Joseph Werth
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Monsignor Joseph Werth, SJ, DD is Bishop of Siberia and the Russian Far East. His see encompasses 4.2 million square miles (10.3 per cent of all the land on earth) and extends through nine of the world's twenty four time zones.
Named as the Latin-rite Apostolic Administrator of Siberia by Pope John Paul II on April 13, 1991, Werth initially had only two Ukrainian-born priests to help him minister to an estimated 1,500,000 Catholics. He has since assembled over 100 priests, nuns and lay missionaries from 18 different countries, mostly from Poland, Germany, and Slovakia, but also Nicaragua, Lebanon, India, Argentina, South Korea, and other countries. At least fourteen (14) are from the United States.
The center of his apostolic administration is at Novosibirsk, the capital of Siberia - where he is currently building a cathedral and chancery. He has sent church workers to the largest cities of Siberia and the Far East, as well as a few small towns with sizeable Catholic populations.
Joseph Werth began studies for the priesthood clandestinely in Lithuania under the direction of a leader of the underground Jesuits, who also secretly accepted him into the Lithuanian Province of the Society of Jesus. Later he completed his studies at the seminary in Kaunas. In 1984 Father Werth became the first Roman Catholic priest ordained since the 1930s in the Asian part of the former Soviet Union.
Formerly he pursued pastoral work at Aktyubinsk, Kazakstan from 1984 till 1988, and at Marx in Russia's Saratov oblast from 1988 until 1991. He was reportedly so successful in his ministry at Aktyubinsk that the local communist officials expelled him from the city in 1988.[citation needed]
He then moved to Marx along the Volga, where two of his own sisters (both Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament) had organized about thirty (30) Catholic congregations among the thousands of ethnic Germans who, following the death of Stalin, had returned to the area of the former Volga German Republic
[edit] Family
The Bishop's paternal grandfather was Joseph Werth, who was born in 1871 at Schoenchen, Tsarist Russia and deported as a kulak to Kazakhstan in 1929 (with his wife and children). He died in 1951. The Bishop's paternal grandmother was Paulina Demund (b. 1881, Schoenchen - d. 1933). The Bishop's maternal grandfather was Dominic Hoerner (born near Odessa, Ukraine), who was deported around 1931 to Kazakstan with his family. Joseph and Paulina Werth (and their son Johannes) were part of a trainload of 30000 ethnic Germans gathered up during the collectivization and dumped in the middle of the Kazakhstan steppe in the middle of winter of 1929.
Those who survived did so by digging holes in the earth. By the time the next load arrived, 12,000 had died. This area is now the city of Karaganda, where on October 4, 1952, Msgr. Werth was born. He was the second of eleven (11) children born to Johannes Werth (born October 1, 1923 in Schoenchen, Tsarist Russia - died November 18, 1995 in Ilbenstadt, near Frankfurt, Germany) and Maria Hoerner Werth (born December 23, 1931, near Odessa, Ukraine).
[edit] Polyglot
Bishop Werth is fluent in Russian, German, Lithuanian, Latin and speaks some Italian; however he reportedly does not speak or write in English.[citation needed]