Fr. Richard Henkes, S.A.C., A Picture of His Life A Picture of His Life | Page 8

Joseph. Josef Beran was a professor of pastoral theology in Prague and the Prefect of the Seminary there. He had already entered the concentration camp in Dachau in 1942 and was able to give Richard Henkes advice. Who could guess that the Archbishop of Prague, after renewed suffering under the Communists, would become a Cardinal in Rome exactly 22 years after February 22, 1945? Here in the camp, all was striped dull blue-gray, but not all were equal. There were groups of prisoners with influence, even with the guards, so you always had to be careful. And woe to you if you had no friends in the camp. You could not live and survive from the thin soup and the little bread you were rationed. Richard Henkes and Josef Beran got to know each other in Dachau and became friends. They thought about the post-war pe- riod that corresponded with the time after Hitler’s dictatorship. It was not known what the country would look like, but there would be areas where Germans and Czechs lived together, and it would certain- ly prove difficult if the chaplains in such areas could not speak both languages. Richard Henkes had already begun to learn Czech with his barber in Chuchelna - a neighboring village and railway station of Strandorf. His arrest took away this opportunity. At 43 years old, he was now able to resume the language lessons with Josef Beran. He looked intently towards the future: its uncertainty did not worry him. Additionally, learning vocabulary and grammar drove away the brooding in camp every day. Brooding made him homesick. Learning gave him direction in this directionless environment. Richard Henkes found it hard to learn languages. This had always been the case. If someone had said to him in his Latin studies at Vallendar (Pallottine Theological Institute) that he would later learn a foreign language again, voluntarily, he would have laughed. Richard had time to learn because he had a relatively easy job as a canteen-keeper at Block 17. He was a sort of administrator for the men of this barracks, in which prisoners from many nations spent the first three weeks in Dachau Concentration Camp. There were pris- oners from 30 states in Dachau and from 1938, there were prisoners from the Czech Republic as well. The canteen store took care of food 2