With God in Russia

by Walter J. Ciszek S. J.

Paperback, 1966

Barcode

2268

Call number

922.2 CIS

Status

Available

Call number

922.2 CIS

Pages

357

Description

Republished for a new century and featuring an afterword by Father James Martin, SJ, the classic memoir of an American-born Jesuit priest imprisoned for fifteen years in a Soviet gulag during the height of the Cold War-a poignant and spiritually uplifting story of extraordinary faith and fortitude as indelible as Unbroken. Foreword by Daniel L. Flaherty. While ministering in Eastern Europe during World War II, Polish-American priest Walter Ciszek, S.J., was arrested by the NKVD, the Russian secret police, shortly after the war ended. Accused of being an American spy and charged with "agitation with intent to subvert," he was held in Moscow's notorious Lubyanka prison for five years. The Catholic priest was then sentenced without trial to ten more years of hard labor and transported to Siberia, where he would become a prisoner within the forced labor camp system made famous in Alexsandr Solzhenitsyn's Nobel Prize-winning book The Gulag Archipelago. In With God in Russia, Ciszek reflects on his daily life as a prisoner, the labor he endured while working in the mines and on construction gangs, his unwavering faith in God, and his firm devotion to his vows and vocation. Enduring brutal conditions, Ciszek risked his life to offer spiritual guidance to fellow prisoners who could easily have exposed him for their own gains. He chronicles these experiences with grace, humility, and candor, from his secret work leading mass and hearing confessions within the prison grounds, to his participation in a major gulag uprising, to his own "resurrection"-his eventual release in a prisoner exchange in October 1963 which astonished all who had feared he was dead. Powerful and inspirational, With God in Russia captures the heroic patience, endurance, and religious conviction of a man whose life embodied the Christian ideals that sustained him.… (more)

Publication

Galilee Trade (1966), Edition: Reissue, 357 pages

Original publication date

1964

ISBN

0385039549 / 9780385039543

Collection

Rating

(27 ratings; 4.2)

User reviews

LibraryThing member vanjr
A story of the life of an American Catholic Priest who ends up in the USSR during and after WW2 and his life and times there as a prisoner till he leaves to come back to the USA after 23 years. Fascinating and remarkably similar to Solzhenitshen's Gulag Archipalego. This is not great literature but
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adds another perspective to the USSR in Stalin's time period and after it, up until about 1964.
I do wish he had included his adjustment back into American life.
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LibraryThing member gabriel
Fascinating and genuine autobiography of a priest who sneaks into Soviet Russia to try and be a missionary, and ends up fulfilling that hope in the gulags. Father Ciszek tells his story well, weaving in fascinating details about prison life and life in the Soviet Union as well as accounts of his
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extraordinary efforts as a priest in the most difficult of circumstances.
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LibraryThing member judithrs
With God in Russia. Walter J. Ciszek, S.J. 1964. Father Ciszek, was an American Jesuit priest of Polish decent who spent over 20 years in various Russian prison camps. A young tough on the way to a life of juvenile mischief, Ciszek decided he wanted to be a priest to become a priest. In 1929 while
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he was still in seminary, the Pope called for volunteers to go to Russia, and Father Walter volunteered. He had some training in Rome and then went to Poland in 1940. He was given a fake id and volunteered to work in Russia at a lumber company. In early June of 1941, he was arrested by the Russians. He was accused of being an American spy and/or a Vatican spy. Eventually he was transferred to Siberia where he workee in mines, lumbering, construction, etc. All along he conducted mass, heard confessions, married people, baptized them, and buried them when he could. His matter of fact descriptions of the hardships, torture, freezing weather, starvation and other horrors make these atrocities all the more hideous. For years his family and the Jesuits thought he was dead. A riveting account.
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Language

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