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Mečislovas Reinys

Mečislovas Reinys (5 February 1884 – 8 November 1953) was a Lithuanian Roman Catholic titular archbishop and professor at Vytautas Magnus University. He was the Lithuanian Minister of Foreign Affairs from September 1925 to April 1926. He was imprisoned by the Soviets in Vladimir Central Prison where he died in 1953. His beatification case was opened in 1998 and he was recognized as a martyr in 2000.

Mečislovas Reinys
Auxiliary Archbishop of Vilnius
Lithuanian postal stamp dedicated to Reinys (2009)
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
ArchdioceseArchdiocese of Vilnius
Other post(s)Coadjutor Bishop of Vilkaviškis
Titular Bishop of Tiddi
Titular Archbishop of Cypsela
Orders
Ordination10 June 1907
Consecration16 May 1926
by Jurgis Matulaitis-Matulevičius
Personal details
Born(1884-02-05)5 February 1884
Madagaskaras [lt], Kovno Governorate, Russian Empire
Died8 November 1953(1953-11-08) (aged 69)
Vladimir Central Prison, Soviet Union
NationalityLithuanian
DenominationRoman Catholic
Alma materVilnius Priest Seminary
Saint Petersburg Roman Catholic Theological Academy
Catholic University of Leuven

Born into a family of peasants, Reinys received his master's from the Saint Petersburg Roman Catholic Theological Academy and doctorate from the Catholic University of Leuven. He returned to Lithuania in 1914 and became an active participant in the Lithuanian cultural and political life in Vilnius. He taught at Vilnius Priest Seminary, chaired the Lithuanian Education Society Rytas, and drafted political program of the Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party. In the interwar period, he was active in many other organizations and societies, including the Catholic youth organizations Ateitis and Pavasaris as well as the Lithuanian Catholic Academy of Science.

In 1922, he moved to Kaunas, the temporary capital of Lithuania, and became a professor of psychology at Vytautas Magnus University. In September 1925, Reinys became the Lithuanian Minister of Foreign Affairs in the cabinet of Prime Minister Leonas Bistras. During his short tenure, Reinys began negotiations regarding the Soviet–Lithuanian Non-Aggression Pact (signed in September 1926) and normalized Lithuania's relations with the Holy See that soured after the Concordat of 1925 with Poland. On 4 April 1926, Pope Pius XI issued a bull which established the ecclesiastical province in Lithuania, including the Diocese of Vilkaviškis of which Reinys was named coadjutor bishop. The bull was harshly criticized by the opposition forcing Reinys to resign. After a conflict with bishop Antanas Karosas [lt], Reinys became more involved in diocesan affairs and started teaching at the Vilkaviškis Priest Seminary [lt] in 1934.

In July 1940, Reinys was appointed titular archbishop of Cypsela and auxiliary archbishop of Vilnius. This brought him to conflict with archbishop Romuald Jałbrzykowski who supported Polonization efforts. After Jałbrzykowski's arrest by the German Gestapo, Reinys became the administrator of the archdiocese and began undoing some of the Polonization efforts (e.g. replacing arrested Polish priest with Lithuanian or Belarusian priests). This brought him into conflict with Polish activists. After the Soviet re-occupation, Soviet security agencies attempted to persuade Reinys to cooperate. When he refused, he was sentenced to 8 years in prison. He died in Vladimir Central Prison in November 1953.

Biography edit

Early life and education edit

 
House where Reinys was born

Mečislovas Reinys was born on 5 February 1884 on a farm in Madagaskaras [lt] near Daugailiai and Antalieptė, then part of the Russian Empire. He was the youngest of 11 children.[1] His parents owned about 32 hectares (79 acres) of land.[2] His father died when Reinys was seven from a kick by a horse.[2][3]

Reinys received some education at home and at a primary school in Antalieptė.[1] He was then taken in by his relative, a Catholic priest who worked in Muravanaja Ašmianka. Reinys attended a school there for three years.[4] He then moved to live with relatives in Riga and attend the Riga Alexander Gymnasium [lv].[1][4] Reinys was an excellent student and graduated with a gold medal in 1900.[2] For some time, he worked as a tutor to earn some money.[5]

From 1901 to 1905, he studied at the Vilnius Priest Seminary. He then received a government stipend for studies at the Saint Petersburg Roman Catholic Theological Academy.[1] His professors included Kazimieras Jaunius, Vincent Hadleŭski, Zygmunt Łoziński, Jurgis Matulaitis-Matulevičius, Adomas Jakštas [lt], Pranciškus Būčys, Jonas Mačiulis-Maironis, Jan Cieplak.[6] He was ordained a priest on 10 June 1907 in Saint Petersburg and held his first mass in his native parish church in Daugailiai. He graduated in 1909 with a master's degree in theology.[1]

Doctoral studies edit

He continued his studies at the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium).[1] His professors included Maurice De Wulf, Albert Michotte, Armand Thiéry [fr], Alphonse Meunier [fr].[7] At the university, he was a member of a Lithuanian student society which read and wrote articles to various Lithuanian periodicals.[8] He spent three vacations in Horsens (Denmark) doing pastoral work among Polish and Lithuanian workers.[9] He defended his doctoral thesis about morality in the works of Vladimir Solovyov in 1912.[1] It was one of the first works to discuss Solovyov's works in western Europe.[10]

Reinys was interested not only in theology, but also in psychology, natural law, natural sciences, geology.[2] After his doctorate, he continued to study natural sciences (including prof. Victor Grégoire [fr]) in Leuven and philosophy (including prof. Georg Simmel) at the University of Strasbourg (France).[9][1]

During his studies, Reinys traveled across Europe and learned multiple languages: Latin, Italian, French, English, Danish, German in addition to the local languages of Lithuanian, Russian, and Polish. He later also learned Spanish.[1]

World War I in Vilnius edit

Reinys returned to Lithuania just before the outbreak of World War I and became a vicar at the Church of St. Johns, Vilnius.[2] He started working as a chaplain at the newly establish Lithuanian Vytautas Magnus Gymnasium and Teachers' Seminary maintained by the Lithuanian Education Society Rytas.[9] He later became a teacher of religion, psychology, logic, natural sciences, and political economy.[9] He became a professor at Vilnius Priest Seminary in 1916 and continued to teach until 1922.[2] He taught sociology and philosophy.[9]

During the German occupation, Reinys participated in the Lithuanian political life. He was associated with a small Lithuanian political club which debated Lithuania's post-war future. For this involvement, Reinys was interrogated by the German police in January 1917.[11] Reinys participated in the Vilnius Conference in September 1917 and was elected to the central committee of the Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party which was established after the conference.[12] He was one of the authors of the original party's program.[9] He was reelected to the party's leadership in 1918 and 1925.[12]

From November 1915 to December 1916, and again from August 1918 to June 1922, Reinys was chairman of the Lithuanian Education Society Rytas which maintained Lithuanian primary schools in Vilnius Region.[13] He also worked with Ateitis and Pavasaris Catholic youth organizations. For two years, he was vice-chairman of the Lithuanian Scientific Society.[9] In 1920, he was also elected to the board of the Provisional Committee of Vilnius Lithuanians [lt].[14]

The Red Army captured Vilnius in early January 1919 at the start of the Lithuanian–Soviet War. Authorities of the proclaimed Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic arrested Reinys on 22 February 1919.[5] He was held in Lukiškės Prison for giving a speech on 16 February, the first anniversary of the Act of Independence of Lithuania.[15] As Soviets were about to be pushed out of Vilnius by the Polish forces in April 1919, they took several prominent Lithuanians as hostages, including Reinys, Felicija Bortkevičienė, Juozas Vailokaitis [lt], and Liudas Gira,[1] and transported them to prisons in Daugavpils and Smolensk.[5] On 24 July 1919, Vaclovas Sidzikauskas arranged a prisoner exchange in Daugailiai: 15 prominent Lithuanians, including Reinys, for 35 communists.[16]

Interwar in Kaunas edit

University professor edit

In 1922, Reinys moved from Vilnius (which was incorporated into the Second Polish Republic) to Kaunas, the temporary capital of Lithuania. Reinys was invited to teach at the University of Lithuania and head its department of psychology.[10] At different times he taught general, comparative, and educational psychology, special topics in psychology, and led psychology practical.[17] His lecture notes were published by students in 1931.[18]

In 1931, the ruling Lithuanian Nationalist Union reduced the Faculty of Theology, eliminated the department of psychology, and laid off 18 professors. Reinys was also temporarily dismissed.[19] This prompted Lithuanian clergy to revive ideas about a separate Catholic university.[19] Reinys was in charge of this proposed university and was slated to become its rector. The Holy See approved the university in June 1932 and it was supposed to open in August 1932, but the Lithuanian Nationalist Union postponed it indefinitely.[20] Since the Catholic university was not abolished, but only postponed, Reinys continued to seek official recognition of the university. He represented the university at various gatherings and societies up until 1940.[21] He also prepared annual reports and organized lectures in the name of the university.[22]

After the dismissal in 1931, Reinys quickly returned to the University of Lithuania, but only as a privatdozent, i.e. without a full-time salary. To compensate Reinys and other affected lecturers, remaining professors agreed to donate part of their salary.[23] Reinys continued to teach at the university until 1940.[24]

Minister of Foreign Affairs edit

As a member of the Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party, Reinys was selected by Prime Minister Leonas Bistras as the Minister of Foreign Affairs. He served in this capacity from 25 September 1925 to 20 April 1926.[25] Foreign diplomats and Lithuanian opposition did not consider him a strong or independent minister and believed he was assigned to the post only temporarily.[26]

His predecessor, Voldemaras Čarneckis [lt], was forced to resign when he attempted to normalize the relations with Poland. Therefore, after the Locarno Treaties, the new government searched for alternatives – normalize Lithuania's relations with the Holy See, sign a treaty with the Soviet Union, and search for allies in Germany, Latvia, or Estonia.[26]

Lithuania's relations with the Holy See soured after the Concordat of 1925 with Poland which established an ecclesiastical province in Vilnius, thereby acknowledging Poland's claims to the city. Due to rising tensions, official diplomatic relations were severed.[27] With the help of Archbishop Jurgis Matulaitis-Matulevičius, Reinys reestablished diplomatic contacts with the Holy See and agreed to a three-step plan to normalize the relations.[28] The first step was establishing an ecclesiastical province in Lithuania. On 4 April 1926, Pope Pius XI issued a bull which established the Archdiocese of Kaunas in place of the Diocese of Samogitia as well as new Dioceses of Kaišiadorys, Telšiai, Vilkaviškis, and Panevėžys.[28] The Lithuanian opposition attacked the bull, accused the government of "surrendering" its claims to Vilnius, and claimed that Reinys served his ecclesiastical superiors in Vatican first and Lithuania second. This led to Reinys' resignation on 20 April 1926.[29] He also resigned from the Christian Democratic Party.[12]

In relations with Poland, Reinys had to respond to an incident when Polish border guards violated the border, captured about 15 hectares (37 acres) of forest near Kernavė, and took eight Lithuanian policemen as prisoners on 17–22 February 1926.[30] The Lithuanian government prepared a protest note which Reinys personally delivered to Ishii Kikujirō, president of the Council of the League of Nations, on 12 March 1926. The protest was ignored which only bolstered Lithuanian government's decision to seek closer relations with the Soviet Union.[27]

Reinys personally disapproved the government's decision to seek closer relations with the Soviet Union, but pursued its decision.[31] The negotiations began in December 1925 when People's Commissar of Foreign Affairs Georgy Chicherin stopped in Kaunas on his way to Moscow.[32] Reinys prepared the first draft of the Soviet–Lithuanian Non-Aggression Pact which was signed in September 1926, almost five months after Reinys' resignation.[33]

Coadjutor bishop of Vilkaviškis edit

In July 1923, Reinys was named a prelate.[34] On 5 April 1926, one day after the papal bull which established the ecclesiastical province in Lithuania, Reinys was appointed as titular bishop of Tiddi and coadjutor bishop of the newly established Diocese of Vilkaviškis[35] which was established mainly from the territory of the Diocese of Sejny.[36] Reinys was consecrated in Kaunas Cathedral by Jurgis Matulaitis-Matulevičius, assisted by Juozapas Kukta and Justinas Staugaitis, on 16 May 1926.[37]

The new bishop Antanas Karosas [lt] was already 70-years old. Therefore, he was more passive and tolerant of bad behaviors.[38] Karosas and Reinys did not have a good working relationship as Karosas tried to keep Reinys out of diocese affairs.[39] This prompted a complaint by the younger priests to the Holy See in 1934.[38] Karosas was ordered to allow Reinys a more active role in the curia and allow him to supervise the Vilkaviškis Priest Seminary [lt].[38] Reinys taught psychology at the seminary in 1934–1940.[40] He also conducted canonical visitations of various parishes,[41] led three-day Spiritual Exercises,[42] inspected religious education in schools,[43] etc.

Activist edit

Reinys was also active in a number of Lithuanian societies. Reinys was elected to the first board of the Lithuanian Catholic Academy of Science.[44] He was its scientific secretary in 1922–1926, participated in its conferences, and was elected a true member in 1939.[45] Reinys was elected first treasurer of the Union for the Liberation of Vilnius in April 1925.[46] He was also elected to the board of Ateitis, Catholic youth organization, in 1927 and 1930. He was an honorary member and patron-protector of Pavasaris, another Catholic youth organization.[47] In 1927, Reinys prepared new statute for the Catholic Action Center based on the book by Civardi Luigi on the Catholic Action.[48]

In June–September 1937, Reinys toured Lithuanian American and Lithuanian Canadian communities.[34] Commemorating the 550th anniversary of the Christianization of Lithuania, he visited 52 parishes, delivered 67 sermons and 46 speeches, participated in congresses and other events of Lithuanian organizations.[21]

Auxiliary archbishop of Vilnius edit

German occupation edit

Vilnius Region was captured by the Soviet Union after the Invasion of Poland in 1939. Part of the region was transferred to Lithuania according to the Soviet–Lithuanian Mutual Assistance Treaty. The Archdiocese of Vilnius remained part of the Polish ecclesiastical province.[49] Archbishop Romuald Jałbrzykowski supported Polonization efforts and restricted activities of Lithuanian or Belarusian priests.[49] When auxiliary archbishop Kazimierz Mikołaj Michalkiewicz [pl] died in February 1940, Lithuanians requested that Pope Pius XI appoint a Lithuanian auxiliary archbishop.[49] On 18 July 1940, Reinys was appointed titular archbishop of Cypsela and auxiliary archbishop of Vilnius.[34] Archbishop Jałbrzykowski met him with hostility, did not give him any duties in the curia, and complained about him to the Vatican.[50]

After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, Vilnius Region became part of the Reichskommissariat Ostland. Since many Polish clergymen joined the anti-Nazi resistance, German Gestapo organized repressions.[51] For example, on 3 March 1942, they raided Vilnius Priest Seminary and arrested 14 professors and about 70 clerics. Lithuanians were later released, while Poles were taken for forced labor.[51] On 22 March, Germans arrested archbishop Jałbrzykowski and archdiocese's chancellor Adam Sawicki [pl] and interned them in Marijampolė.[52] This left Reinys as the administrator of the archdiocese, which was officially confirmed by the Vatican on 22 June 1942.[52] At the same time, Reinys inherited Jałbrzykowski's role as the apostolic administrator of the Archdiocese of Mohilev and the Diocese of Minsk.[53] However, German did not allow Reinys to function in these dioceses and limited his authority to the borders of the Generalbezirk Litauen.[54]

During an air raid by the Soviet forces on the night of 23 March 1942, a bomb fell onto the clergy house of the Church of Saint Nicholas, Vilnius.[55] It killed priest Kristupas Čibiras [lt], severely injured Reinys and priest Vincentas Taškūnas. Reinys spent a month in hospital with a broken clavicle.[55]

Reinys negotiated with the German authorities to lessen repressions against the clergy. For example, he managed to secure release of 222 nuns and negotiated that arrested priest and monks would be transferred to work camps within Lithuania instead of the Nazi concentration camps.[52] He managed to reopen Vilnius Priest Seminary (it was closed twice by the Germans, in March 1942 and March 1943).[56] Reinys also continued pastoral work. He delivered sermons, held spiritual exercises, visited hospitals, etc.[43] Unlike Jałbrzykowski, Reinys supported the cult of the Divine Mercy image: he approved a Lithuanian chaplet for the Divine Mercy in May 1942 and allowed to celebrate the Second Sunday of Easter as the Divine Mercy Sunday at the Church of St. Johns, Vilnius in 1946.[57]

Reinys replaced the arrested Polish priests with Lithuanians and Belarusians in Lithuanian- or Belarusian-speaking parishes.[56] This drew ire from the Polish activists who started spreading rumors that repressions against the Polish clergy were orchestrated by Reinys and the Lithuanian Security Police so that Vilnius Region could be "Lithuanized". Polish–Lithuanian relations during World War II grew increasingly tense.[58]

Reinys removed a reference to Virgin Mary as the Queen of Poland in the Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary as Lithuanians and Belarusians did not agree with such prayer.[59] He also removed the Feast of the Most Holy Virgin Mary, Queen of Poland [pl] (3 May) from the liturgical calendar for 1944 as the feast was prohibited by the Germans.[59] This became a particularly contentious issue. After complaints reached the Vatican, Reinys defended that the reinstatement of either the litany or the feast were not possible due to the political situation and offered to resign. Vatican told Reinys to be more sensitive to the Polish needs and did not accept his resignation.[59] Polish authors continue to portray Reinys as a Lithuanian chauvinist.[60]

Soviet occupation edit

After the Operation Bagration, Vilnius was captured by the Red Army and Jałbrzykowski returned to Vilnius on 8 August 1944 and Reinys was removed from the curia.[61] However, Jałbrzykowski was arrested by the Soviets in late January 1945 and Reinys returned as the administrator of the archdiocese.[61] Soviet NKGB attempted to use Reinys in its anti-Polish campaign and a purge of Polish priests, but he refused.[62]

Soviet NKVD began surveillance of Reinys soon after the Soviet occupation of Lithuania in June 1940. Surviving documents show that NKVD collected reports from 12 different agents in 1940–1941 that focused on Reinys' sermons and personal attitudes towards the Soviet regime and relations between Polish and Lithuanian clergy.[63]

Reinys was first briefly arrested on 6 September 1944 after a gathering of Lithuanian bishops which was not approved by the Soviets.[64] In November 1944, chief of the Lithuanian NKGB Aleksandras Gudaitis-Guzevičius and first secretary of the Lithuanian Communist Party Antanas Sniečkus wanted to arrest Reinys, but officials in Moscow suggested using Reinys to demoralize the anti-Soviet Lithuanian partisans.[62] As leverage, they used Reinys' two nephews imprisoned by the Soviets and seven relatives deported to Siberia during the June deportation in 1941.[a][69]

In June 1945, Reinys was pressured by the NKGB to write an appeal to the Lithuanian partisans urging them to apply for the "amnesty" and "legalization" campaign announced by the NKGB. Reinys refused to cooperate.[70] On 9 August 1945, Reinys published circular Nežudyk (Thou Shall not Kill). However, it was so vague and abstract that even Soviet writers admitted its limited usefulness.[71] One could apply the circular to the NKGB and its operatives.[5][72] Nevertheless, thousands of copies of the circular were published and distributed in Lithuania.[71] In March 1946, Reinys issued an instruction to priests ordering them not to get involved in political agitation.[73]

In later part of 1946, anti-religious action intensified.[74] In late 1946, a representative of the Ministry of State Security (MGB) met with all remaining Lithuanian bishops. After these conversations, Teofilius Matulionis and Pranciškus Ramanauskas [lt] were arrested,[75] while Reinys was pressed to sign a pledge to consult Soviet security agencies on specified issues; Reinys refused.[73] He also refused to order priests to register with the Soviet authorities and support the establishment of parish committees which would allow Soviet agencies to intervene in church affairs.[76] Reinys was one last obstacle in this Soviet plan since other administrators of dioceses were inclined to cooperate.[73]

Soviet prisoner edit

 
Symbolic grave of Reinys (left) in Daugailiai

Reinys was arrested by Soviet authorities on 12 June 1947. He was interrogated for more than 162 hours mostly at night.[77] His indictment was prepared after three months.[78] It listed specific instances of Reinys' anti-Soviet activities, which included participating in the activities of the Catholic Action Center in interwar Lithuania, publishing various anti-Soviet articles during the German occupation, providing financial support (300 Reichsmarks for the purpose of purchasing books)[79] to a battalion of the Lithuanian Auxiliary Police, attending a meeting of Lithuanian bishop in September 1944 which decided to seek religious lessons in schools and military chaplains in Red Army units, persuading bishop Vincentas Borisevičius not to cooperate with the NKGB in December 1945, and delivering a sermon defending the Vatican after a critical article was published in Sovetskaya Litva in June 1947.[80] These charges demonstrated how difficult it was for the Soviets to find something political in Reinys' actions.[81]

On 15 November 1947, the Special Council of the NKVD sentenced Reinys to eight years in prison and confiscation of property according to the Article 58 of the Penal Code for anti-Soviet agitation and participation in anti-Soviet organizations.[82] Reinys was informed of this decision on 25 December 1947 and transported to the Vladimir Central Prison in January 1948.[82] In early 1953, the Ministry of State Security (MGB) of the Lithuanian SSR prepared a plan of an investigation to uncover the supposed vast Lithuanian Catholic underground led by Reinys.[83] To that end, Reinys was interrogated in Vladimir Prison eight times in March 1953.[84]

In prison, Reinys wrote two clemency requests, one in March 1948 and another to Nikolai Shvernik in August 1948.[85] According to surviving records, Reinys wrote 17 times to the warden. He requested a subscription to Pravda (twice) and English-language The New Times as well as a copy of a book on psychology by Sergei Rubinstein (twice) – all of these requests were denied.[86] Reinys could write few letters to his relatives and receive packages. In 1949–1953, the packages were prohibited while the letters were limited to just two per year.[87] His cellmates included Russian monarchist Vasily Shulgin and leader of Latvian Jews Mordehai Dubin, as well as German diplomat Gotthold Starke [de] and British soldier Frank Kelly who later wrote memoirs about Reinys in prison.[88][15]

Reinys died in the prison on 8 November 1953. His relatives were informed about his death only in May 1954.[89] The exact cause or circumstances of his death are not known.[82] He was buried in a mass grave; therefore, the exact location of his burial is unknown.[12] There are three symbolic graves of Reinys in Lithuania, all with some soil from the prison's cemetery: the churchyard in his native Daugailiai (July 1990), Deportees' Chapel in Vilnius Cathedral (June 2000), and sculpture of Pensive Christ in Skapiškis (July 2013).[90]

Publications edit

Reinys delivered many sermons, lectures, speeches.[91] Starting in 1907, he published various articles in Lithuanian periodicals, including Šaltinis, Draugija, Viltis, Tėvynės sargas, Pavasaris, Ateitis, XX amžius.[17] During the German occupation, he published more than 10 articles in Karys and Naujoji Lietuva [lt] criticizing communism and bolshevism.[92] In total, he authored more than a hundred articles[93] which were published in 23 different periodicals.[94] Not all articles have been identified as he used various pen names.[91] Researcher Aldona Vasiliauskienė has attributed about 50 articles published in Vilniaus garsas [lt] in 1920–1922 that were signed under the pen name Dr. Mututa to Reinys.[95]

In 1921, Reinys translated and published a 242-page psychology textbook by Georgy Chelpanov which was used by various schools during the entire interwar period.[1][96] It was a free translation; Reinys added or modified the text as he saw fit. Its three main parts discussed cognitive psychology and sensations, feelings, and willful and involuntary movements.[97] It was the first Lithuanian textbook of psychology, therefore Reinys had to come up with Lithuanian words for various technical terms used in psychology.[98]

In 1939, he published his only original study – 107-page book Rasizmo problema (The Problem of Racism).[91] It was Reinys' response to the papal encyclical Mit brennender Sorge of March 1937.[94] In this work, Reinys surveys developments in scientific racism, particularly the use of anthropology and craniometry to distinguish "higher" and "lower" races. He criticized works of Arthur de Gobineau, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, Alfred Rosenberg based on biology, religion, philosophy, pedagogy, and argued that there is no such thing as the Aryan race.[99]

From January 1945 to May 1947, Reinys wrote 27 satirical and sarcastic bulletins T. Aškūnų bei B. Asių kolchozo Moderniojo Cirko biuleteniai (Modern Circus Bulletins of the Kolkhoz of T. Aškūnai and B. Asiai).[55] The works referenced Vincentas Taškūnas, Edmundas Basys [lt], and others who lived in one apartment in Vilnius – they moved there after the bombing of the clergy house of the Church of Saint Nicholas, Vilnius.[95] Kolkhoz referred to the crowded apartment, while modern circus referred to the new Soviet regime. The works showcase Reinys' ability to find humor even in dire circumstances.[95] These handwritten bulletins were hidden by Taškūnas' niece and were first published in 1999.[100]

Canonization efforts edit

Reinys was rehabilitated by the Supreme Court of the Lithuanian SSR in February 1989.[101] In February 1990, Lithuanians submitted documents to the Roman Curia to open the canonisation case for Reinys along with Teofilius Matulionis and Vincentas Borisevičius, two other Lithuanian bishops persecuted by the Soviets.[102] Pope John Paul II mentioned these three in a 1993 speech at the Hill of Crosses.[103] The official beatification case was opened on 14 September 1998.[15] On 7 May 2000, Pope John Paul II recognized 114 Lithuanian martyrs, among them Reinys.[104]

Character edit

Reinys' contemporaries wrote about his frugal lifestyle and generosity for those in need. According to one memoir, he purchased a simple fur coat only after being told by a doctor to dress warmer.[1] He continued to dress modestly in priest robes even when he was the Minister of Foreign Affairs.[105] He recorded his expenses in notebooks. A surviving notebook from December 1924 to May 1929 shows that he donated to 48 different organizations as well as different churches, parishes, and other causes.[106] He also supported individual students, among them Salomėja Nėris and Jonas Grinius [lt],[107] as well as his family members.[108] He spent considerable sums on literature and periodicals – the notebook shows that he subscribed to 32 different periodicals.[109] Overall, over the 54 months, Reinys spent approximately 54,500 litas on charitable causes, 13,300 litas on literature, and 52,000 litas for other expenses.[110]

Reinys was a teetotaler since 1910.[17] This caused several diplomatic incidents when Reinys was the Minister of Foreign Affairs and dignitaries noticed that they were toasted not with a glass of wine, but rose colored water.[105]

Gotthold Starke [de] in his memoirs about Vladimir Prison wrote that Reinys exhibited strong faith, Christian love and humility and had become a moral authority among the prisoners.[111] According to Starke, Reinys occasionally received some money from his relatives which he used to buy some bread or sugar and share it with other inmates. Once, an inmate stole from Reinys who said nothing but gave a double portion to that inmate next time.[88] Frank Kelly similarly wrote that Reinys prayed frequently and was very calm.[15]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The deported relatives were sister Emilija Telyčėnienė (age 76), brothers Kazimieras Reinys (74) and Jonas Reinys (70), sister-in-law Grasilda Musteikytė-Reinienė (55), pregnant niece-in-law Stefanija Reinienė and her two children Aldutė (2) and Pranas Vilius (7 months). In exile, Stefanija gave birth to her daughter Nijolė. Due to harsh living conditions, five member of the exiled family died: Emilija (1941), Pranas-Vilius (1942), Jonas (1942), Kazimieras (1943), and Grasilda (1945).[65] Stefanija and her two surviving children escaped to Lithuania in 1947, but she was deported for the second time.[66] Reinys' nephew and Stefanija's husband Antanas Reinys was arrested in October 1944 and sentenced to ten years in prison.[67] Stefanija and Antanas eventually reunited and returned to Lithuania in 1966.[66] Another nephew Juozas Reinys was arrested right after the family was deported in June 1941.[68]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Vasiliauskienė 1999a, p. 1.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Ibianska 2018.
  3. ^ Darbininkas 1937, p. 1.
  4. ^ a b Čepėnas 2000, p. 440.
  5. ^ a b c d Lukšas 2011.
  6. ^ Redakcija 1972, p. 475.
  7. ^ Redakcija 1972, pp. 475–476.
  8. ^ Katilius 2011, p. 166.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Redakcija 1972, p. 476.
  10. ^ a b Vasiliauskienė 2011a, pp. 96–97.
  11. ^ Čepėnas 1986, pp. 37, 39.
  12. ^ a b c d Svarauskas 2016, p. 333.
  13. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2013.
  14. ^ Liekis 2011, p. 171.
  15. ^ a b c d Juozevičiūtė 2014.
  16. ^ Veilentienė 2013, p. 15.
  17. ^ a b c Redakcija 1972, p. 477.
  18. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 99.
  19. ^ a b Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 104.
  20. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 105.
  21. ^ a b Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 106.
  22. ^ Grickevičius 2016, p. 164.
  23. ^ Grinius 1972, p. 362.
  24. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 100.
  25. ^ Svarauskas 2016, p. 334.
  26. ^ a b Kasparavičius 1999, pp. 154–155.
  27. ^ a b Kasparavičius 1999, p. 164.
  28. ^ a b Kasparavičius 1999, p. 165.
  29. ^ Kasparavičius 1999, pp. 166–167.
  30. ^ Kasparavičius 1999, pp. 163–164.
  31. ^ Kasparavičius 1999, pp. 158, 163.
  32. ^ Eidintas, Žalys & Senn 1999, p. 108.
  33. ^ Kasparavičius 1999, p. 162.
  34. ^ a b c Matulis 1961, p. 269.
  35. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 96.
  36. ^ Žemaitis 2004, p. 515.
  37. ^ Žemaitis 2004, p. 516.
  38. ^ a b c Žemaitis 2004, p. 517.
  39. ^ Žemaitis 2000, p. 232.
  40. ^ Žemaitis 2004, p. 518.
  41. ^ Žemaitis 2000, p. 233.
  42. ^ Žemaitis 2004, p. 519.
  43. ^ a b Pipiras & Žemaitis 2014, p. 17.
  44. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 102.
  45. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011a, pp. 102–103.
  46. ^ Pšibilskis 2009, p. 255.
  47. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 101.
  48. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2006, p. 87.
  49. ^ a b c Jegelevičius 2004, p. 528.
  50. ^ Jegelevičius 2004, pp. 529, 534.
  51. ^ a b Jegelevičius 2004, p. 531.
  52. ^ a b c Jegelevičius 2004, p. 532.
  53. ^ Laukaitytė 2005, pp. 4, 8.
  54. ^ Laukaitytė 2005, p. 8.
  55. ^ a b c Vasiliauskienė 1999b, p. 12.
  56. ^ a b Jegelevičius 2004, p. 533.
  57. ^ Pipiras & Žemaitis 2016, p. 39.
  58. ^ Jegelevičius 2004, pp. 525, 533.
  59. ^ a b c Jegelevičius 2004, p. 534.
  60. ^ Weeks 2015, p. 169.
  61. ^ a b Jegelevičius 2004, p. 535.
  62. ^ a b Streikus 2004, p. 540.
  63. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2000, p. 59.
  64. ^ Streikus 2004, p. 539.
  65. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2003a, pp. 735, 746.
  66. ^ a b Vasiliauskienė 2003a, pp. 735–736.
  67. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2003a, p. 737.
  68. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2003a, pp. 735, 738.
  69. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2003a, pp. 734–735, 737–738.
  70. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2003a, pp. 737–738.
  71. ^ a b Vasiliauskienė 2003a, p. 739.
  72. ^ Zugger 2001, pp. 388–389.
  73. ^ a b c Streikus 2004, p. 541.
  74. ^ Streikus 2000, p. 12.
  75. ^ Streikus 2000, pp. 11–12.
  76. ^ Streikus 2000, pp. 14–15.
  77. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011b, pp. 157, 160.
  78. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2003a, p. 743.
  79. ^ Streikus 2004, p. 542.
  80. ^ Streikus 2000, pp. 727–729.
  81. ^ Streikus 2000, p. 18.
  82. ^ a b c Vasiliauskienė 2003a, p. 744.
  83. ^ Streikus 2004, p. 543.
  84. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011b, p. 161.
  85. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011b, pp. 154–155.
  86. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011b, pp. 164–166.
  87. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011b, p. 167.
  88. ^ a b Starke 1977, p. 7.
  89. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2011b, pp. 172–173.
  90. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2015.
  91. ^ a b c Vasiliauskienė 2011a, p. 107.
  92. ^ Streikus 2000, p. 613.
  93. ^ Redakcija 1972, pp. 478–481.
  94. ^ a b Pipiras & Žemaitis 2014, p. 18.
  95. ^ a b c Vasiliauskienė 2005.
  96. ^ Katelytė 2009, p. 198.
  97. ^ Katelytė 2009, pp. 198–199.
  98. ^ Katelytė 2009, pp. 198, 214.
  99. ^ Pruskus 2001, pp. 64–65.
  100. ^ Vasiliauskienė 1999b, pp. 12–13.
  101. ^ Kronika 1989.
  102. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2003b, p. 107.
  103. ^ John Paul II 1993.
  104. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2000, p. 58.
  105. ^ a b Kasparavičius 1999, p. 154.
  106. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2004, pp. 134–135.
  107. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2004, p. 133.
  108. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2004, pp. 131–132.
  109. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2004, p. 138.
  110. ^ Vasiliauskienė 2004, p. 150.
  111. ^ Starke 1977, p. 8.

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mečislovas, reinys, february, 1884, november, 1953, lithuanian, roman, catholic, titular, archbishop, professor, vytautas, magnus, university, lithuanian, minister, foreign, affairs, from, september, 1925, april, 1926, imprisoned, soviets, vladimir, central, p. Mecislovas Reinys 5 February 1884 8 November 1953 was a Lithuanian Roman Catholic titular archbishop and professor at Vytautas Magnus University He was the Lithuanian Minister of Foreign Affairs from September 1925 to April 1926 He was imprisoned by the Soviets in Vladimir Central Prison where he died in 1953 His beatification case was opened in 1998 and he was recognized as a martyr in 2000 Mecislovas ReinysAuxiliary Archbishop of VilniusLithuanian postal stamp dedicated to Reinys 2009 ChurchRoman Catholic ChurchArchdioceseArchdiocese of VilniusOther post s Coadjutor Bishop of Vilkaviskis Titular Bishop of Tiddi Titular Archbishop of CypselaOrdersOrdination10 June 1907Consecration16 May 1926by Jurgis Matulaitis MatuleviciusPersonal detailsBorn 1884 02 05 5 February 1884Madagaskaras lt Kovno Governorate Russian EmpireDied8 November 1953 1953 11 08 aged 69 Vladimir Central Prison Soviet UnionNationalityLithuanianDenominationRoman CatholicAlma materVilnius Priest Seminary Saint Petersburg Roman Catholic Theological Academy Catholic University of LeuvenBorn into a family of peasants Reinys received his master s from the Saint Petersburg Roman Catholic Theological Academy and doctorate from the Catholic University of Leuven He returned to Lithuania in 1914 and became an active participant in the Lithuanian cultural and political life in Vilnius He taught at Vilnius Priest Seminary chaired the Lithuanian Education Society Rytas and drafted political program of the Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party In the interwar period he was active in many other organizations and societies including the Catholic youth organizations Ateitis and Pavasaris as well as the Lithuanian Catholic Academy of Science In 1922 he moved to Kaunas the temporary capital of Lithuania and became a professor of psychology at Vytautas Magnus University In September 1925 Reinys became the Lithuanian Minister of Foreign Affairs in the cabinet of Prime Minister Leonas Bistras During his short tenure Reinys began negotiations regarding the Soviet Lithuanian Non Aggression Pact signed in September 1926 and normalized Lithuania s relations with the Holy See that soured after the Concordat of 1925 with Poland On 4 April 1926 Pope Pius XI issued a bull which established the ecclesiastical province in Lithuania including the Diocese of Vilkaviskis of which Reinys was named coadjutor bishop The bull was harshly criticized by the opposition forcing Reinys to resign After a conflict with bishop Antanas Karosas lt Reinys became more involved in diocesan affairs and started teaching at the Vilkaviskis Priest Seminary lt in 1934 In July 1940 Reinys was appointed titular archbishop of Cypsela and auxiliary archbishop of Vilnius This brought him to conflict with archbishop Romuald Jalbrzykowski who supported Polonization efforts After Jalbrzykowski s arrest by the German Gestapo Reinys became the administrator of the archdiocese and began undoing some of the Polonization efforts e g replacing arrested Polish priest with Lithuanian or Belarusian priests This brought him into conflict with Polish activists After the Soviet re occupation Soviet security agencies attempted to persuade Reinys to cooperate When he refused he was sentenced to 8 years in prison He died in Vladimir Central Prison in November 1953 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Doctoral studies 1 3 World War I in Vilnius 1 4 Interwar in Kaunas 1 4 1 University professor 1 4 2 Minister of Foreign Affairs 1 4 3 Coadjutor bishop of Vilkaviskis 1 4 4 Activist 1 5 Auxiliary archbishop of Vilnius 1 5 1 German occupation 1 5 2 Soviet occupation 1 5 3 Soviet prisoner 2 Publications 3 Canonization efforts 4 Character 5 Notes 6 References 7 BibliographyBiography editEarly life and education edit nbsp House where Reinys was bornMecislovas Reinys was born on 5 February 1884 on a farm in Madagaskaras lt near Daugailiai and Antaliepte then part of the Russian Empire He was the youngest of 11 children 1 His parents owned about 32 hectares 79 acres of land 2 His father died when Reinys was seven from a kick by a horse 2 3 Reinys received some education at home and at a primary school in Antaliepte 1 He was then taken in by his relative a Catholic priest who worked in Muravanaja Asmianka Reinys attended a school there for three years 4 He then moved to live with relatives in Riga and attend the Riga Alexander Gymnasium lv 1 4 Reinys was an excellent student and graduated with a gold medal in 1900 2 For some time he worked as a tutor to earn some money 5 From 1901 to 1905 he studied at the Vilnius Priest Seminary He then received a government stipend for studies at the Saint Petersburg Roman Catholic Theological Academy 1 His professors included Kazimieras Jaunius Vincent Hadleŭski Zygmunt Lozinski Jurgis Matulaitis Matulevicius Adomas Jakstas lt Pranciskus Bucys Jonas Maciulis Maironis Jan Cieplak 6 He was ordained a priest on 10 June 1907 in Saint Petersburg and held his first mass in his native parish church in Daugailiai He graduated in 1909 with a master s degree in theology 1 Doctoral studies edit He continued his studies at the Catholic University of Leuven Belgium 1 His professors included Maurice De Wulf Albert Michotte Armand Thiery fr Alphonse Meunier fr 7 At the university he was a member of a Lithuanian student society which read and wrote articles to various Lithuanian periodicals 8 He spent three vacations in Horsens Denmark doing pastoral work among Polish and Lithuanian workers 9 He defended his doctoral thesis about morality in the works of Vladimir Solovyov in 1912 1 It was one of the first works to discuss Solovyov s works in western Europe 10 Reinys was interested not only in theology but also in psychology natural law natural sciences geology 2 After his doctorate he continued to study natural sciences including prof Victor Gregoire fr in Leuven and philosophy including prof Georg Simmel at the University of Strasbourg France 9 1 During his studies Reinys traveled across Europe and learned multiple languages Latin Italian French English Danish German in addition to the local languages of Lithuanian Russian and Polish He later also learned Spanish 1 World War I in Vilnius edit Reinys returned to Lithuania just before the outbreak of World War I and became a vicar at the Church of St Johns Vilnius 2 He started working as a chaplain at the newly establish Lithuanian Vytautas Magnus Gymnasium and Teachers Seminary maintained by the Lithuanian Education Society Rytas 9 He later became a teacher of religion psychology logic natural sciences and political economy 9 He became a professor at Vilnius Priest Seminary in 1916 and continued to teach until 1922 2 He taught sociology and philosophy 9 During the German occupation Reinys participated in the Lithuanian political life He was associated with a small Lithuanian political club which debated Lithuania s post war future For this involvement Reinys was interrogated by the German police in January 1917 11 Reinys participated in the Vilnius Conference in September 1917 and was elected to the central committee of the Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party which was established after the conference 12 He was one of the authors of the original party s program 9 He was reelected to the party s leadership in 1918 and 1925 12 From November 1915 to December 1916 and again from August 1918 to June 1922 Reinys was chairman of the Lithuanian Education Society Rytas which maintained Lithuanian primary schools in Vilnius Region 13 He also worked with Ateitis and Pavasaris Catholic youth organizations For two years he was vice chairman of the Lithuanian Scientific Society 9 In 1920 he was also elected to the board of the Provisional Committee of Vilnius Lithuanians lt 14 The Red Army captured Vilnius in early January 1919 at the start of the Lithuanian Soviet War Authorities of the proclaimed Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic arrested Reinys on 22 February 1919 5 He was held in Lukiskes Prison for giving a speech on 16 February the first anniversary of the Act of Independence of Lithuania 15 As Soviets were about to be pushed out of Vilnius by the Polish forces in April 1919 they took several prominent Lithuanians as hostages including Reinys Felicija Bortkeviciene Juozas Vailokaitis lt and Liudas Gira 1 and transported them to prisons in Daugavpils and Smolensk 5 On 24 July 1919 Vaclovas Sidzikauskas arranged a prisoner exchange in Daugailiai 15 prominent Lithuanians including Reinys for 35 communists 16 Interwar in Kaunas edit University professor edit In 1922 Reinys moved from Vilnius which was incorporated into the Second Polish Republic to Kaunas the temporary capital of Lithuania Reinys was invited to teach at the University of Lithuania and head its department of psychology 10 At different times he taught general comparative and educational psychology special topics in psychology and led psychology practical 17 His lecture notes were published by students in 1931 18 In 1931 the ruling Lithuanian Nationalist Union reduced the Faculty of Theology eliminated the department of psychology and laid off 18 professors Reinys was also temporarily dismissed 19 This prompted Lithuanian clergy to revive ideas about a separate Catholic university 19 Reinys was in charge of this proposed university and was slated to become its rector The Holy See approved the university in June 1932 and it was supposed to open in August 1932 but the Lithuanian Nationalist Union postponed it indefinitely 20 Since the Catholic university was not abolished but only postponed Reinys continued to seek official recognition of the university He represented the university at various gatherings and societies up until 1940 21 He also prepared annual reports and organized lectures in the name of the university 22 After the dismissal in 1931 Reinys quickly returned to the University of Lithuania but only as a privatdozent i e without a full time salary To compensate Reinys and other affected lecturers remaining professors agreed to donate part of their salary 23 Reinys continued to teach at the university until 1940 24 Minister of Foreign Affairs edit As a member of the Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party Reinys was selected by Prime Minister Leonas Bistras as the Minister of Foreign Affairs He served in this capacity from 25 September 1925 to 20 April 1926 25 Foreign diplomats and Lithuanian opposition did not consider him a strong or independent minister and believed he was assigned to the post only temporarily 26 His predecessor Voldemaras Carneckis lt was forced to resign when he attempted to normalize the relations with Poland Therefore after the Locarno Treaties the new government searched for alternatives normalize Lithuania s relations with the Holy See sign a treaty with the Soviet Union and search for allies in Germany Latvia or Estonia 26 Lithuania s relations with the Holy See soured after the Concordat of 1925 with Poland which established an ecclesiastical province in Vilnius thereby acknowledging Poland s claims to the city Due to rising tensions official diplomatic relations were severed 27 With the help of Archbishop Jurgis Matulaitis Matulevicius Reinys reestablished diplomatic contacts with the Holy See and agreed to a three step plan to normalize the relations 28 The first step was establishing an ecclesiastical province in Lithuania On 4 April 1926 Pope Pius XI issued a bull which established the Archdiocese of Kaunas in place of the Diocese of Samogitia as well as new Dioceses of Kaisiadorys Telsiai Vilkaviskis and Panevezys 28 The Lithuanian opposition attacked the bull accused the government of surrendering its claims to Vilnius and claimed that Reinys served his ecclesiastical superiors in Vatican first and Lithuania second This led to Reinys resignation on 20 April 1926 29 He also resigned from the Christian Democratic Party 12 In relations with Poland Reinys had to respond to an incident when Polish border guards violated the border captured about 15 hectares 37 acres of forest near Kernave and took eight Lithuanian policemen as prisoners on 17 22 February 1926 30 The Lithuanian government prepared a protest note which Reinys personally delivered to Ishii Kikujirō president of the Council of the League of Nations on 12 March 1926 The protest was ignored which only bolstered Lithuanian government s decision to seek closer relations with the Soviet Union 27 Reinys personally disapproved the government s decision to seek closer relations with the Soviet Union but pursued its decision 31 The negotiations began in December 1925 when People s Commissar of Foreign Affairs Georgy Chicherin stopped in Kaunas on his way to Moscow 32 Reinys prepared the first draft of the Soviet Lithuanian Non Aggression Pact which was signed in September 1926 almost five months after Reinys resignation 33 Coadjutor bishop of Vilkaviskis edit In July 1923 Reinys was named a prelate 34 On 5 April 1926 one day after the papal bull which established the ecclesiastical province in Lithuania Reinys was appointed as titular bishop of Tiddi and coadjutor bishop of the newly established Diocese of Vilkaviskis 35 which was established mainly from the territory of the Diocese of Sejny 36 Reinys was consecrated in Kaunas Cathedral by Jurgis Matulaitis Matulevicius assisted by Juozapas Kukta and Justinas Staugaitis on 16 May 1926 37 The new bishop Antanas Karosas lt was already 70 years old Therefore he was more passive and tolerant of bad behaviors 38 Karosas and Reinys did not have a good working relationship as Karosas tried to keep Reinys out of diocese affairs 39 This prompted a complaint by the younger priests to the Holy See in 1934 38 Karosas was ordered to allow Reinys a more active role in the curia and allow him to supervise the Vilkaviskis Priest Seminary lt 38 Reinys taught psychology at the seminary in 1934 1940 40 He also conducted canonical visitations of various parishes 41 led three day Spiritual Exercises 42 inspected religious education in schools 43 etc Activist edit Reinys was also active in a number of Lithuanian societies Reinys was elected to the first board of the Lithuanian Catholic Academy of Science 44 He was its scientific secretary in 1922 1926 participated in its conferences and was elected a true member in 1939 45 Reinys was elected first treasurer of the Union for the Liberation of Vilnius in April 1925 46 He was also elected to the board of Ateitis Catholic youth organization in 1927 and 1930 He was an honorary member and patron protector of Pavasaris another Catholic youth organization 47 In 1927 Reinys prepared new statute for the Catholic Action Center based on the book by Civardi Luigi on the Catholic Action 48 In June September 1937 Reinys toured Lithuanian American and Lithuanian Canadian communities 34 Commemorating the 550th anniversary of the Christianization of Lithuania he visited 52 parishes delivered 67 sermons and 46 speeches participated in congresses and other events of Lithuanian organizations 21 Auxiliary archbishop of Vilnius edit German occupation edit Vilnius Region was captured by the Soviet Union after the Invasion of Poland in 1939 Part of the region was transferred to Lithuania according to the Soviet Lithuanian Mutual Assistance Treaty The Archdiocese of Vilnius remained part of the Polish ecclesiastical province 49 Archbishop Romuald Jalbrzykowski supported Polonization efforts and restricted activities of Lithuanian or Belarusian priests 49 When auxiliary archbishop Kazimierz Mikolaj Michalkiewicz pl died in February 1940 Lithuanians requested that Pope Pius XI appoint a Lithuanian auxiliary archbishop 49 On 18 July 1940 Reinys was appointed titular archbishop of Cypsela and auxiliary archbishop of Vilnius 34 Archbishop Jalbrzykowski met him with hostility did not give him any duties in the curia and complained about him to the Vatican 50 After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 Vilnius Region became part of the Reichskommissariat Ostland Since many Polish clergymen joined the anti Nazi resistance German Gestapo organized repressions 51 For example on 3 March 1942 they raided Vilnius Priest Seminary and arrested 14 professors and about 70 clerics Lithuanians were later released while Poles were taken for forced labor 51 On 22 March Germans arrested archbishop Jalbrzykowski and archdiocese s chancellor Adam Sawicki pl and interned them in Marijampole 52 This left Reinys as the administrator of the archdiocese which was officially confirmed by the Vatican on 22 June 1942 52 At the same time Reinys inherited Jalbrzykowski s role as the apostolic administrator of the Archdiocese of Mohilev and the Diocese of Minsk 53 However German did not allow Reinys to function in these dioceses and limited his authority to the borders of the Generalbezirk Litauen 54 During an air raid by the Soviet forces on the night of 23 March 1942 a bomb fell onto the clergy house of the Church of Saint Nicholas Vilnius 55 It killed priest Kristupas Cibiras lt severely injured Reinys and priest Vincentas Taskunas Reinys spent a month in hospital with a broken clavicle 55 Reinys negotiated with the German authorities to lessen repressions against the clergy For example he managed to secure release of 222 nuns and negotiated that arrested priest and monks would be transferred to work camps within Lithuania instead of the Nazi concentration camps 52 He managed to reopen Vilnius Priest Seminary it was closed twice by the Germans in March 1942 and March 1943 56 Reinys also continued pastoral work He delivered sermons held spiritual exercises visited hospitals etc 43 Unlike Jalbrzykowski Reinys supported the cult of the Divine Mercy image he approved a Lithuanian chaplet for the Divine Mercy in May 1942 and allowed to celebrate the Second Sunday of Easter as the Divine Mercy Sunday at the Church of St Johns Vilnius in 1946 57 Reinys replaced the arrested Polish priests with Lithuanians and Belarusians in Lithuanian or Belarusian speaking parishes 56 This drew ire from the Polish activists who started spreading rumors that repressions against the Polish clergy were orchestrated by Reinys and the Lithuanian Security Police so that Vilnius Region could be Lithuanized Polish Lithuanian relations during World War II grew increasingly tense 58 Reinys removed a reference to Virgin Mary as the Queen of Poland in the Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary as Lithuanians and Belarusians did not agree with such prayer 59 He also removed the Feast of the Most Holy Virgin Mary Queen of Poland pl 3 May from the liturgical calendar for 1944 as the feast was prohibited by the Germans 59 This became a particularly contentious issue After complaints reached the Vatican Reinys defended that the reinstatement of either the litany or the feast were not possible due to the political situation and offered to resign Vatican told Reinys to be more sensitive to the Polish needs and did not accept his resignation 59 Polish authors continue to portray Reinys as a Lithuanian chauvinist 60 Soviet occupation edit After the Operation Bagration Vilnius was captured by the Red Army and Jalbrzykowski returned to Vilnius on 8 August 1944 and Reinys was removed from the curia 61 However Jalbrzykowski was arrested by the Soviets in late January 1945 and Reinys returned as the administrator of the archdiocese 61 Soviet NKGB attempted to use Reinys in its anti Polish campaign and a purge of Polish priests but he refused 62 Soviet NKVD began surveillance of Reinys soon after the Soviet occupation of Lithuania in June 1940 Surviving documents show that NKVD collected reports from 12 different agents in 1940 1941 that focused on Reinys sermons and personal attitudes towards the Soviet regime and relations between Polish and Lithuanian clergy 63 Reinys was first briefly arrested on 6 September 1944 after a gathering of Lithuanian bishops which was not approved by the Soviets 64 In November 1944 chief of the Lithuanian NKGB Aleksandras Gudaitis Guzevicius and first secretary of the Lithuanian Communist Party Antanas Snieckus wanted to arrest Reinys but officials in Moscow suggested using Reinys to demoralize the anti Soviet Lithuanian partisans 62 As leverage they used Reinys two nephews imprisoned by the Soviets and seven relatives deported to Siberia during the June deportation in 1941 a 69 In June 1945 Reinys was pressured by the NKGB to write an appeal to the Lithuanian partisans urging them to apply for the amnesty and legalization campaign announced by the NKGB Reinys refused to cooperate 70 On 9 August 1945 Reinys published circular Nezudyk Thou Shall not Kill However it was so vague and abstract that even Soviet writers admitted its limited usefulness 71 One could apply the circular to the NKGB and its operatives 5 72 Nevertheless thousands of copies of the circular were published and distributed in Lithuania 71 In March 1946 Reinys issued an instruction to priests ordering them not to get involved in political agitation 73 In later part of 1946 anti religious action intensified 74 In late 1946 a representative of the Ministry of State Security MGB met with all remaining Lithuanian bishops After these conversations Teofilius Matulionis and Pranciskus Ramanauskas lt were arrested 75 while Reinys was pressed to sign a pledge to consult Soviet security agencies on specified issues Reinys refused 73 He also refused to order priests to register with the Soviet authorities and support the establishment of parish committees which would allow Soviet agencies to intervene in church affairs 76 Reinys was one last obstacle in this Soviet plan since other administrators of dioceses were inclined to cooperate 73 Soviet prisoner edit nbsp Symbolic grave of Reinys left in DaugailiaiReinys was arrested by Soviet authorities on 12 June 1947 He was interrogated for more than 162 hours mostly at night 77 His indictment was prepared after three months 78 It listed specific instances of Reinys anti Soviet activities which included participating in the activities of the Catholic Action Center in interwar Lithuania publishing various anti Soviet articles during the German occupation providing financial support 300 Reichsmarks for the purpose of purchasing books 79 to a battalion of the Lithuanian Auxiliary Police attending a meeting of Lithuanian bishop in September 1944 which decided to seek religious lessons in schools and military chaplains in Red Army units persuading bishop Vincentas Borisevicius not to cooperate with the NKGB in December 1945 and delivering a sermon defending the Vatican after a critical article was published in Sovetskaya Litva in June 1947 80 These charges demonstrated how difficult it was for the Soviets to find something political in Reinys actions 81 On 15 November 1947 the Special Council of the NKVD sentenced Reinys to eight years in prison and confiscation of property according to the Article 58 of the Penal Code for anti Soviet agitation and participation in anti Soviet organizations 82 Reinys was informed of this decision on 25 December 1947 and transported to the Vladimir Central Prison in January 1948 82 In early 1953 the Ministry of State Security MGB of the Lithuanian SSR prepared a plan of an investigation to uncover the supposed vast Lithuanian Catholic underground led by Reinys 83 To that end Reinys was interrogated in Vladimir Prison eight times in March 1953 84 In prison Reinys wrote two clemency requests one in March 1948 and another to Nikolai Shvernik in August 1948 85 According to surviving records Reinys wrote 17 times to the warden He requested a subscription to Pravda twice and English language The New Times as well as a copy of a book on psychology by Sergei Rubinstein twice all of these requests were denied 86 Reinys could write few letters to his relatives and receive packages In 1949 1953 the packages were prohibited while the letters were limited to just two per year 87 His cellmates included Russian monarchist Vasily Shulgin and leader of Latvian Jews Mordehai Dubin as well as German diplomat Gotthold Starke de and British soldier Frank Kelly who later wrote memoirs about Reinys in prison 88 15 Reinys died in the prison on 8 November 1953 His relatives were informed about his death only in May 1954 89 The exact cause or circumstances of his death are not known 82 He was buried in a mass grave therefore the exact location of his burial is unknown 12 There are three symbolic graves of Reinys in Lithuania all with some soil from the prison s cemetery the churchyard in his native Daugailiai July 1990 Deportees Chapel in Vilnius Cathedral June 2000 and sculpture of Pensive Christ in Skapiskis July 2013 90 Publications editReinys delivered many sermons lectures speeches 91 Starting in 1907 he published various articles in Lithuanian periodicals including Saltinis Draugija Viltis Tevynes sargas Pavasaris Ateitis XX amzius 17 During the German occupation he published more than 10 articles in Karys and Naujoji Lietuva lt criticizing communism and bolshevism 92 In total he authored more than a hundred articles 93 which were published in 23 different periodicals 94 Not all articles have been identified as he used various pen names 91 Researcher Aldona Vasiliauskiene has attributed about 50 articles published in Vilniaus garsas lt in 1920 1922 that were signed under the pen name Dr Mututa to Reinys 95 In 1921 Reinys translated and published a 242 page psychology textbook by Georgy Chelpanov which was used by various schools during the entire interwar period 1 96 It was a free translation Reinys added or modified the text as he saw fit Its three main parts discussed cognitive psychology and sensations feelings and willful and involuntary movements 97 It was the first Lithuanian textbook of psychology therefore Reinys had to come up with Lithuanian words for various technical terms used in psychology 98 In 1939 he published his only original study 107 page book Rasizmo problema The Problem of Racism 91 It was Reinys response to the papal encyclical Mit brennender Sorge of March 1937 94 In this work Reinys surveys developments in scientific racism particularly the use of anthropology and craniometry to distinguish higher and lower races He criticized works of Arthur de Gobineau Houston Stewart Chamberlain Alfred Rosenberg based on biology religion philosophy pedagogy and argued that there is no such thing as the Aryan race 99 From January 1945 to May 1947 Reinys wrote 27 satirical and sarcastic bulletins T Askunu bei B Asiu kolchozo Moderniojo Cirko biuleteniai Modern Circus Bulletins of the Kolkhoz of T Askunai and B Asiai 55 The works referenced Vincentas Taskunas Edmundas Basys lt and others who lived in one apartment in Vilnius they moved there after the bombing of the clergy house of the Church of Saint Nicholas Vilnius 95 Kolkhoz referred to the crowded apartment while modern circus referred to the new Soviet regime The works showcase Reinys ability to find humor even in dire circumstances 95 These handwritten bulletins were hidden by Taskunas niece and were first published in 1999 100 Canonization efforts editReinys was rehabilitated by the Supreme Court of the Lithuanian SSR in February 1989 101 In February 1990 Lithuanians submitted documents to the Roman Curia to open the canonisation case for Reinys along with Teofilius Matulionis and Vincentas Borisevicius two other Lithuanian bishops persecuted by the Soviets 102 Pope John Paul II mentioned these three in a 1993 speech at the Hill of Crosses 103 The official beatification case was opened on 14 September 1998 15 On 7 May 2000 Pope John Paul II recognized 114 Lithuanian martyrs among them Reinys 104 Character editReinys contemporaries wrote about his frugal lifestyle and generosity for those in need According to one memoir he purchased a simple fur coat only after being told by a doctor to dress warmer 1 He continued to dress modestly in priest robes even when he was the Minister of Foreign Affairs 105 He recorded his expenses in notebooks A surviving notebook from December 1924 to May 1929 shows that he donated to 48 different organizations as well as different churches parishes and other causes 106 He also supported individual students among them Salomeja Neris and Jonas Grinius lt 107 as well as his family members 108 He spent considerable sums on literature and periodicals the notebook shows that he subscribed to 32 different periodicals 109 Overall over the 54 months Reinys spent approximately 54 500 litas on charitable causes 13 300 litas on literature and 52 000 litas for other expenses 110 Reinys was a teetotaler since 1910 17 This caused several diplomatic incidents when Reinys was the Minister of Foreign Affairs and dignitaries noticed that they were toasted not with a glass of wine but rose colored water 105 Gotthold Starke de in his memoirs about Vladimir Prison wrote that Reinys exhibited strong faith Christian love and humility and had become a moral authority among the prisoners 111 According to Starke Reinys occasionally received some money from his relatives which he used to buy some bread or sugar and share it with other inmates Once an inmate stole from Reinys who said nothing but gave a double portion to that inmate next time 88 Frank Kelly similarly wrote that Reinys prayed frequently and was very calm 15 Notes edit The deported relatives were sister Emilija Telyceniene age 76 brothers Kazimieras Reinys 74 and Jonas Reinys 70 sister in law Grasilda Musteikyte Reiniene 55 pregnant niece in law Stefanija Reiniene and her two children Aldute 2 and Pranas Vilius 7 months In exile Stefanija gave birth to her daughter Nijole Due to harsh living conditions five member of the exiled family died Emilija 1941 Pranas Vilius 1942 Jonas 1942 Kazimieras 1943 and Grasilda 1945 65 Stefanija and her two surviving children escaped to Lithuania in 1947 but she was deported for the second time 66 Reinys nephew and Stefanija s husband Antanas Reinys was arrested in October 1944 and sentenced to ten years in prison 67 Stefanija and Antanas eventually reunited and returned to Lithuania in 1966 66 Another nephew Juozas Reinys was arrested right after the family was deported in June 1941 68 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Vasiliauskiene 1999a p 1 a b c d e f Ibianska 2018 Darbininkas 1937 p 1 a b Cepenas 2000 p 440 a b c d Luksas 2011 Redakcija 1972 p 475 Redakcija 1972 pp 475 476 Katilius 2011 p 166 a b c d e f g Redakcija 1972 p 476 a b Vasiliauskiene 2011a pp 96 97 Cepenas 1986 pp 37 39 a b c d Svarauskas 2016 p 333 Vasiliauskiene 2013 Liekis 2011 p 171 a b c d Juozeviciute 2014 Veilentiene 2013 p 15 a b c Redakcija 1972 p 477 Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 99 a b Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 104 Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 105 a b Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 106 Grickevicius 2016 p 164 Grinius 1972 p 362 Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 100 Svarauskas 2016 p 334 a b Kasparavicius 1999 pp 154 155 a b Kasparavicius 1999 p 164 a b Kasparavicius 1999 p 165 Kasparavicius 1999 pp 166 167 Kasparavicius 1999 pp 163 164 Kasparavicius 1999 pp 158 163 Eidintas Zalys amp Senn 1999 p 108 Kasparavicius 1999 p 162 a b c Matulis 1961 p 269 Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 96 Zemaitis 2004 p 515 Zemaitis 2004 p 516 a b c Zemaitis 2004 p 517 Zemaitis 2000 p 232 Zemaitis 2004 p 518 Zemaitis 2000 p 233 Zemaitis 2004 p 519 a b Pipiras amp Zemaitis 2014 p 17 Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 102 Vasiliauskiene 2011a pp 102 103 Psibilskis 2009 p 255 Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 101 Vasiliauskiene 2006 p 87 a b c Jegelevicius 2004 p 528 Jegelevicius 2004 pp 529 534 a b Jegelevicius 2004 p 531 a b c Jegelevicius 2004 p 532 Laukaityte 2005 pp 4 8 Laukaityte 2005 p 8 a b c Vasiliauskiene 1999b p 12 a b Jegelevicius 2004 p 533 Pipiras amp Zemaitis 2016 p 39 Jegelevicius 2004 pp 525 533 a b c Jegelevicius 2004 p 534 Weeks 2015 p 169 a b Jegelevicius 2004 p 535 a b Streikus 2004 p 540 Vasiliauskiene 2000 p 59 Streikus 2004 p 539 Vasiliauskiene 2003a pp 735 746 a b Vasiliauskiene 2003a pp 735 736 Vasiliauskiene 2003a p 737 Vasiliauskiene 2003a pp 735 738 Vasiliauskiene 2003a pp 734 735 737 738 Vasiliauskiene 2003a pp 737 738 a b Vasiliauskiene 2003a p 739 Zugger 2001 pp 388 389 a b c Streikus 2004 p 541 Streikus 2000 p 12 Streikus 2000 pp 11 12 Streikus 2000 pp 14 15 Vasiliauskiene 2011b pp 157 160 Vasiliauskiene 2003a p 743 Streikus 2004 p 542 Streikus 2000 pp 727 729 Streikus 2000 p 18 a b c Vasiliauskiene 2003a p 744 Streikus 2004 p 543 Vasiliauskiene 2011b p 161 Vasiliauskiene 2011b pp 154 155 Vasiliauskiene 2011b pp 164 166 Vasiliauskiene 2011b p 167 a b Starke 1977 p 7 Vasiliauskiene 2011b pp 172 173 Vasiliauskiene 2015 a b c Vasiliauskiene 2011a p 107 Streikus 2000 p 613 Redakcija 1972 pp 478 481 a b Pipiras amp Zemaitis 2014 p 18 a b c Vasiliauskiene 2005 Katelyte 2009 p 198 Katelyte 2009 pp 198 199 Katelyte 2009 pp 198 214 Pruskus 2001 pp 64 65 Vasiliauskiene 1999b pp 12 13 Kronika 1989 Vasiliauskiene 2003b p 107 John Paul II 1993 Vasiliauskiene 2000 p 58 a b Kasparavicius 1999 p 154 Vasiliauskiene 2004 pp 134 135 Vasiliauskiene 2004 p 133 Vasiliauskiene 2004 pp 131 132 Vasiliauskiene 2004 p 138 Vasiliauskiene 2004 p 150 Starke 1977 p 8 Bibliography editCepenas Juozapas 2000 Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys PDF Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos metrastis in Lithuanian 17 439 458 ISSN 1392 0502 Cepenas Pranas 1986 Naujuju laiku Lietuvos istorija Vol II Chicago Dr Kazio Griniaus Fondas OCLC 3220435 J E Vyskupas Mecislovas Reinys PDF Darbininkas in Lithuanian 46 18 June 1937 Eidintas Alfonsas Zalys Vytautas Senn Alfred Erich 1999 Tuskenis Edvardas ed Lithuania in European Politics The Years of the First Republic 1918 1940 Paperback ed New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 22458 3 Grickevicius Arturas 2016 Kataliku kunigu seminarija Kaune 150 ies metu istorijos bruozai in Lithuanian Versus aureus ISBN 9786094671999 Grinius Jonas 1972 Teologijos Filosofijos Fakultetas In Cepenas Pranas ed Lietuvos Universitetas 1579 1803 1922 in Lithuanian Chicago The Association of Lithuanian American Professors OCLC 2152067 Ibianska Vanda 10 January 2018 Dievo tarnas Mecislovas Reinys in Lithuanian Bernardinai lt Retrieved 19 February 2023 Jegelevicius Sigitas 2004 Dialogai ir konfliktai Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys Vilniuje 1939 1944 Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos metrastis in Lithuanian 24 521 535 ISSN 1392 0502 John Paul II 7 September 1993 Viaggio Apostolico in Lituania Celebrazione presso il Monte delle Croci a Siauliai Omelia Di Giovanni Paolo II in Italian Dicastero per la Comunicazione Libreria Editrice Vaticana Retrieved 1 March 2023 Juozeviciute Vilma February 2014 Mecislovas Reinys 1884 02 03 1953 11 08 PDF Atmintinos dienos in Lithuanian Genocide and Resistance Research Centre of Lithuania Retrieved 1 March 2023 Kasparavicius Algimantas 1999 Kunigas Mecislovas Reinys diplomatineje tarnyboje In Cesonis Alfonsas ed Lietuvos uzsienio reikalu ministrai 1918 1940 in Lithuanian Kaunas Sviesa ISBN 5 430 02696 4 Katelyte Rita 2009 Mecislovo Reinio laisvai versto Psichologijos vadovelio psichologijos terminu reiksme ir kilme Terminologija in Lithuanian 16 198 216 ISSN 1392 267X Katilius Algimantas 2011 Lietuviu studentu kataliku draugijos Leveno universitete XX a pradzioje Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos metrastis in Lithuanian 34 141 167 ISSN 1392 0502 Reabilituotas a a vyskupas Mecislovas Reinys Lietuvos kataliku baznycios kronika in Lithuanian 81 1989 Laukaityte Regina 2005 Lietuvos baznyciu misijos okupuotose SSRS srityse 1941 1944 m PDF Lituanistica in Lithuanian 3 1 14 ISSN 0235 716X Liekis Algimantas 2011 Juodieji Lietuvos istorijos puslapiai PDF in Lithuanian Vol II Mokslotyros institutas ISBN 978 9986 795 67 4 Luksas Aras 18 November 2011 Pasirinkes kankinio kelia in Lithuanian Lietuvos zinios Retrieved 1 March 2023 Matulis Steponas 1961 Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys PDF Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos suvaziavimo darbai in Lithuanian IV 268 271 Pipiras Nerijus Zemaitis Kestutis 2014 Pastoracinio darbo kryptys arkivyskupo Mecislovo Reinio studijoje Rasizmo problema Soter in Lithuanian 51 79 15 25 doi 10 7220 2335 8785 51 79 2 ISSN 2335 8785 Pipiras Nerijus Zemaitis Kestutis 2016 Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys Dievo gailestingumo zinios skleidejas ir kulto platintojas Soter in Lithuanian 57 85 33 42 doi 10 7220 2335 8785 57 85 2 ISSN 2335 8785 Pruskus Valdas 2001 Jaunosios kartos kataliku intelektualu poziuris į fasizma ir nacionalsocializma tarpukario Lietuvoje Problemos in Lithuanian 60 57 78 doi 10 15388 Problemos 2001 60 6781 ISSN 2424 6158 Psibilskis Vygintas Bronius 2009 Mykolas Birziska patrioto mokslininko kulturininko gyvenimo ir veiklos pedsakai in Lithuanian Vilniaus universiteto leidykla ISBN 978 9955 33 462 0 Redakcija 1972 Jo Eksc Vysk Mecislovas Reinys PDF Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos suvaziavimo darbai in Lithuanian 3 475 481 Starke Gotthold 29 December 1977 Paskutinieji velionies arkivyskypo Reinio metai PDF Musu Lietuva in Lithuanian 52 1535 7 8 Streikus Arunas ed 2000 Lietuvos vyskupai kankiniai sovietiniame teisme PDF in Lithuanian Lithuanian Catholic Academy of Science ISBN 9986 592 28 3 Streikus Arunas 2004 Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys sovietiniame teisme PDF Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos metrastis in Lithuanian 24 537 542 ISSN 1392 0502 Svarauskas Arturas 2016 Reinys Mecislovas PDF In Tamosaitis Mindaugas Bitautas Algis Svarauskas Arturas eds Lietuvos Respublikos 1918 1940 m vyriausybiu ministru biografinis zodynas in Lithuanian Vilnius Mokslo ir enciklopediju leidybos centras ISBN 978 5 420 01778 4 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 13 March 1999a Is arkivysk Mecislovo Reinio gyvenimo PDF Draugas Literatura menas mokslas in Lithuanian 53 11 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 1999b Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys ir T Askunu bei B Asiu kolchozo Moderniojo Cirko biuleteniai Istorija in Lithuanian 42 12 30 ISSN 2029 7181 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 2000 Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys Lietuvos ypatingojo archyvo dokumentuose 1940 1941 m Soter in Lithuanian 4 32 57 67 ISSN 1392 7450 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 2003a Arkivyskupo Mecislovo Reinio stoiskumas nepavykes cekistu santazas giminiu likimu PDF Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos suvaziavimo darbai in Lithuanian 18 731 746 ISSN 1392 0499 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 2003b LKMA genezes aspektai Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos metrastis in Lithuanian 22 81 126 ISSN 1392 0502 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 2004 Arkivyskupo Mecislovo Reinio ketvirtoji Islaidu knygele Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos metrastis 24 123 151 ISSN 1392 0502 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 19 October 2005 Arkiv Mecislovas Reinys pasirasinejo Mututa ir dr Mututa XXI amzius in Lithuanian 78 1379 ISSN 2029 1299 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 2006 M Reinys krikscioniskosios pedagogikos universalumo puoseletojas PDF Soter in Lithuanian 17 45 85 97 ISSN 1392 7450 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 2011a Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys akademine veikla 1922 1940 PDF Soter in Lithuanian 39 67 95 114 ISSN 1392 7450 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 2011b Arkivyskupas Mecislovas Reinys kalinio Mecislovo Reinio asmens byla Nr 3145 Genocidas Ir Rezistencija in Lithuanian 1 29 146 179 ISSN 1392 3463 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 5 January 11 May 2013 Dr kun Jonas Steponavicius kovotojas del lietuvybes Vilnijos kraste Voruta in Lithuanian 1 10 765 774 ISSN 1392 0677 Retrieved 19 February 2023 Vasiliauskiene Aldona 21 November 2015 Dievo tarno M Reinio simboliniai kapai Lietuvoje Lietuvos aidas in Lithuanian 6 7 ISSN 1822 5713 Veilentiene Audrone 16 February 2013 Vasario 16 oji pirmosios Nepriklausomybes metines PDF Voruta in Lithuanian 4 768 15 ISSN 1392 0677 Weeks Theodore R 2015 Vilnius Between Nations 1795 2000 Northern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 1 60909 191 0 Zemaitis Kestutis 2000 Vyskupas Mecislovas Reinys ir Vilkaviskio vyskupija Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos metrastis in Lithuanian 16 229 236 ISSN 1392 0502 Zemaitis Kestutis 2004 Vyskupas Mecislovas Reinys Vilkaviskio kunigu seminarijoje ir vyskupijoje PDF Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademijos metrastis in Lithuanian 24 513 519 ISSN 1392 0502 Zugger Christopher Lawrence 2001 The Forgotten Catholics of the Soviet Empire from Lenin through Stalin Syracuse NY Syracuse University Press ISBN 0 8156 0679 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mecislovas Reinys amp oldid 1197371091, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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