Our Lady Of Czestochowa
The Icon
Our Lady Of Czestochowa
Michael P. Duricy
The image of Our Lady in Czestochowa, Poland is among that small
group of Black Madonnas recognized throughout the entire world, largely due to the recent
manifestations of public piety shown by the reigning Polish Pope, John Paul II.
The image is sometimes called Our Lady of Jasna Gora after the name of the monastery
site in which it has been kept for six centuries. Joan Carroll Cruz relates the
following 'miracle story' regarding the selection of this site:
St. Ladislaus determined to save the image from the repeated invasions
of the Tartars by taking it to the more secure city of Opala, his birthplace. This
journey took him through Czestochowa, where he decided to rest for the night. During
this brief pause in their journey, the image was taken to Jasna Gora
[meaning "Bright Hill"]. There it was placed in a small wooden church named for the
Assumption. The following morning, after the portrait was carefully replaced in its
wagon, the horses refused to move. Accepting this as a heavenly sign that the portrait
was to remain in Czestochowa, St. Ladislaus had the image solemnly returned to the
Church of the Assumption.
Another 'miraculous' aspect of this image is that its antiquity is so
great that its origins are unknown, as if "dropped from the heavens." Legend attributes
its creation to St. Luke, the evangelist, who "painted a portrait of the Virgin on the
cedar wood table at which she had taken her meals." St. Helena, the Queen-Mother of
Emperor Constantine is said to have located the portrait during her visit to the Holy
Land and to have brought it to Constantinople in the fourth century. After remaining
there for five centuries, it allegedly was transferred in royal dowries until it made
its way to Poland, and the possession of St. Ladislaus in the fifteenth century.
The legend continues: During Ladislaus' time, the image was damaged
during a siege, by a Tartar arrow, "inflicting a scar on the throat of the Blessed
Virgin." In 1430, Hussites stole and vandalized the precious image, breaking it into
three pieces. Adding insult to injury:
One of the robbers drew his sword, struck the image and inflicted two
deep gashes. While preparing to inflict a third gash, he fell to the ground and writhed
in agony until his death ... The two slashes on the cheek of the Blessed Virgin, together
with the previous injury to the throat, have always reappeared - despite repeated attempts
to repair them.
However, modern scholarship has its own views on this legend. Leonard
Moss claims: "the figure is distinctly thirteenth-fourteenth century Byzantine in form."
In general, its Byzantine style is obvious, a variant on Hodegetria. Janusz Pasierb
states of the image that "in 1434 it was painted virtually anew" due to the extensive
damage caused by vandalism. He adds that "the authors of the new version were faithful
to the original as regards its contents." This might explain the persistence of the damage
marks mentioned earlier. Finally, note that Pasierb sees the prototype of Our Lady of
Czestochowa as "a Byzantine icon ... which from the fifth century on had been worshipped
in a church in Constantinople's ton hodegon quarter."
Miracles
The miracles worked by Our Lady of Czestochowa seem to occur mainly
on a public scale. During her stay in Constantinople, she is reported to have frightened
the besieging Saracens away from the city. Similarly, in 1655 a small group of Polish
defenders was able to drive off a much larger army of Swedish invaders from the
sanctuary. The following year, the Holy Virgin was acclaimed Queen of Poland by King
Casimir. It is also recorded that Our Lady dispersed an army of Russian invaders by an
apparition at the River Vistula on September 15, 1920. In more recent times, the
Czestochowa Madonna has also been acknowledged for her protection of and cooperation
with the Polish nation. Beyond these public prodigies:
The miracles attributed to Our Lady of Czestochowa are numerous and
spectacular. The original accounts of these cures and miracles are preserved in the
archives of the Pauline Fathers at Jasna Gora.
The image is not so well-known only on account of its history of
miracles. Its international reputation has been considerably enhanced because of the
personal devotion of the current Roman Pontiff:
In modern times, Pope John Paul II, a native son of Poland, prayed
before the Madonna during his historic visit in 1979, several months after his election to
the Chair of Peter. The Pope made another visit to Our Lady of Czestochowa in 1983 and
again in 1991.
Why is She Black?
A final question remains: why is Our Lady of Czestochowa black? Cruz
mentions a possible link to the Canticle of Canticles: "I am black but beautiful"; but
concludes that "The darkness is ascribed to various conditions [e.g. accumulated residue
from candles], of which its age is primary." Broschart, by contrast, opines:
the shrine was destroyed by fire, but the picture was not burned -
however, the flames and smoke had darkened it and from that day it has been known as the
"Black Madonna."
Recall that Moss saw the image as Byzantine in form, dating from the
Medieval period. He added: "the skin pigmentation is characteristic of this stylized
portraiture."
Interestingly, Ernst Scheyer, an art historian who studied the image,
believed that "the present image was restored in the nineteenth century and painted
somewhat darker than previously."
Adding to all this confusion, a notable Swiss copy, completed by
Kosmoski in 1956 and kept in the Hospice of the Great St. Bernard Pass, is much darker
than the version in Jasna Gora, while a copy at a shrine in Doylestown, Pennsylvania is
depicted in lighter flesh tones. All of which makes the question of authorial intent
extremely complicated. Perhaps all that may be said of Our Lady of Czestochowa is that
she may be called black, but she is certainly beautiful. Her miraculous reputation,
though, is beyond dispute.
For further information on Our Lady of Czestochowa, refer to In Quest
of the Black Virgin ... by Leonard W. Moss pp. 53-74 in Mother Worship:Themes and
Variations (1982) by James Preston (ed.); Miraculous Images of Our Lady (1993) by Joan
Carroll Cruz; Call Her Blessed (1961) by Charles B. Broschart; and The Shrine of
the Black Madonna of Czestochowa (1989) by Janusz Pasierb.
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