Bronisław Markiewicz was born in Poland in 1842 as the sixth of eleven children to John Markiewicz and Marianna Grysziecka. While in school at the age of eighteen he suffered an absence of faith due to the aggressive anti-religious atmosphere of his school. Of that he wrote: "I wanted to adapt to my teachers' views" and also wrote "Along with faith in God, I lost the peace in my soul and my sense of interior harmony. I was overcome by sadness". Markiewicz began his studies for the priesthood in 1863 in Przemyśl and was ordained as a priest on 15 September 1867. After his ordination he was appointed as a parish priest at Harta and at the Cathedral of Przemyśl and remained there from 1867 until 1873. He later studied at the Jagiellonian University from 1873 to 1875. In addition, he served as a parish priest at Gac from 1875 until his next appointment in Blazowa in 1877. He taught theological studies at Przemyśl in 1882. Markiewicz decided that he wanted to join the Salesians of Don Bosco - with John Bosco as its head and founder - and so embarked for Turin in November 1885 where he commenced his period of formation with the Salesians. He made his final vows into the order on 25 March 1887 into the hands of Bosco himself. He was also a spiritual student of Bosco. He also contracted aggressive tuberculosis in 1889 and almost died from it. The disease left him in 1890 at which point he could return to Poland on 23 March 1892 as a parish priest at Miejsce Piastowe. He left Turin with the permission of his Salesian superiors He began a trade school in Poland for the poor and for orphaned males. He also founded a group known as Moderation and Work in 1898 to support these people and base their education on Salesian principles. The corresponding magazine first started to publish - with the same name as the group - on 16 July 1898. He therefore established his congregation - the Congregation of Saint Michael the Archangel - in 1897. Markiewicz also opened an orphanage in Pawlikowice that soon had over 400 people enter as residents. His work received the approval and the blessing of the Bishop of PrzemyślJózef Sebastian Pelczar who encouraged Markiewicz's work. Markiewicz died from complications from his tuberculosis in 1912. On 29 September 1921 the Archbishop of Krakow - and future cardinal - Adam Stefan Sapieha approved the order as being one of diocesan right. The order later received the full papal approval of Pope Paul VI on 15 June 1966. His congregation now operates in nations such as Papua New Guinea and Belarus. The male branch and female branches of his Moderation and Work received approbation on 29 September 1921 for the males and on 15 August 1928 for the females.
Beatification
The diocesan process for the beatification of Markiewicz opened in 1958 and closed in 1961 - the opening of the cause in 1958 granted him the posthumous title of Servant of God. Its sole aim was to compile documentation on his life and on his deeds in life as well as whatever witness testimonies were available to them. The Congregation for the Causes of Saints signed a decree recognizing the process completed its work in 1990 and assumed control of the cause in order for them to investigate the merits of it. The postulation compiled the Positio in 1990 and submitted it to the C.C.S. for further investigation. The consulting theologians met to discuss the merits of the cause and voted in the affirmative for it on 30 November 1993. The C.C.S. also approved it on 12 April 1994 and would present it to the pope for his approval. It was presented to Pope John Paul II on 2 July 1994 who conferred upon Markiewicz the title of Venerable upon acknowledging his life of heroic virtue. John Paul II approved a single miracle credited to his intercession on 20 December 2004 in a move that would allow for the beatification to take place. The beatification was celebrated on 19 June 2005 in Warsaw with Cardinal Józef Glemp presiding on the behalf of Pope Benedict XVI.