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Venerable

Venerable Mary Theresa Dudzik

1860 to 1918

“Let us do everything for the greater glory of God.”

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Path to Sainthood

Declared Venerable in 1994. Awaiting a confirmed miracle for beatification.

Servant of God

1977

Venerable

1994

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Blessed

Pending

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Saint

The Immigrant Who Sheltered Chicago’s Forgotten

Josephine Dudzik was born on August 30, 1860, in Plocicz, Poland. In 1881, her family joined the wave of Polish immigrants crossing the Atlantic, settling in Chicago’s crowded Polish neighborhoods on the near northwest side. Josephine found work and became deeply involved in her parish, but it was the economic crash of 1893 that revealed her vocation.

As the depression devastated Chicago, the elderly, the orphaned, and the destitute of the Polish community had nowhere to turn. Josephine opened her own home to them. She took in anyone who needed shelter, feeding them from her own table and nursing them with her own hands. What began as one woman’s act of mercy soon attracted other women who wanted to serve alongside her.

On December 8, 1894, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, Josephine and her companions formally established the Franciscan Sisters of Blessed Kunegunda (known today as the Franciscan Sisters of Chicago). She took the religious name Mary Theresa. The congregation received diocesan approval and grew steadily, building homes for the elderly and institutions to serve the needy of Chicago.

Mother Mary Theresa’s health declined in her later years, and she stepped down from leadership in 1909. She died on September 20, 1918, in Chicago, at age fifty-eight. Her cause for canonization was opened in 1963. She was declared Servant of God in 1977 and Venerable in 1994 by Pope John Paul II. Her congregation continues to serve in Chicago and beyond.

In Her Own Words

Let us do everything for the greater glory of God.

In the face of the poor, we see the face of Christ.

To her sisters

Timeline
1860Born Josephine Dudzik on August 30 in Plocicz, Poland
1881Family immigrates to Chicago, settling in the Polish community
1893Economic crash devastates Chicago; Josephine begins sheltering the aged, poor, and orphaned in her own home
1894Founds the Franciscan Sisters of Blessed Kunegunda on December 8, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception
1896Takes the religious name Mary Theresa; congregation receives diocesan approval
1898Opens a home for the elderly, the first of many institutions serving the needy
1900Congregation grows as more women join to serve the poor of Chicago
1909Steps down from leadership due to declining health
1918Dies September 20 in Chicago, Illinois, at age fifty-eight
1963Cause for canonization formally opened on September 11
1977Declared Servant of God
1994Declared Venerable by Pope John Paul II
Support Mother Dudzik’s Cause

Mother Mary Theresa Dudzik opened her home to the destitute of Chicago and founded a religious congregation that continues to serve the poor. Declared Venerable in 1994, she awaits a confirmed miracle for beatification. Pray for the advancement of her cause.

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Born

August 30, 1860

Plocicz, Poland

Died

September 20, 1918

Chicago, Illinois

Cause Opened

September 11, 1963

Archdiocese of Chicago

Stage

Venerable

Declared 1994

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