About St. Edith Stein
Edith Stein, Virgin and Martyr, was born in 1891 in Breslau, Germany (now
Poland). She was the youngest child of a large Jewish family. She was an
outstanding student and was well versed in philosophy with a particular interest
in phenomenology.
Eventually she became interested in the Catholic Faith, and in 1922, she was
baptized at the Cathedral Church in Cologne, Germany. Eleven years later Edith
entered the Cologne Carmel. Because of the ramifications of politics in Germany,
Edith, whose name in religion was Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, was sent to the
Carmel at Echt, Holland. When the Nazis conquered Holland, Teresa was arrested,
and, with her sister Rose, was sent to the concentration camp at Auschwitz.
Teresa died in the gas chambers of Auschwitz in 1942 at the age of fifty-one. In
1987, she was beatified in the Cologne cathedral by Pope John Paul II. She was
canonized on October 11, 1998.
The darker it becomes around us
, the more we ought to
open our hearts to the light that comes
from on high. -- Edith
Stein

Saint Edith Stein
Excerpted from an address delivered by the (then) President of
Holy Cross, the Rev. John E. Brooks, S.J. on the occasion of the formal
dedication of Edith Stein Hall, 6 May 1988.
Edith
Stein was a remarkable Jewish woman. Born in Breslau, Germany on 12 October
1891, the youngest of eleven children of a very devout Jewish family, she died
in the Auschwitz gas chamber on 9 August 1942, having been sent to the death
camp when she refused to deny her Jewish heritage.
In the
intervening 50 years, she was a remarkably successful woman in a male dominated
world. became a convert to Catholicism and a devout Carmelite nun who, as
anti-Semitism spread and intensified in Germany and Holland, wished to offer her
life for world peace and the preservation of her Jewish people.
She was
a brilliant student, first enrolling at the University of Breslau in 1911, and
later transferring to the University of Gottingen to pursue her studies under
the mentorship of the famed founder of phenomenology, Edmund Husserl. Husserl
eventually chose Edith Stein to be his teaching assistant at the University of
Freiburg, and declared her to be the best doctoral student he ever had -- even
more able than Heidegger who was also a pupil of Husserl's at the same time
Edith was. In 1916 she completed her doctoral dissertation and was awarded a
Doctor of Philosophy degree summa cum laude.
As the
draft began calling up many of her friends for service in World War I, Edith
volunteered together with a number of other women students for duty in military
hospitals. She requested an assignment in a hospital for infectious diseases,
and devotedly cared for soldiers of the Austrian Army who were suffering from
typhus, dysentery and cholera. On completion of her term as a volunteer at the
military hospital, Edith was awarded the medal of valor in recognition of
her selfless service.
She
next became Husserl's assistant at the University of Freiburg, where he had been
called to a Full Professorship, and there her religious struggle began as, in
her pursuit of truth, she turned to reading the New Testament and began her
gradual movement back towards a faith which she had earlier abandoned. On
January 1, 1922 -- New Year's Day -- Edith Stein was baptized a Catholic, taking
the name Teresa as her baptismal name. She continued to attend the Synagogue
with her mother, praying the psalms of the service.
At this
point in her life, Edith discontinued her scholarly career as a student and
accepted a position teaching German at the Dominican Sisters' school in Speyer.
Here, for eight years, she labored as a teacher, and balanced her day between
work and prayer. She was known to be a sympathetic and accomodating teacher who
worked hard to convey her material in a clear and systematic manner, and whose
concern extended beyond the transmission of knowledge to include
the formation of the whole person. Sne believed education to be an apostolic
work.
Throughout
this period, Edith continued her philosophical writings and translations, and
took on speaking engagements that took her to cities such as Heidelberg, Zurich,
Salzburg. In the course of her lectures she frequently addressed herself to the
role and significance of women in contemporary life as she developed themes
treating "The Ethos of Women's Professions," "The Separate
Vocations of Man and Woman According to God and Nature," "The
Spirituality of Christian Woman," "Fundamental Principles of Women's
Education," "Problems of Women's
Education," "The Church, Woman and Youth," and "The
Significance of Woman's Intrinsic Value in National Life."A reading of the
texts of these lectures clearly reveals Edith Stein's radical feminist stance
and her strong commitment to the recognition and advancement of women, and to
the value she attached to the mature Christian life of a woman as a source of
healing for the world.
In 1931
Edith left the convent school to devote herself full-time to writing and the
publication of her works. In 1932, she accepted a lectureship position at the
University of Munster, but a year later was told that she would have to give up
her position because of her Jewish background. A sympathetic university
administration suggested that she work on her projects privately until the
situation in Germany improved, but Edith declined. An offer to teach in South
America was also made, but after giving the matter serious consideration, Edith
became convinced that the time had come for her to fulfill her ambition to enter
the convent. AOn October 14, 1933, at age 42, Edith Stein entered the Carmelite
Convent in Cologne and took the religious name, Teresa, Benedicta a Cruce --
Teresa, Blessed of the Cross, reflecting her special devotion to the Passion of
Christ and her gratitude for the spiritual patronage of Teresa of Avila.
In the
convent, Edith continued to study and write, completing the text of her book, Finite
and Being, her magnum opus, authoring Ways of Knowing God and The
Symbolic Theology of the Areopagite, a two-volume translation of St. Thomas'
works, and working on The Science of the Cross.
By 1938
the situation in Germany had grown steadily worse, and the S.S. attack of
November 8 (Kristallnacht) removed any lingering doubts about the true
state of affairs of Jewish citizens. The Convent Prioress arranged for Edith to
be transferred to the Dutch convent at Echt, and on New Years Eve, 31 December
1938, Edith Stein was driven across the border under the cover of darkness to
Holland. There, at the Convent in Echt, Edith composed three acts of
self-oblation, offering her life up for the Jewish people, the averting of war
(i.e., peace) and for
the sanctification of her Carmelite family. She then settled into a life of
teaching the postulants Latin and writing a book on St. John of the Cross.
As the
crematoria and gas chambers rose in the East, Edith, along with thousands of
Jews in Holland, began receiving citations from the S.S. (Hitler's
"Protection Squadron") in Maastricht and the Council for Jewish
Affairs in Amsterdam.
She
applied for a Swiss visa, along with her sister Rosa who had joined her at Echt,
that
they might transfer to the Carmelite Convent of Le Paquier. The Le Paquier
community informed
the Echt community that while they would be glad to receive Edith, they could
not accomodate
Rosa. This was unacceptable to Edith, and she refused to go to Switzerland
preferring to remain
with her sister at Echt. Determined to finish The Science of the Cross,
she used every available
moment for research, often working to the point of exhaustion.
In the
Dutch Carmelite community at Echt, Edith Stein's protection against the growing
persecution of Jews was only temporary. While the Nazi policy of exterminating
Jews was rapidly
implemented once Holland was occupied, Jews who professed Christianity were
initially left alone.
However, when the Catholic bishops in the Netherlands issued a pastoral letter
in which they
sharply protested against the deportation of the Jews, the Nazi rulers reacted
by ordering the
extermination of baptized Jews as well.
That is
the reason why on Sunday, August 2, 1942, at 5 o'clock in the afternoon, after
Edith Stein had spent the day in her usual manner, praying and working on the
unfinished
manuscript of her book on St. John of the Cross. At 5:00 o'clock in the
afternoon, the S.S.
officers came to the Convent and led away Edith and Rosa Stein. Frightened by
the crowd
and unable to absorb fully the situation, Rosa began to grow disoriented. A
witness has related
that Edith took Rosa by the hand and said reassuringly, "Come Rosa, We're
going for our people.
" Together they walked to the corner and got into the waiting police van.
There are a number of
eye witness accounts of Edith's behavior during her days of imprisonment at
Amersfoort and
Westerbork, a central detention camp in the north of Holland -- her silence, her
calm, her
composure, her self-possession, her comforting and consoling of other women, her
caring
for the little ones, washing them and combing their hair and making sure that
they were fed.
In the
middle of the night before the dawn of August 7, 1942, the Westerbork prisoners,
including Edith Stein, the Carmelite nun, were placed in trains and deported to
Auschwitz. In
1950, the Dutch Gazette published the official list of names of all Jews
who had been deported
from Holland on 7 August 1942. There were no survivors from the transport. Among
the listing
is the following entry:
Number 44070: Edith Theresa Hedwig Stein, Echt
Born: 12 October 1891, Breslau
Died: 9 August 1942
On May 1,
1987, Edith Stein, a Carmelite nun and a victim of the Holocaust at
Auschwitz, was beatified, along with Father Rupert Mayer, a Jesuit priest known
for his resistance
to the Nazis, during a Mass celebrated by Pope John Paul II in Cologne, West
Germany. In the
course of his homily, the Pope noted that Edith Stein, the philosopher, was
preoccupied in life
with the search for truth, and her life was one illuminated by the cross.
"In the years when she studied...at the universities of Breslau,
Gottingen and Freiburg," the
Pope said, "God did not play an important role, at least initially. Her
thinking was based
on a demanding ethical idealism. In keeping with her intellectual abilities,
she did not want
to accept anything without careful examination, not even the faith of her
fathers. She wanted
to get to the bottom of things herself. As such she was engaged in a constant
search for the
truth. Looking back on this period of intellectual unrest in her life, she saw
it an important
phase in a process of spiritual maturation. 'My search for truth,' she said,
'was a constant
prayer' --... a comforting bit of testimony for those who have a hard time
believing in God.
The search for truth is itself in a very profound sense a search for
God."
The
playwrite, Arthur Giron, who wrote the first draft of his play, called simply Edith
Stein, while finishing his Master of Arts degree in playwriting at Hunter
College, has said, "The
real Edith Stein was a dark, fine-boned beauty. She had something, some
quality, that naturally
attracted people to her. She was very feminine, yet very strong, very tough
under the surface.
She was very smart about getting what she wanted out of life." When asked
if he ever feels that
Edith Stein may be present in spirit during performances of his play, Giron
replied, I feel Edith is
here with me now. I feel the presence very strongly as you and I are
talking."
On
October 14, 1987, Giron squeezed his eyes shut against the pain as the surgeons
began screwing a metal brace into his skull -- without anesthesia and prior to
an injection of cobalt
into his brain. It was then that Giron saw a vision of radiant white light, and
out of the light
emerged the figure of a nun. Giron was not surprised to see her. After all, he
had been obsessed
with this woman for nearly thirty (30) years. He had written his first play
about her. A decade
later, he rewrote it. He had been rewriting the script yet again, this time for
a Pittsburgh Public
Theatre production scheduled to open on January 5, 1988, when a dime-sized web
of veins in his
cerebellum began leaking blood. As he lay on the operating table, Giron knew the
spirit of the nun
he was seeing in his mind was somehow, literally, in that operating room with
him. He greeted her
by name "Edith Stein," Giron said to himself as the surgeon's screws
bore into his skull, "this is for
you."
This
same Edith Stein, now presented to us as a blessed martyr and an heroic follower
of Christ, is present to us this afternoon as we dedicate this magnificent
academic building in her
name and in her honor. In the words of Pope John Paul II,
"Let us open ourselves up for her message to us as a woman of the spirit
and of the mind,
who saw in the science of the cross the acme of all wisdom..."
Edith Stein is a gift, an invocation and a promise for our time. May she be an
intercessor before
God for our faculty, our students, our administrators, our staff, our alumni,
our benefactors, and
for all people throughout the world. Blessed Edith Stein, Sister Teresa
Benedicta a Cruce, a true
worshipper of God -- in spirit and in truth -- pray for us and for all your
people!
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