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Blessed
Zynoviy Kovalyk
(1903-1941)
Fr.
Zynoviy Kovalyk was born on 18 August 1903 in
the village of Ivachiv Horishniy near Ternopil
to a poor peasant family. Before becoming a monk
he worked as a primary school teacher in his village.
He had a strong character and never compromised
his faith. The dream of Zynoviy's childhood was
to become a priest. Having discovered his vocation
to consecrated life, Zynoviy Kovalyk joined the
Redemptorists. He professed vows as a Redemptorist
on 28 August 1926. Shortly after professing his
vows, Zynoviy was sent to Belgium for philosophical
and Theological studies.
After his return to Ukraine, on 9 August 1932
Zynoviy Kovalyk was ordained a priest. On 4 September
1932 Fr. Kovalyk celebrated his first Liturgy
in his home village of Ivachiv. The little icons
commemorating his ordination bore the following
inscription: "O Jesus, receive me [as a sacrifice]
together with the Holy Sacrifice of Thy Flesh
and Blood. Receive it for the Holy Church, for
my Congregation and for my Motherland". Christ
received these words as a most pure offering.
Little did Fr. Kovalyk know that those words were
prophetic, and that soon - in just nine years
- they would come true in his martyrdom…
After his ordination Fr. Kovalyk departed, together
with bishop Mykolay Charnetskyi, to the Volhyn
region to serve the cause of reconciliation with
Orthodox Ukrainians. The young priest was a true
joy to his confreres. Fr. Kovalyk had a good sense
of humour, beautiful voice and clear diction.
He was a great singer and truly a preacher with
a "golden mouth". His apostolic devotion attracted
thousands of people. Fr. Kovalyk loved the Mother
of God with all his heart, and always displayed
sincere piety towards her. These qualities of
Fr. Kovalyk brought him great success in his missionary
activities.
Having spent several years working in the Volhyn
region, Fr. Kovalyk moved to Stanislaviv (now
Ivano-Frankivsk) to conduct missions there, both
in town and in suburban villages. Immediately
before the Soviet invasion of 1939 he moved to
Lviv, to the Redemptorist monastery in Zyblykevycha
(now Ivana Franka) street, and took charge as
economo of the monastery.
The courageous priest continued preaching the
Word of God even after the Soviet invasion had
started. An important field of Fr. Kovalyk's work
was hearing confessions, and it is in this field
that he had particular success: he was always
approached by a great number of people seeking
spiritual support.
While most of the Galician Ukrainians were overpowered
by terror, Fr. Zynoviy displayed admirable courage.
Most of the preachers were extremely cautious
in their sermons. They tried to avoid the burning
issues of the day and concentrated on exhorting
people to be faithful to God. Fr. Kovalyk, on
the contrary, was never afraid to openly condemn
the atheistic customs introduced by the Soviet
regime. His sermons had a great impact on the
audience, but at the same time constituted no
small danger for the preacher. When advised by
his friends of the possible danger resulting from
such manner of preaching, Fr. Kovalyk answered:
"I will receive death gladly if such be God's
will, but I shall never compromise my conscience
as a preacher".
The last great sermon by Fr. Kovalyk took place
in Ternopil on 28 August 1940 on the occasion
of the feast of the Dormition of the Mother of
God. That day, Fr. Kovalyk had some ten thousand
faithful in his audience. His old dream of martyrdom
was to come true in just a few months…
On the night of 20-21 December 1940 the agents
of the Soviet secret police entered the Redemptorist
monastery to arrest Fr. Kovalyk for his sermons
on the Novena of the Immaculate Conception of
the Mother of God, which he had been delivering
in the monastery's church. Before leaving his
confreres, Fr. Kovalyk asked his superior Fr.
De Vocht for the last blessing and absolution.
Although the Redemptorists had long tried to find
out about their arrested confrere, it was only
in April 1941 that they received information about
Fr. Kovalyk being kept in prison in Zamarstynivska
street (the so-called "Brygidky" prison). During
his six months long imprisonment, Fr. Kovalyk
underwent 28 painful interrogations; three times
he was brought to other prisons and interrogated
there. After one such interrogation, which was
accompanied by especially cruel tortures, Fr.
Kovalyk fell seriously ill due to considerable
loss of blood.
While in prison, Fr. Kovalyk continued his apostolic
work. He shared a tiny (4,20 by 3,50 metres) and
unfurnished cell with 32 other inmates. Fr. Kovalyk
together with the prisoners went through a third
of the rosary on weekdays and through the whole
rosary on Sundays. In addition, Fr. Kovalyk conducted
liturgical prayers; in May he organized prayers
to the Mother of God, and on the feast of Epiphany
he treated the inmates to the liturgical consecration
of water. Apart from prayers, Fr. Kovalyk heard
confessions, conducted spiritual exercises and
catechism, and consoled the inmates by narrating
- in his peculiar humorous manner - various religious
stories. No wonder that the prisoners - people
in the greatest need of hope and consolation -
truly loved Fr. Kovalyk for his apostolic character.
In 1941, when German troops started their offensive,
the prison keepers, eager to flee but not able
to take the prisoners along, started shooting
the inmates. However, it was not enough for them
just to shoot Fr. Kovalyk: reminding him of his
sermons about the crucified Christ, they nailed
Fr. Kovalyk to the prison wall in full view of
his fellow prisoners.
When German troops entered Lviv, they immediately
opened the prisons to clean up the piles of corpses
that had already started to decay. The people
rushed to the prisons hoping to find their relatives.
As the witnesses relate, the most horrible sight
was that of a priest crucified upon the prison
wall, his abdomen cut open and a dead human foetus
pushed into the cut.
To characterize Fr. Zynoviy Kovalyk, we can rightfully
use the words from the vespers of Martyrs regarding
the glorious and invincible warrior, who armed
himself with the Cross, defeated the foe, and
received the crown of victory from the only Victor
and Ruler who reigns forever. The blessed martyrdom
of Fr. Zynoviy Kovalyk can serve as a graphic
representation of the following words from Scripture:
"The souls of the righteous are in the hand of
God, and the suffering shall not meet them … For
although the suffering has met them in the eyes
of men, their hope is filled with immortality;
having suffered a little, they will experience
great blessings, for God has tried them and found
them worthy of Him"(Wisdom 3,1.4-5).
Taking into account the testimonies of Fr. Zynoviy
Kovalyk's virtuous life, and particularly his
endurance, courage and faithfulness to the Christ's
Church during the period of persecution, the beatification
process was started on the occasion of the Jubilee
Year. On 2 March 2001 the process was completed
on the level of eparchy, and the case was handed
over to the Apostolic See. On 6 April 2001 the
theological committee recognized the fact of Fr.
Kovalyk's martyrdom; on 23 April his martyrdom
was verified by the Assembly of Cardinals, and
on 24 April 2001 Most Holy Father John Paul II
signed a decree of beatification of Fr. Zynoviy
Kovalyk, a blessed martyr of Christian faith.
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