Monday, April 13, 2026

Love could still survive fragile, defiant, and deeply human

When Lale Sokolov arrived at Auschwitz concentration camp in 1942, everything that made him who he was was taken away. The SS guards stripped him of his clothes, his belongings, and even his identity. His hair was shaved, he was given a prison uniform, and a number 32407 was tattooed onto his left forearm.
Inside the camp, names were treated as if they no longer mattered. To the Nazis, prisoners were not people; they were numbers, meant to be processed, controlled, and erased. Lale became prisoner 32407.
Because he spoke several languages German, Russian, French, and Slovak he was assigned a role that would both protect him and burden him for the rest of his life: he became the camp’s tattooist.
Each day, he sat with needle and ink as endless lines of prisoners were brought before him. Men, women, and children stood waiting while he marked numbers onto their skin permanent symbols of a system built to strip away identity. The work filled him with guilt, but it also gave him slightly better chances of survival: extra food, warmer clothing, and limited movement between camp sections.
Lale decided that if he had any small advantage, he would use it to help others. He traded valuables taken from the dead for food and medicine, smuggled bread to prisoners, and quietly passed warnings whenever he could.
Then one day in July 1942, a young woman stood before him.
Her name was Gita Furman, a 21 year old from Slovakia with striking dark eyes and a quiet strength that caught his attention instantly. As he prepared to tattoo her number 34902 their eyes met, and something changed in him.
After he finished, he leaned closer and asked her name, risking punishment for even that small act.
“Gita,” she whispered.
“I’m Lale,” he told her. “And one day, I’m going to marry you.”
It sounded impossible in a place built for death, and she thought he must be mad but she remembered him.
From that moment on, survival meant more than simply staying alive. Lale had someone to fight for.
Using the little freedom his position allowed, he searched for ways to protect her. He learned guard routines, brought her food whenever he could, and arranged medicine when she became sick. Every act carried enormous danger. Discovery could have meant immediate execution.
For nearly three years, Lale continued tattooing numbers while witnessing horrors no one should ever see. Trains arrived packed with families. Many were dead within hours. Children were numbered. Smoke rose constantly from the crematoria.
Yet through everything, he held onto one thought: Gita.
Her number, 34902, became his reason not to give up.
In January 1945, as Soviet forces approached, the Nazis evacuated the camp. Chaos followed. Prisoners were separated, forced into marches, and sent to different camps. Lale and Gita were torn apart.
He escaped, but he had no idea whether she was alive.
After the war, he returned to Bratislava and went to the train station every day, hoping for a sign of her. Days turned into weeks, and weeks into months.
Then one afternoon in October 1945, he saw a horse-drawn cart approaching.
Gita was on it.
She had survived.
They ran to each other and held on, overwhelmed by everything they had endured and everything they had nearly lost.
That same year, they married.
Later, in 1949, they moved to Melbourne, where they built a new life far from Europe’s ruins. Lale became a textile merchant, and together they raised their son, Gary.
For decades, they rarely spoke publicly about Auschwitz. The memories remained painful, and Lale carried deep guilt over the role he had been forced to play, even though he had used that position to save lives including Gita’s.
After Gita died in 2003, following 58 years of marriage, Lale finally began telling their story. In his late eighties, he shared it with Heather Morris.
That story became The Tattooist of Auschwitz, published in 2018.
Lale had tattooed 34902 onto Gita’s arm in 1942.
He married her in 1945.
They spent 58 years together.
And when he finally told the world about her, he wanted one thing remembered:
Her number was 34902 but her name was Gita.
Their story remains one of the clearest reminders that even in humanity’s darkest chapter, love could still survive fragile, defiant, and deeply human.

Faith and Reason

April 13, 2026
Monday of the Second Week of Easter
Readings for Today
Saint Martin I, Pope and Martyr—Optional Memorial

Visit of Nicodemus to Christ by John La Farge

Video

“Do not be amazed that I told you, ‘You must be born from above.’ The wind blows where it wills, and you can hear the sound it makes, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes; so it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.” John 3:6–8

Today’s Gospel offers us an opportunity to ponder the relationship between faith and reason. Is it good to live our lives according to human reason? Certainly! The natural virtue of prudence is the ability to use our human reason to discern the right course of action in any given situation, choosing what is most reasonable to achieve good and avoid harm. Unfortunately, we often make choices based not on prudence but on unruly passions and disordered desires. Prudence helps us cut through the confusion so we can choose the most reasonable course of action.

Natural prudence, however, is not enough if we want to choose God’s will in all circumstances. God’s will is not contrary to reason and natural prudence; it is above what our natural minds alone can discern. This was the struggle Nicodemus had in today’s Gospel.

Nicodemus, a well-respected Pharisee, “came to Jesus at night” to converse with Him. Jesus warmly welcomed him and their conversation ensued. Some Church Fathers have interpreted the detail that it was at night as a symbol of Nicodemus’ faith: it had not yet been enlightened by divinely revealed truth. He was clearly open and curious, knowing there was something special about Jesus, which is evidenced by his initial greeting: “Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has come from God, for no one can do these signs that you are doing unless God is with him” (John 3:2). Nicodemus, familiar with Jesus’ miracles, understood that only God could empower one to do such things. This opened the door to his curiosity, which led him to seek Jesus out for a conversation.

What a beautiful starting point for faith! Like Nicodemus, when we encounter God’s almighty power in some way—such as during prayer, the holy virtues of another, or through our reading of the Scriptures—we will experience a certain tug on our hearts. We might not fully understand such an experience, but we must act on it. If we do not, we silence the gentle promptings of the Holy Spirit.

Nicodemus sought understanding, and Jesus’ response to him was exactly what he needed. Jesus did not address Nicodemus’ compliment; instead, He addressed Nicodemus as a person and said what he needed to hear: “Amen, amen, I say to you, unless one is born from above, he cannot see the Kingdom of God” (John 3:3).

Nicodemus responded in a way we are all tempted to do when we face a divine mystery—he tried to figure it out through the use of his natural reason alone: “How can a person once grown old be born again? Surely he cannot reenter his mother’s womb and be born again, can he?” (John 3:4). This is a common tendency. We want to figure things out so they make sense. However, the only way to make sense of life is to allow our human reason to be informed and elevated by the grace of the Holy Spirit. For that reason, Jesus continued to insist on speaking mysteriously, to draw Nicodemus beyond natural prudential judgments into supernatural understanding.

Reflect today on the mysterious ways the Holy Spirit communicates to you. Like the wind, the Holy Spirit moves through our lives, unseen yet transformative, refreshing our souls with His gentle guidance. We cannot direct His movements, but we can recognize His presence in the stirrings of grace and the fruits of goodness in our lives. When we allow ourselves to be carried by the Spirit, we find ourselves led in directions we might never have chosen on our own but that always lead us closer to God’s will and His Kingdom.

Lord of true Wisdom, Your thoughts are far above our thoughts and Your ways are far above our ways. Please bestow upon me, and upon all Your children, Your Holy Spirit so that we can always discern and choose Your holy will. I pray that Your grace will enlighten my natural reason so that I may know and love You with all my heart. Jesus, I trust in You.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Archaeologists May Have Finally Found Cleopatra's Tomb

Archaeologists May Have Finally Found Cleopatra's Tomb. The World Is Holding Its Breath.

For over two thousand years, it has been history's most elusive mystery. Where is Cleopatra buried? The last pharaoh of Egypt, the queen who seduced Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, the woman whose death marked the end of ancient Egyptian civilization, vanished into legend without a trace. Her tomb, believed to contain unimaginable treasures and the secrets of a dynasty, has never been found. Countless expeditions have searched. All have failed. Until now. Deep beneath the sands of Egypt, archaeologists believe they are on the brink of the greatest discovery in the history of archaeology. They may have finally found the final resting place of the legendary queen.

The search has consumed the careers of researchers for generations. Ancient texts describe Cleopatra's burial alongside Mark Antony, her Roman lover who died by his own sword after their defeat at the Battle of Actium. The writers of antiquity claimed the tomb was magnificent, filled with treasures worthy of the last ruler of an empire that had endured for three thousand years. But the location was never recorded with precision. Wars, earthquakes, rising seas, and the shifting sands of the desert conspired to hide whatever remained. The tomb became a ghost, a legend that many believed would never be found.

But one archaeologist refused to give up.

For over two decades, Dr. Kathleen Martinez has led excavations at Taposiris Magna, an ancient temple complex west of Alexandria. Her theory, dismissed by many colleagues when she first proposed it, was that Cleopatra would have been buried not in Alexandria itself but in a sacred site associated with the goddess Isis, with whom the queen closely identified. Year after year, Martinez and her team have excavated tunnels, chambers, and shafts beneath the temple, each discovery bringing them closer to what they believe lies waiting in the darkness below.

Recent breakthroughs have electrified the archaeological community. A tunnel carved through solid rock, stretching over a mile beneath the temple complex, was discovered filled with water from centuries of Mediterranean flooding. When divers explored its depths, they found coins bearing Cleopatra's image, statues of the queen in ceremonial poses, and architectural features consistent with royal Egyptian tombs. The tunnel appears to lead toward a chamber that ground-penetrating radar suggests may be the prize everyone has been seeking.

The potential contents of the tomb are almost beyond imagination. Cleopatra was the last of the Ptolemaic dynasty, Greek rulers who had governed Egypt for nearly three centuries following the conquest by Alexander the Great. She commanded wealth that made the treasures of Tutankhamun look modest by comparison. Gold, jewels, sacred texts, ceremonial objects, artifacts representing the fusion of Greek and Egyptian culture that defined her reign. And her mummified remains, preserved according to traditions that her family had adopted from their Egyptian subjects, potentially intact after two millennia.

But the discovery would mean far more than treasure. Cleopatra remains one of history's most misunderstood figures, her story filtered through the propaganda of her Roman enemies who portrayed her as a seductress and schemer rather than the shrewd political leader she actually was. She spoke nine languages, personally commanded naval fleets, and navigated the treacherous politics of the Roman civil wars with remarkable skill. Finding her tomb could reveal the truth behind the legend, providing direct evidence of how she lived, how she ruled, and how she chose to be remembered for eternity.

The excavation continues with painstaking care. Water must be pumped from flooded passages. Unstable rock must be reinforced. Every inch must be documented before the team advances. The researchers know they may be steps away from the most significant archaeological find since Tutankhamun's tomb was opened in 1922. They also know that haste could destroy the very secrets they seek to uncover.

The world watches and waits. Social media buzzes with anticipation. Documentary crews have positioned themselves near the site, ready to capture the moment that history is made. If the chamber beyond the flooded tunnel contains what researchers believe it contains, everything we know about ancient Egypt's final chapter will be transformed.

Cleopatra has hidden from history for over two thousand years. Her secrets may finally be within reach. Prepare for history to be made.