Within just fifteen years, Father Schwartz had changed the course of Korean history, founding and reforming orphanages, hospitals, hospices, clinics, schools, and the Sisters of Mary, a Korean religious order dedicated to the sickest of the sick and the poorest of the poor. All the while, he himselfx26mdash;like the Sistersx26mdash;lived the same hard poverty as the people he served and loved.
Biographer Kevin Wells tells the story of a different kind of American hero, an ordinary priest who stared down corruption, slander, persecution, and death for the sake of Godx27s poor. x26#34;What Father Al managed to do is beyond the palex26#34;, said his longtime collaborator Monsignor James Golasinski. x26#34;He was the boldest man I ever knew. He feared nothing.x26#34;
Known for his joy and his humor, even in the teeth of Lou Gehrigx26rsquo;s disease, Schwartz was declared a Servant of God by Pope Francis in 2015. By the time of his death in 1992, his work with the Sisters of Mary had spread to the Philippines and Mexico; and since then, the Sisters have founded Boystowns and Girlstowns across Central and South America, as well as in Tanzania. Father Schwartz died calling out to his beloved Mary, the Virgin of the Poor, saying, x26#34;All praise, honor, and glory for anything good accomplished in my life goes to her and to her alone.x26#34;
Includes 16 pages of photos.