A Vatican cardinal born in the Czech city of Brno will return there on June 6 to preside at the beatification of two priests executed by the communist regime in what was then Czechoslovakia.
"To go and be there, near where I was born and where my family is from, is of course a very moving experience, and I am looking forward very much to it," Cardinal Michael Czerny, prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, told EWTN News.
Czerny was born 80 years ago, but due to a communist threat his family soon emigrated to Canada. Though he remembers the 1950s in Montreal, he said, "I never imagined what was happening behind the Iron Curtain."
Getting to know Jan Bula and Václav Drbola
The Diocese of Brno, which will mark its 250th anniversary next year, will celebrate the first beatifications in its history. The diocese expects thousands of visitors at the city's exhibition center, where a spiritual and cultural program will run all day, and it prepared a novena for the nine days leading up to the beatification.
"The coming days should help us get to know Jan Bula and Václav Drbola personally better, so that they will be close to us and become our spiritual friends," Bishop Pavel Konzbul explained, stressing that he does not want "the beatification to be a one-time event."
Jan Bula (1920–1952) and Václav Drbola (1912–1951) faced increasing pressure from the communist regime that took power in 1948 in Czechoslovakia. The regime imprisoned them without cause and accused them of complicity in a shooting that killed three communists, although both were already in prison at the time. They were condemned to death in staged trials in the early 1950s.
To prepare the faithful, the diocese has published educational, prayer, and catechetical materials. A six-minute animated film about the martyrs' lives was produced using AI, along with a documentary. Around 40 catechists also went on a pilgrimage this year to places linked with the two priests.
The organizer said the catechists were given "firsthand experience to get to know the churches, parishes, and other places where both martyrs worked" to "spread the story and legacy of Jan Bula and Václav Drbola among children and youth."
Life as a hymn of praise
The two priests' witness was also recounted at a May 20 conference in Rome, "The Blessed Martyrs of Communism," organized by the Embassy of the Czech Republic to the Holy See at the Czech Pontifical College Nepomucenum, where Czerny reflected on their martyrdom. The date marked the anniversary of Bula's execution in 1952.
"Their life was a hymn of praise that burst out of the depths of promise and rose up above the tumult of the world," Czerny said at the opening, adding that the two priests "turned the courtroom into a pulpit and the prison into an altar."
When the bishops in Czechoslovakia decided to inform the faithful about the worsening situation in 1949 through pastoral and circular letters, many priests did not read them out. "They were afraid of the consequences," said Father Karel Orlita, head of the diocesan phase of the beatification process. Bula and Drbola, however, read the pastoral letter in church, which testified to their courage, Orlita underscored.
The postulator of the Roman phase of the process, Maria Bresciani, said "the profound reason for their persecution was their Christian identity, influence on the faithful, loyalty to the pope and the Church, and their ability to shape people's consciences, mainly of the young."
Both speakers agreed that Bula and Drbola were not stubborn or fanatics but simply decided to remain faithful to Christ, in peace and without hatred. Communists even singled out Bula's influence on people's consciences as problematic, claiming he "abused the trust among people that he had as a priest."
"They were popular with their parishioners and active in community life, and the reverence for them has a long tradition after their death," said Eva Vybíralová of the Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes.
She noted that Bishop Felix Davídek, who was secretly ordained in Czechoslovakia and had known Bula from the seminary, considered him a "candidate for canonization and one of the protectors of the secret Church."
Bula and Drbola were rehabilitated in 1990 and will become the first beatified victims of the totalitarian regimes of the 20th century on the territory of today's Czech Republic.






