Cardinal Jozef Glemp former Primate of Polonia dies
January 24, 2013: Cardinal Jozef Glemp, Archbishop Emeritus of Warsaw and Primate
of Poland from 1981 to 2009, died Wednesday night. A Protagonist in the ecclesial
and civil life of his country, the cardinal has died at age of 83 in a hospital in
Warsaw after being operated in March of lung cancer. The funeral will be held on January
28 at the Cathedral of Warsaw
Cardinal Józef Glemp, was born on 18 December
1929 at Inowroclaw, in the Archdiocese of Gniezno, the son of a salt miner. His father
Kazimierz had participated in the insurrection of Great Poland in the year 1918-1919.
During the Nazi occupation he was forced to work in the country on a German farm,
and so was well acquainted with hard physical work. He finished his elementary school
after the outbreak of WWII and only after the war in 1945 he was able to begin studying
in the secondary school of Jan Kasprowicz at Inowroclaw, earning his diploma on 25
May 1950. On 22 July of the same year he entered the Archdiocesan Seminary of Gniezno
where on 25 May 1956 he was ordained a priest.
After two years of pastoral
service, in 1958 he was sent to Rome to study Canon Law at the Pontifical Lateran
University, earning his doctorate "in utroque iure" in 1964, with a thesis on: "De
evolutione conceptus fictionis iuris". After his practicum he was given the title
of Advocate of the Roman Rota. He attended a course in stylistic Latin at the Pontifical
Gregorian University and also finished his studies in ecclesial administration.
In
1964, he finished all his studies in Rome and returned to Gniezno in Poland. He became
chaplain of the Dominican and Franciscan Sisters and teacher of religion in the house
for delinquent minors. He worked as Secretary of the Seminary of Gniezno and as notary
for the Curia and the metropolitan tribunal and also as defender of the bond.
In
December 1967, he worked in the Secretariat of the Primate, and for 15 years was one
of Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński's close collaborators. As the personal chaplain of the
Cardinal, he accompanied him on his journeys within Poland and to Rome. He exercised
varied responsibilities in the Commissions of the Polish Episcopate and taught Canon
Law at the Academy of the Catholic Theology in Warsaw. He participated in several
congresses on this topic in Poland and abroad. In 1972 he was named chaplain to His
Holiness, and in March 1976 be became Canon of the Metropolitan Chapter at Gniezno.
On
4 March 1979, John Paul II named him Bishop of Warmia, in the northeast part of Poland
and was consecrated on the feast of S. Adalberto, on 21 April, in Gniezno. After the
death of Cardinal Wyszyński on 18 May 1981, he was named Archbishop of Gniezno on
7 July 1981, in union "pro illa vice, ad personam" with the Archdiocese of Warsaw.
As Bishop of Gniezno he became also the Primate of Poland. [The title of Primate of
Poland was conferred on the Archbishop of Gniezno by Pope Martin V in 1418 and confirmed
by Leo X in 1515, every Primate of Poland to the time of his election, even if he
is not a cardinal, has the right to wear the red "zucchetto" of a cardinal, a privilege
already accorded in 1600 and confirmed by Benedict XIV in 1749.]
On 25 March
1992, with the restructuring of the Church dioceses in Poland, John Paul II dissolved
the union "ad personam" of Gniezno-Warsaw, naming as Metropolitan Archbishop of Gniezno
Bishop Henryk Muszyński. The Holy Father decided that the title of Primate of Poland
should remain linked to the historical heritage of S. Adalberto in the Archdiocese
of Gniezno and confirmed that Cardinal Józef Glemp, Archbishop of Warsaw, who had
custody of the relics of S. Adalberto, which were venerated in the Cathedral of Gniezno,
should continue to bear the title of Primate of Poland. On 1 November 2006, the Holy
Father Benedict XVI confirmed the title of Primate until reaching 80 years old.
Cardinal
Glemp acted as President of the Episcopal Conference of Poland for 23 years, from
1981 until March 2004.
President delegate to the 1st Special Assembly for Europe
of the Synod of Bishops (1991).
Archbishop emeritus of Warsaw, 6 December 2006.
Ordinary
for the faithful of the Oriental Rite residing in Poland, 18 September 1981 until
9 June 2007.
Created and proclaimed Cardinal by John Paul II in the Consistory
of 2 February 1983, of the Title of S. Maria in Trastevere (St. Mary in Trastevere).
With
the death of the card. Glemp, the number of cardinals of the College of Cardinals
has been reduced to 210, of which 119 are eligible to vote for a new Pope. The age
of eligibility is 80.