Fumasoni Biondi
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Lorenzo Passarini
Latin Patriarch of Antioch
7 December 1916 - 5 October 1925
Succeeded by
Roberto Vicentini
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