CARPI, Italy, MARCH 20, 2007 (Zenit.org).- The Catholic journalist Odoardo Focherini saved more than 100 Jews before he died in a concentration camp during World War II, at the age of 37.
The Catholic Union of the Italian Press paid tribute to Focherini on Saturday, marking the 100th anniversary of his birth. The journalist was the administrative director of L'Avvenire d'Italia and president of the Italian segment of Catholic Action.
In a letter he dictated shortly before dying, he said: "I declare that I die in the most pure catholic, apostolic, Roman faith and in full submission to the will of God, offering my life as a holocaust for my diocese, Catholic Action, for the Pope and for the return of peace to the world."
Bishop Elio Tinti of Carpi, who opened the celebration, said: "He was a man who knew how to bring joy to the lives of many people, especially the 105 Jews he saved, but also to all those he met, offering a shining example of what it means to be a man of simplicity."
The prelate spoke of the journalist's deep love for his family, "his tender relationship with his beloved wife and his seven dear children -- deep ties that we see revealed in the marvelous letters that he wrote, but ties which did not impede him from living his life for others."
Bishop Tinti added: "With hope and devotion, we hope that the Church will soon be able to recognize him as a martyr. His life is truly a hymn of sanctity."
Focherini organized a network to move Jews out of Italy to safety in Switzerland. He was arrested for this on March 11, 1944. After stops in several prisons, he died from an infected leg wound on Dec. 27, 1944, in the Hersbruck concentration camp in Germany.
Father Claudio Pontiroli, vice postulator of his cause for beatification, reported: "We found more than 300 letters of condolences; in 62 of them Odoardo is spoken of as a martyr of charity. Celebrations for him were made, like for no other victim of the war."
Code: ZE07032004
Date: 2007-03-20