Fr. Richard Henkes, S.A.C., A Picture of His Life A Picture of His Life | Page 12

Strandorf. This is a small spot with 780 inhabitants in the Hultschiner Ländchen region, which belonged to the Archdiocese of Olomouc. In the German-Czech border area, the nationality often changed. In 1938, the Wehrmacht occupied the Sudetenland. The Archbishop of Olomouc therefore extended the general vicariate of Branitz, the German-speaking area, to the Sudetenland. The vicar general was Josef Martin Nathan. He appreciated Fr. Henkes, who regularly held retreats for young people in St. Joseph in Branitz since 1935. After 1938, the cooperation deepened. With the closure of St. Joseph, Fr. Henkes joined a circle of about thirty priests who held three-day courses, or spiritual weeks, in the parishes themselves so that the Gestapo did not discover and end their efforts before they be- gan. In the spring of 1941, Fr. Henkes was threatened with imminent conscription and then assigned to parish work by Monsignor Nathan as pastors were not allowed to be conscripted, according to the Con- cordat. As a result, Richard Henkes became the fill-in parish priest in Strandorf, settling in the presbytery headed by Paula Miketta, who was already a bursar and housekeeper for Pastor Dr. Josef Vrchovecky. The Germans had forced the Czechs to move to a separate part of the diocese. The fate of the Czechs affected Fr. Henkes greatly. He did not like it when children with language difficulties in German were being teased in school, going as far as forbidding mockery. This is the root of the zeal that developed as a Czech student in Dachau, inspiring him to build a bridge between the Germans and Czechs after the bad experience of the war. The parish flourished in the service of their new priest. The wor- ship, in the sense of the liturgical movement, was attractive, and the children felt addressed. For two wonderful years the church and its pastor grew stronger together. Fr. Henkes continued to work as a pas- tor and became a leader of the Pallottines in the eastern Sudeten re- gion. He negotiated with Monsignor Nathan so that the community could “accommodate” several Westerners to escape the Nazi regime. One shared joy and suffering in Strandorf - and suffering was always increasing. As Fr. Henkes knew from his own youth in Schön- statt during the First World War, he kept written contact with the soldiers of his village who were at the front. He mourned with fami- 6