Miracle Recipients to Attend Beatification of Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski and Mother Elżbieta Czacka

Karolina Gawrych and Sister Nulla were healed, respectively, through the intercession of Mother Elżbieta Czacka and Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński.

Karolina Gawrych and Sister Nulla were healed, respectively, through the intercession of Mother Elżbieta Czacka and Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński.
Karolina Gawrych and Sister Nulla were healed, respectively, through the intercession of Mother Elżbieta Czacka and Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński. (photo: Family News Service. / Family News Service via CNA)

This Sunday, a Polish Catholic teen will attend the beatification of a 20th-century nun whom she credits with her recovery from a devastating accident. 

Karolina Gawrych will carry the relics of Mother Elżbieta Róża Czacka up to the altar of Warsaw’s Temple of Divine Providence on Sept. 12 during the beatification of the nun and Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński, who led the Polish Church’s resistance to communism.

Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński and Mother Elżbieta Róża Czacka. wyszynskiprymas.pl/triuno.pl/Family News Service.

Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński and Mother Elżbieta Róża Czacka. | wyszynskiprymas.pl/triuno.pl/Family News Service via CNA

The 18-year-old was seriously injured in 2010 when a swing she was playing on collapsed and the overhead beam fell on her. 

Her head injuries were so severe that doctors thought that she would either die, remain in a persistent vegetative state, or, in the best-case scenario, lose her sight and hearing.  

The Franciscan Sisters Servants of the Cross, a congregation founded by Mother Elżbieta in 1918, prayed for then-7-year-old girl. The sisters, based in Laski, a village about 10 miles west of Warsaw, sought the intercession of their founder, who died in 1961 after a lifetime of service to her fellow blind people.

The accident took place on Aug. 29. On Sept. 13, there seemed to be a breakthrough when Karolina began to move. Just two months after the beam came crashing down, she walked out of the hospital on her own two feet.

Completely recovered, she will start next month at the University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, northern Poland, where she will study psychology.

She has recently been working as a volunteer, while also taking care of her younger siblings. 

Karolina Gawrych. Family News Service.

Karolina Gawrych | Family News Service via CNA

“I try to talk to them about what happened, to explain to them why I am still here, why I live normally — so that they may know the power of prayer,” she said at a Sept. 12 press conference at the Archbishop’s House in Warsaw.

“I try to visit the sisters in Laski as often as possible. I visit the grave of Mother Czacka. I thank her for her intercession. I go for walks in nature there. I can calm down and think about my plans and activities.”

On Oct. 27, 2020, Pope Francis authorized the publication of a decree recognizing Karolina’s recovery as a miracle, paving the way for Mother Elżbieta’s beatification.

The nun will be beatified alongside Cardinal Wyszyński, who is known as the “Primate of the Millennium” because as primate of Poland he oversaw a nine-year program of preparation culminating in a nationwide celebration of the millennium of Poland’s baptism in 1966.

Wyszyński’s relics will be carried to the altar in the Temple of Divine Providence by Sister Nulla, a member of the Community of Sisters Disciples of the Cross

Sr. Nulla. Family News Service

Sister Nulla | Family News Service via CNA

In 1988, two years after she joined the congregation, Sister Nulla underwent surgery for thyroid cancer. The disease continued to spread, and she had further treatment at the oncological center in Gliwice, southern Poland. But an almost two-inch tumor developed in her throat, making breathing, swallowing and sleeping difficult. 

“When the doctor informed me of the diagnosis, he said I had a maximum of three months to live. Operating is possible, but it is connected with a high risk of irreversible complications,” Sister Nulla recalled at the press conference. 

She decided not to go ahead with the operation because of the risk to her life.

Sr. Helena Christiana Mickiewicz, who founded Sr. Nulla’s community in 1982, asked the sisters to pray for a miraculous healing through Cardinal Wyszyński’s intercession. They prayed nine times a day for the intention for several weeks. 

On the night of March 14-15, 1989, she experienced severe pain, but the tumor began to shrink. She left the hospital on March 21, completed her novitiate, and has been serving in the congregation ever since.

In November 2018, a medical board appointed by the Vatican Congregation for the Causes of Saints declared that Sister Nulla’s recovery was medically inexplicable. 

On Oct. 3, 2019, Pope Francis approved the promulgation of a decree recognizing the event as a miracle attributed to Cardinal Wyszyński’s intercession. 

“The doctors told me many times that they only had accepted me in the unit because I was young, so that I would not break down mentally, because the treatment they were giving me could not help me,” Sister Nulla said.

“I have seen miracles happen, and believers don’t need much explaining.”