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Catholic News

Czech court to weigh clearing cardinal jailed by communists

A district court will weigh whether Cardinal Štepán Trochta, imprisoned by the Nazis and later by the communists, was unlawfully interned in the 1950s.

A second cardinal and a third senior churchman may be rehabilitated this year for mistreatment under the communist regime in Czechoslovakia. The District Court in Litomerice, in what is now the Czech Republic, will consider a proposal for the rehabilitation of Cardinal Štepán Trochta, the former bishop of Litomerice, over his internment between 1950 and 1953.

The public prosecutor asked the relevant authorities to carry out an investigation into the archives and, based on the outcome, found the initiative reasonable. He has already submitted a proposal for the judicial rehabilitation of Trochta over the illegal deprivation of his personal freedom. A date for consideration of the proposal has not yet been set.

"I firmly believe that the name of Štepán Trochta, my predecessor in Litomerice, will be cleared through the courts," said Archbishop Stanislav Pribyl of Prague, who is also apostolic administrator of Litomerice.

The verdict that sent Trochta to prison, handed down in a political trial for "treason and conspiracy," was overturned in 1968, but the Czech courts have not dealt with his earlier illegal internment. The initiative for full rehabilitation came from Jan Kratochvil, director of the Museum of Czech, Slovak, and Ruthenian Exile of the 20th Century, and the lawyer Lubomír Müller.

It is "important to clean his name in this way as well," said Kratochvil, whose family was friends with the prelate.

Salesian, prisoner, cardinal

Štepán Trochta (1905–1974) was one of the first Czech members of the Society of St. Francis de Sales, the so-called Salesians. He studied in Turin, Italy, where he obtained a doctorate in theology. He returned to Czechoslovakia, and when Nazi Germany occupied the country, he was arrested for his contacts with and support for the resistance and was sent to several concentration camps.

He was "ready to work, full of energy, enthusiasm, and willing to work hard." Trochta was also a good organizer and a gifted speaker and writer who "enjoyed being among the boys, even though he gradually had to spend more time in administration," according to "Life and Legacy," a booklet published by the Salesians on the 50th anniversary of the prelate's death.

Shortly before the communists took over in Czechoslovakia, he was appointed bishop of Litomerice. He became the spokesman for the episcopate of Czechoslovakia in difficult negotiations with the new government. In the end, the regime interned him in his residence and later imprisoned him. Although he was released sooner than expected, he was not allowed to continue as a bishop and had to work as a manual laborer.

In 1969, when he was already back in the Diocese of Litomerice, Pope Paul VI created him a cardinal "in pectore" — that is, secretly.

When Trochta died five years later, the funeral was attended by many of the faithful, including cardinals from Berlin, Krakow, and Vienna. Archbishop Karol Wojtyla of Krakow, who later became Pope John Paul II, reportedly asked to concelebrate but was not permitted to do so. Wojtyla then defied the ban on foreign participants speaking, delivering a short address over the coffin in which he called the deceased prelate a martyr. The funeral Mass was celebrated by the Czech bishop and future Cardinal František Tomášek.

A series of Czech rehabilitations

The case may become one more in a recent series of rehabilitations in the Czech Republic.

In February, the District Court of Prague recognized the unjust treatment of Cardinal Josef Beran, the former archbishop of Prague, who was interned in several locations. Last month, the District Court in Olomouc rehabilitated Archbishop Josef Karel Matocha of Olomouc, also over his internment.

In 2024, the Regional Court in Hradec Králové rehabilitated Father Josef Toufar, who was illegally arrested and tortured to death.

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