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Ancestor
of Priest Helps to Liberate
Concentration
Camp in World War II
VOCATIONS
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THE
WARNING OF THE NAZI CONCENTRATION CAMPS IS CLEAR:
Christians around the world must
uphold the faith and oppose all that is against the freedom of mankind.
- Abp. Johnson
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JOHN
Loyd, the grandfather of one of the priests of the Archdiocese of
the Southwest, served in the Army of the United States in World War
II. He served in the European theatre. One of his greatest and most
significant acts of service, though, benefited humanity as a whole.
He was involved in the liberation of a Nazi Concentration Camp.
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Brief
History of the Camps
The Dachau camp
was the first regular camp of its type established by the Nazis, and
it housed not only Jews, but political prisoners opposed to Hitler's
government (sources generally state that two-thirds were political
prisoners, and one-third were Jews). Its format provided the
blueprint for later camps. Auschwitz and other notorious camps were
part of the regime's actions against decent human behavior. |
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Some
Dachau Statistics as an Example
According to That
Was Dachau 1933 - 1945,
by Stanislav Zámecník, more than 25,000 prisoners were
believed to have died in the camp. A particularly important point to
note for Christians is that the camp had a special "Priest
Block" for the clergy. At least three thousand priests were held
there, and more than a third did not survive. The camp stands as a
bleak symbol of religious persecution. |
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John Loyd,
discharged in 1945, was part of the liberating force of humanity in
the 20th century. The men who freed the death camps did a service to
the people of the world and to freedom. John Loyd's great grandson
inherited this legacy. The defense of freedom of all mankind is a key
mission of the Archdiocese. All the Christian faithful are called to
this mission. |
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