He was a spiritual leader who drew thousands of people closer to God, and he still does so today.
Those of us who are old enough may recall where we were when we heard that John Paul II had passed away (April 2, 2005) — I was watching college basketball with my then-boyfriend, now-husband. I didn’t yet know much about this man, but there was a feeling that something special was now gone.
Over the last few years I’ve learned more about JPII, what he faced in his youth, and how it shaped him as an adult. Born Karol Wojtyla, JPII lost his mother, then his brother, then his father, and endured great personal suffering under communism in Poland. He became a priest in secret, and held clandestine youth group meetings to keep the faith alive in the youth of Poland. He understood well not only the importance of young people, but their hunger for truth and purpose, even when the world around them was discouraging it. He later played a pivotal role in the fall of communism in Europe.
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