COMMUNISM As I Know It
by Father Vladimir Kozina
Father Kozina who is still living today gives a first hand
account of some of the many horrors and atrocities suffered under the rule of
atheistic Communism. Today, world Communism continues its advance all over the
globe "provoking wars and persecutions against the Church," as Our Lady of
Fatima said. According to Sister Lucy, unless we obtain the conversion of
Russia, it will overcome and enslave the whole world including the United
States of America. (Communism As I Know It from which this article is taken is
available from The Fatima Crusader)
The Martyrdom Of My Family
The modern martyr, Aloysius Cardinal Stepinac, Archbishop of
Zagreb, declared: "Believe me, I know Communism. It is a satanic
totalitarianism of terror!" I dare to say the same after witnessing the
martyrdom and destruction of my own family.
We were opposed to Communism and its OF - (Liberation Front) -
from its inception. We saw in Communism nothing but evil. As Catholics, we
could not have cooperated with this Red plague. My brother, Frank, was among
the Catholic lay leaders in our Parish. The Communists knew that and therefore
they were trying to persuade him to join the Party. They promised him various
worthy positions in the Party. But as soon as they realized that nothing could
be achieved in a friendly way, the Communists began to threaten him.
It was April of 1942 when the Communists sent out their
henchman, Abi, to visit Frank. Abi threatened him with death as the alternative
if Frank refused to join the OF. My brother angrily shouted at Abi, saying,
"You dare to tell me that you are fighting for the liberation of our Country?
You Communists... if our Nation means something to you why, then, are you
murdering our innocent people and plundering our properties?" Frank was fully
aware of what he had said. He knew what to expect from this man. So also did
Abi know what was going to happen to us. Our firm stand against Communism was
considered a "crime against the people." For our divergent opinions, our strong
Catholic faith, the Communist Party sentenced us to death.
Friday, May 29, 1942, a Communist patrol staked out our house at
Zapotok. Arti was the commanding officer. He asked for Frank. When my brother
arrived, Arti began to beat Frank with a club in front of my poor parents,
sisters, and brother. When Arti's heavy blows broke the club, he continued his
"liberation" action by kicking the innocent victim. Some neighbors gathered
around the bloody scene. Arti turned to the crowd and said: "Shame on you
having had this dung among you for such a long time. Could you not have
finished with him yourselves by now? However, one of our informers in the Town
was watching this dog and his anti-Communist work and reported everything to
us. Now he will get his long deserved reward..."
My poor parents pleaded with Arti to release Frank as he had
done no harm to anyone. Arti's answer was: "Handcuff this devil and take him
away!" The Communist patrol brought him to Sodrazica and locked him up. The
"Peoples' Court" was not certain what should be done with Frank. Should they
sentence him to death? This would then be the first Communist execution in the
Sodrazica Valley. What would people think of this crime? They sent Ludvik
Lusin, a Communist, who knew Frank well, in order to persuade him for the last
time. Ludvik Lusin later said: "I advised Frank to be reasonable. I told him to
say that he was not opposed to Communism and that he was willing to cooperate
with the OF. But Frank Kozina steadily affirmed that he would not do that..."
Since Frank did not accept the Communist offer, he was forced
then before the torturers. They flogged and tortured him mercilessly. Then they
put him into a car and transported him to Boncar, the place of his execution.
They were afraid of the people so they decided to do this bloody job during the
night of May 30, 1942. Frank was forced to stand on the edge of a grave. A
Communist eyewitness declared that at this moment the moon shone on the scene.
Frank stood quietly and looked into the place of his "rest." Then he pulled a
prayer book from his pocket and began to pray. Suddenly, a rifle shot broke the
silence of the night. From point-blank range the executioner, Joseph Kovacic,
from Zigmarice, sent the bullet into Frank's head... My 33-year-old brother
collapsed into the grave. The prayer book fell out of Frank's hands. Those
present threw it on his back before they covered his body with the soil.
We were fortunate to find Frank's grave in the woods on August
19, 1942. I recognized his body at once. His head was shattered. The prayer
book was still lying on his back. I lifted up his jacket and shirt from his
back. Signs of terrible torture were obvious. The dorsal side was covered with
black marks, signs of flogging and beating. We placed Frank's corpse in a
coffin and transported it to the Cemetery of St. Mark's. During the funeral
procession - a journey of 10 miles from the place of execution to St. Mark's
Cemetery - the good people of the Sodrazica Valley threw flowers on the hearse.
Dead, Frank was receiving recognition among the people for his
unselfish deed and still more, for his martyr's death. The Communists thought
that they had rid themselves of their dangerous opponent. They did not think at
that time that his blood would make a hundred more enemies. The Communists
wanted to eradicate his Catholic belief but they did not realize that Frank's
spirit would live on. They were convinced that they had won when he was dead.
The majestic funeral procession of the martyr was proof of their moral defeat.
The Communists saw that the people whom they confidently thought were on their
side spoke now, without words, against them. But if they could not keep the
minds of the people in check, they would run dangerously on and lose the game.
What was to be done?
Night Of Horror
Our family went about its normal business on that fateful
evening of August 26, 1942. It was just one week after my brother's internment.
As on any other evening, we said the Family Rosary. Who would have ever thought
that this evening's prayer was going to be the last for us as a family ...
I bid my parents, my brother, John, and my three teenage sisters
goodnight and went upstairs to my bedroom. I had not been sleeping for an hour
when, suddenly, the barking of our watch-dog woke me up. Through the window I
saw a group of armed Communists approaching our house. I knew right away the
meaning of this night visit. Something horrible was going to happen to us
tonight!
I ran to the next room where there was a door into the attic. I
grabbed the ladder, opened the door, climbed up, pulled up the ladder after me
and shut the door. Meanwhile, the pane in the hall window was broken. The
Communist brigands forced their way into the hall through the window. At the
same time, mother and father came out from their bedroom. Frightened, they
started to call for help. But the Communists silenced them. One of them knocked
my mother on the head with the butt of his rifle so that she staggered. Then he
pushed her and father into the living room where my lame brother John, and my
three sisters were already under the supervision of the Communist guard, Vinko
Lusin, from Kot.
Upon the arrival of my parents into the living room, my father
began to say loudly the Act of Contrition. But, when the family started with
the Rosary, the Communist guard forbade them to pray! Frightened and severely
injured from the blow, my mother asked for a glass of water. The brute snubbed
her with a shameful remark and refused to allow her to take some water. The
Communists were constantly asking my mother for my whereabouts. They knew I was
at home; my bed and my clothes in my bedroom were proof of that. They did not
see me escape from the house ... I must be somewhere in the house ... but
where?
In the meantime, the Communist mob plundered our property. They
actually "freed" us from everything - I mean everything! When the plundering
was finished, I heard someone asking: "Ronko, what should we do now?" Ronko,
the Commanding Officer, answered: "Just this, and then..." He did not finish
his sentence. A Communist then entered the living room and started to berate my
parents and lame John in a manner as only the devil could.
When this Red beast finished his speech, he commanded the other
guards to separate my father from the rest of the family. My mother, sisters,
and John pleaded with the Communists to release our father. But a stone, I
think, would have shown more mercy than a Communist! They forced my father
to leave the living room. One more glimpse at his beloved wife, one last look
at his children, whom he loved so much, and he went to his slaughter.
While he was on his "death march" to the basement, my father
prayed loudly. My sisters heard him say: "Jesus, I have lived for Thee, Jesus,
I die for Thee. Jesus, alive or dead I am Thine..."
Perhaps father did not finish his prayer when, upon reaching the
basement, a Communist knocked him on the head with the butt end of a rifle. My
father, 63 years old, a fine Catholic layman, collapsed, dead, on the concrete
floor.
Death Of John My Paralyzed Brother
John was the second one born to our family of 11 children. When
still a little child, he caught a severe cold. After a prolonged and costly
illness, he became paralyzed for life. In spite of, and perhaps because of this
physical defect, John was an extremely gifted young man.
During this night of horror, John was thinking ... Father is
gone ... he must be dead by now. Who was going to be the next victim? And,
should he also be numbered among those to be murdered, how would the Communists
be able to explain this crime to the people? After all, what damage could a
crippled, paralyzed man do to the Communists?
John was soon to find out the Communist logic. The same two
henchmen who took father away, returned to the living room. They picked up the
bed with lame John and carried him down to the basement. Up in my hiding place,
I heard a rattling of dishes and tins coming from the cellar. I could not
understand what this meant. I hadn't the slightest idea that with this rattling
the Communist executioners deadened the shot from a pistol which fired a bullet
into John's forehead.
After making certain that John and his father were no longer
among the living, the Communists rushed back to the living room. Their bloody
job was not yet finished. There was one more person on their death roll call
tonight... Who? My mother.
Days Of Tears And Mourning
The two hands of the big clock hanging on the wall in the living
room were slowly approaching the midnight point. The whole atmosphere in the
room was wrapped in a dead silence. Even the Communist guard's face seemed to
be disturbed. No one was talking. My mother and my three little sisters,
clinging to her body, were waiting for the grand finale of this bloody drama.
Before the clock hammered the last strike, the two Communist murderers returned
from the basement. They had to use force in order to separate my sisters from
the embrace of their mother.
On the threshold, mother slipped her Rosary beads into my
sister's hand. By this, I am sure, my mother wanted to say: "Take these rosary
beads from me. The rosary will help you as it helped me on my way to Calvary
... May the Blessed Mother, Mary, be watching over you as I used to while with
you ..."
And mother, the dearest a child could have in this world, went
heroine-like to her martyr death. While my mother was led to her death in the
basement, my three sisters were taken away from the living room and locked up
in one of the storerooms. It remains a mystery why the Communists spared their
lives. The original plan, I found out later, was to liquidate the whole family
that night.
Shortly after the rattling of the tins, I heard my mother's
shrill weeping. Then everything became dead silent except for the three strong
blows which sounded as if someone were beating a door with a hard club. I got
the impression that the Communist bandits had left the house and taken the rest
of my family with them.
At last, the long hours of the terrible night were finally over.
Through the little windows in the attic, I saw some of our neighbors walking
around the house. Since I did not see any Communist guard, I ventured to step
down from the place of my agony. In the door of the storeroom outside the
house, I spotted the key in the keyhole. I quickly turned the key, opened the
door and, after the frightful night, a faint gleam of hope and happiness shone
in my eyes: I saw my three little sisters - alive! They could not understand
how I stood before them alive...
But where were John, and father, and mother...? Suddenly a
neighbor came running from the house and said that there was a frightful scene
in the basement. We hurried into the cellar. A most horrifying sight met our
eyes! Father, mother, John ... all dead! There was blood, a lot of blood, on
the basement floor. Father was lying behind the door, his body stretched out.
There were two large wounds on his head. His skull was split in two above the
right ear. The cheekbone on the right side was wide open.
John's bed, in which he was resting, was placed beside father.
His eyes were open and his mouth as well. His face looked as if he were
smiling. Coagulated blood was on his forehead, nose and ears.
The body of my mother was lying on the cement floor about a pace
away. She was in a prostrate position, her face much swollen. The crown of her
skull was broken. From the posture, it could be seen that mother must have been
battling with death for a long time and that she had died only after much
suffering. Kneeling at my mother's body, I then understood the crying which I
had heard up in the attic. When she entered the basement, she saw a most
terrifying picture: husband killed, her paralyzed child perhaps breathing his
last, and the same fate awaiting her...
At least one of her life-wishes was fulfilled in this night of
horror. My mother always feared for her crippled son, John. What would happen
to him when she died? Who would take care of him? Often, I remember having
heard my mother say: "If John could die at least one minute before I go, my
heart would be at peace."
What a mysterious answer to her prayer! Her dream came true on
the very night of horror. And I am sure that this made her death agony a little
bit easier ...
Two of our neighbors were courageous enough to help my sisters
and me with the washing of the corpses, dressing them, and placing them in the
coffins.
On the following day, August 28, 1942, at about 10:00 in the
morning, three coffins were slowly moving up to St. Mark's Cemetery. After the
Requiem Mass, two men and I had to carry the coffins from the Church and lower
them into the graves. The people were afraid to show sympathy. They read the
sign which the Communist murderers posted on the front of our house: "Thus
shall happen to everyone who is against us! Death to the traitors! Long live
the Communist Party!"
Of course, the Communists did not forget to engrave the sign
of death on the wall of our house - sickle and hammer.
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