
Did you ever wonder where your faith comes from? The question really never
meant much to me until one evening, I was trying to organize my thoughts
about my mother. She had just passed away and I was to give a “tribute” at
her grave side services. Quickly, I found that my thoughts were not centered
on some heavy religious doctrine, taught to me from youth. Instead, I found
myself reminiscing about the great family stories.
Both my grandmother and grandfather came to the United States from
Lithuania. My grandmother came here
because she heard the United States was a wonderful place and my grandfather,
he came to avoid the draft during the Prussian War. I only met my
grandfather once for about five minutes in a hospital; he was ill and
dying of cancer. My grandfather chose to abandon his wife and two
daughters, taking his son and moving to another city. In a desperate
attempt to survive, my grandmother sent her two daughters back to
Lithuania to grow up on a relative’s farm near
Kaunas. Many years later, as young adults, my
mother and her sister would return to the U.S. to continue their lives.
My
life was spent listening to the many stories about Lithuania, life on the
farm and the tragic stories of the country’s take over by the Communists.
Those stories included my mother's long walks down the country roads into town and how
she and her sister would stop at each of the many crosses along
the way to pray. In each of those stories, whether about farm life or the
distant relatives I would never know, there was always a sense of pride.
With my father's parents both coming from Lithuania too, it was easy for
me to grow up with my own sense of ancestral interest.
There was one very defining story, however, that seemed to open the window
to my soul. In Lithuania, there is a place called “The
Hill of Crosses” located 12 kilometers north of the small industrial city of Siauliai. Standing upon a small hill are many hundreds of
thousands of crosses that represent Christian devotion and a memorial to
Lithuanian national identity.
The city of Siauliai was founded in 1236 and occupied by Teutonic Knights
during the 14th century. The tradition of placing crosses dates from this
period and probably first arose as a symbol of Lithuanian defiance of
foreign invaders. Since the medieval period, the Hill of Crosses has
represented the peaceful resistance of the Lithuanian faith to oppression.
In 1795 Siauliai was incorporated into Russia but was returned to Lithuania
in 1918. Many crosses were erected upon the hill after the peasant uprising
of 1831-63. By 1895, there were at least 150 large crosses, in 1914 200, and
by 1940 there were 400 large crosses surrounded by thousands of smaller
ones. While Kaunas was not close to Sialuliai, it was easy to see how
my mother would have been influenced by these symbols of faith that were
so prevalent throughout Lithuanian society.
Captured by Germany in World War II, the city suffered heavy damage when
Soviet
Russia retook it at the war's end. From 1944 until Lithuania's independence
in 1991, Siauliai was a part of the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic of
the USSR. During the Soviet era, the pilgrimage to the Hill of Crosses
served as a vital expression of Lithuanian nationalism. The Soviets
repeatedly removed Christian crosses placed on the hill by Lithuanians.
Three times, during 1961, 1973 and 1975, the hill was leveled, the crosses
were burned or turned into scrap metal, and the area was covered with waste
and sewage. Following each of these desecrations local inhabitants and
pilgrims from all over Lithuania rapidly replaced crosses upon the sacred
hill. In 1985, the Hill of Crosses was finally left in peace. The reputation
of the sacred hill has since spread all over the world and every year it is
visited by many thousands of pilgrims. Pope John Paul II visited the Hill of
Crosses in September of 1993.
The size and variety of crosses is as amazing as their number. Beautifully
carved out of wood or sculpted from metal, the crosses range from three
meters tall to the countless tiny examples hanging profusely upon the larger
crosses. An hour spent upon the sacred hill will reveal crosses brought by
Christian pilgrims from all around the world. Rosaries, pictures of Jesus
and the saints, and photographs of Lithuanian patriots also decorate the
larger crosses. On windy days breezes blowing through the forest of crosses
and hanging rosaries is said to produce a uniquely beautiful music.
This rich history was part of my nationality, passed on by the subtle
stories by my mother and grandparents. A Lithuania-style cross could
always be found on the wall in any of my relatives homes.
As I began to think deeply about my mother’s influence, I came to recognize
that in her life, she had learned the gift of simplicity. She had every
worldly reason to reject God’s love. Abandoned as a child and sent away
across the sea, my mother’s youth was to live almost as an indentured farm
hand in Lithuania. Upon returning to the United States, she labored as a
servant for a wealthy family. During my birth, she suffered serious medical
problems and soon was forced to share her husband with the US Army. I cannot
imagine watching my father leave only four weeks after I was born, not to
see him again for three years.
My
mother never drove an automobile. She had no career. My mother left no
worldly legacy. Her focus was always on just serving her family. Her faith
was as Jesus says in Matthew 18:3, “faith like a child’s.” In its simplicity
was its perfection. My mother trusted in Jesus because it was a worthy
truth. In her years of life, I never heard her utter a distrusting word
about God. She could not quote you Scripture but she did not have to. She
just believed because it was true. In today’s world, that is a rare claim,
to have asked nothing of God accept to serve Him. Even in her later years
that were filled with pain, never a distrusting word.
As I laid to rest, the ashes of my mother next to those of my father, all of
their dreams, all they had accumulated in life, all of their goals, and all
of the accomplishments were now to be measured in how well her family
understood her simple faith, the faith of a child. I do not know how my
mother passed her faith on to me, but she did and I will eternally thank
her. They call my parent’s generation the “Greatest Generation.” And now I
know why. In spite of hardship, war, and constant sacrifice, they still knew
and loved God. With all the abundance of my own generation and the
generation of my children, our greatest prayer must be to simply say one
day, “we knew God and and we love Him.” My challenge now is to
recognize the "crosses by the roadside," stopping in reverence and prayer.
God is everywhere but unless we stop, we miss the simplicity of His gift of
salvation.
