He was ordained titular bishop of Cillium in secret by Bishop Michel d'Herbigny, S.J., on 10 May 1926 in Moscow. Bishop Aleksander Frison was also ordained during the same secret ceremony. On 13 August 1926 Bishop Sloskāns was appointed apostolic administrator of the Archdiocese of Mohilev as well as apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Minsk. On the same day he assisted Bishop d'Herbigny in the ordination of Anton Malecki as titular bishop of Dionysiana and apostolic administrator for Leningrad.
On 17 September 1927 Bishop Sloskāns was arrested in Minsk by the Soviet secret police, or OGPU. He was then sentenced to three years in Solovki prison camp, which has often been called "The First Camp of the GULAG", based on false evidence. He was released in October 1930 after completing his sentence. On 8 November 1930 he was arrested again just one week after arriving back in Mohilev. He served an additional two years in prison until he was repatriated to Latvia on 22 January 1933 in exchange for an accused Soviet spy in the custody of the Latvian government.
Life in exile
After leaving the Soviet Union, Bishop Sloskāns traveled to Rome. The Holy See had publicly acknowledged the episcopal ordinations of Bishops Sloskāns and Malecki only in 1929 when both were in Soviet prisons.[2]Pope Pius XI appointed Bishop Sloskāns an assistant to the Papal Throne on 5 April 1933 in recognition of the harsh treatment he had experienced while imprisoned.[3]
Returning to Latvia, Bishop Sloskāns continued to serve as the apostolic administrator of Mohilev and of Minsk in absentia while he took charge of the Roman Catholic seminary in Riga. In late 1944 he was evacuated to Nazi Germany to escape the advancing Red Army. In 1946 he moved to Belgium where he established a Latvian seminary.
Coming from a Latvian-Belarusian border region and being a fluent speaker of Belarusian, Boļeslavs Sloskāns actively supported the Belarusian student community in Belgium as well as other Belarusian diaspora communities in the West. He provided financing for two exiled Belarusian Catholic magazines published in Rome (Źnič) and Paris (Božym Šlacham, Belarusian Cyrillic: Божым шляхам) and pledged for the appointment for a Belarusian Catholic bishop.[6]
Bishop Sloskāns is widely commemorated by the Roman and Greek Catholic churches in Belarus as one of the longest-standing Belarusian Catholic leaders of the 20th century, for his support to exiled Belarusian Catholics and for his promotion of the usage of the vernacularBelarusian language in opposition to the historical Polonization policy favored by the hierarchy of the Catholic Church in Belarus.[9][10][11]
In 2012, several days long commemorative events dedicated to Boļeslavs Sloskāns were held in Mahiliou with the participation of senior Catholic clergy from Belarus and Latvia.[12]
Further reading
(in French) Boleslas Sloskans and François Rouleau (1986). Witness for God among the Godless. Aide à l'église en détresse, Mareil-Marly. ISBN2-905287-07-1
^(in Belarusian) Слуга Божы біскуп Баляслаў Слосканс, маліся за нас! [Bishop Balaslau Sloskans, pray for us!] - kasciol.by, official website of the Roman Catholic Parish of the Bialynichy Holy Mother Of God in Horki