Emil Joseph Kapaun was a farm boy from Pilsen, Kansas, born in 1916 to a devout Czech Catholic family that eked out an existence during the Depression. Young Emil felt called to the priesthood and ended up a Chaplain to the U.S. Army during World War II, where he served admirably in the Burma Theater.
He re-enlisted and attained the rank of Captain when the Korean War broke out in 1950. And this is where his jaw-dropping heroism emerged. Father Kapaun, in the words of the soldiers he loved and served, was “all priest and all man.”
He twice declined the chance to escape the Communist Chinese, preferring to stay with “his boys,” many of whom were badly wounded or otherwise abused. Kapaun was sent to a Communist prison camp north of the Yalu River, where he, among other incredible things, gave the traumatized POWs reason after reason to stay alive and to hope for liberation—a liberation that never arrived for him.
Father died of his many illnesses and deprivations from forced starvation. His mortal remains were discovered in December 2020, in a military cemetery in Hawaii, which will hopefully move his Cause for Canonization forward.
In this episode, you will learn
- The basic life story of Servant of God Father Kapaun
- The account by Lt. Mike Dowe, a fellow prisoner with Father in the camp, that appeared in The Saturday Evening Post in 1954
- Near unbelievable acts of heroic kindness toward prisoners of all religious faith or none
- Why he is a stellar example of specifically priestly service
- The list of US-born male saint candidates (there are none at present)
- The strangely low pace of Kapaun’s Cause compared to modern beati like Bl. Carlo Acuti, the Italian teen who died only in 2006
- Why Father Kapaun is a proven powerful intercessor
Resources mentioned in this episode
- The Miracle of Father Kapaun by Roy Wenzl and Travis Heying
- Handwritten homily notes by Father Kapaun
- The actual recording of a homily by Father Kapaun April 21, 1950.
The Patrick Coffin Show podcast features weekly interviews with A-list influencers and outliers in the effort to recover the Judeo-Christian roots of the culture. Patrick is the Canadian-born former host of Catholic Answers Live, and he has raving fans around the world. He injects these fascinating interviews with his own distinctive blend of depth and levity. If you’re tired of politically correct mediaspeak, you want to see God back in the public square, and you’re not allergic to having a laugh, this is the place to be
To listen to Patrick’s video, click on Patrick Coffin Media at the bottom.
#225: The Bravest Priest You’ve Never Heard Of—Fr. Emil Kapaun
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Since few are unafraid to speak ,I will. Agree is known by its fruits. The current President should repent or be excommunicated. He is like the SS soldiers in Nazi Germany saying ” I don’t ‘t like killing the jews,Jewish, just load them on the trains. Someone else kills them.Jesus called the scribes & pharisees a brood of pit vipers. That is what we have in the seat of government. Our country is in deep spiritual trouble.
Sure was. I put him in terms of martyrology along the lines of Father Max Kolbe, Stein etc.
Why has the article “Our Catholic President is working for the common good” been taken down from this website? Is this cancel culture at work?
The article on Biden triggered misunderstanding, hurt, and anger. The main thesis of the piece was that the present Catholic President is unfairly condemned for attempting a delicate balancing act between being faithful to the Church’s teachings on abortion and the dilemma of governing a diverse society but it was not based on all the facts. The issues facing the president aren’t just about whether to allow safe and rare abortions but about promoting scientific experimentation and exploitation of unborn human beings. The push to expand these experiments cannot be called the “common good” by anyone with moral convictions, not just Catholics