"Commemorating the Anti-Nazi Resistance and Victims of the Nazi Regime in Hall in Tirol"
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Franciscan- Father 
Gaudentius (Vigilius) Konzi/Conzi 
(1883 - 1973)




Franciscan Father Gaudentius Conzi/Konzi (Vigilius) OFM (1883 – 1973)

9/3/2025

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Picture
Photo Gaudentius (Vigilius) Konzi/Conzi. Held in: Archive of the Tyrolean Franciscan province in Hall in Tyrol.

Father Gaudentius Konzi (1883–1973): A Guardian Under Nazi Persecution

The history of the Franciscan Order in Tyrol in the 20th century is closely linked to the political persecution under National Socialism. One of the central figures in this dark chapter was Father Gaudentius Conzi/Konzi, a man whose life as a scholar, pastor, and courageous Guardian left a profound legacy of faith and resistance.

From Farmer's Son in Kurtatsch to Spiritual Teacher

Born on December 6, 1883, in Penon near Kurtatsch, Vigilius Konzi found his calling early. After attending high schools in Bozen and Hall, he joined the Franciscan Order in 1902 and received the religious name Gaudentius (“the joyful one”). His academic and spiritual career was impressive: after his ordination to the priesthood in 1908 in Trent, he worked for decades as a high school professor in Hall and Bozen. He was not only an educator but also took on important roles within the religious community, including leading the Hall college "Antonianum."

Father Gaudentius Under Nazi Persecution

In 1935, Father Gaudentius was appointed Guardian (Superior) of the Franciscan monastery in Hall – an office that would soon lead him into the order's greatest storm. With the Nazi rise to power, the systematic suppression of the Church began. As Guardian, Father Gaudentius was the first point of contact for these reprisals.
His path of suffering began in June 1940, three months before the final closure of the monastery, when he was arrested. The charge seemed absurd, but in the arbitrariness of the regime, it carried weight: he was accused of "aiding and abetting high treason" because he had given the escaped prisoner Ennemoser a gift of three Reichsmarks – an act of Christian charity that the regime interpreted as a crime.
His time in custody was long and arduous:
·       June 26 – August 6, 1940: Police prison in Innsbruck
·       August 6 – October 12, 1940: Regional Court in Innsbruck
·       October 12 – November 7, 1940: Again in the police prison in Innsbruck
Although there was no conviction, the message was clear: the inconvenient Guardian was to disappear. Under pressure, Father Gaudentius was forced to leave the country and expelled to Italy.

Exile and Later Work

He spent the following years in exile, partly in his home village of Penon and partly in Kaltern, where he continued to work as a lecturer and pastor. After the end of the war and the liberation of Tyrol, he returned to Bozen and resumed his work as a high school professor. Father Gaudentius Konzi died at a ripe old age on January 12, 1973, in Bozen.

A Legacy of Quiet Resistance

Father Gaudentius Konzi was not a political activist but a man of faith and education. His "crime" consisted of an act of mercy. His fate is exemplary of that of countless religious people who suffered under the Nazi regime because they did not abandon their convictions. As the Guardian who led his community through its greatest crisis and paid for it with imprisonment and exile, he is a key figure in the Tyrolean history of the Church and a model of civic courage and steadfastness.
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    Author
    Elisabeth Walder
    ​BA MA MA

    female historian-female ethnologist 

    Archives

       Archive of the Tyrolean Franciscan Province in Hall in Tyrol: This is the official archive of the Franciscan religious order for the Tyrol region, located in the town of Hall.
    ·       Chronicle of the Franciscan Province of Hall in Tyrol: This refers to the historical chronicle or record book maintained by the aforementioned Franciscan Province.
    ·      

     Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (DÖW): A renowned institute in Vienna dedicated to researching and documenting the history of Austrian resistance to National Socialism and the Holocaust.
    ·       Private Archive of Fr. Johann Reiter, Innsbruck: The personal collection of documents belonging to Father Johann Reiter, a researcher and co-author on this topic.
    ·       Private Archive of Helmut Tschol, Schwaz: The personal collection of documents belonging to Helmut Tschol, a key historian on the Catholic Church in Tirol during this period.
          Private Archive of Dr. Paul Torggler, Innsbruck: The personal collection of documents belonging to Dr. Paul Torggler.

    Publications:


    Tscholl, Helmut:
     The Catholic Church. Laity and Collective Resistance. In: Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (Ed.): *Resistance and Persecution in Tyrol 1934-1945. A Documentation (Volume 2).* Vienna/Munich 1984, pp. 251-284.

    Tschol, Helmut: The Catholic Church. General Measures of Persecution. In: Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (Ed.): *Resistance in Tyrol 1934-1945. A Documentation (Volume 2).*Vienna/Munich 1984, pp. 234-235.

    Tschol, Helmut: The Catholic Church. 2. Persecution and Resistance of the Clergy. c.) Members of Religious Orders. In: Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (Ed.): Resistance and Persecution in Tyrol 1934–1945. A Documentation (Volume 2). Vienna/Munich 1984, pp. 230-251, specifically p. 242.

    Tschol, Helmut / Reiter, Johann: Measures against Monasteries and Religious Orders. 6. List of Arrested Priests and Members of Religious Orders. In: Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (Ed.): Resistance and Persecution in Tyrol 1934–1945. A Documentation (Volume 2). Vienna/Munich 1984, pp. 332-351, specifically p. 335, as well as p. 615, footnote no. 136.

    Kuhl, Manfred et al. (Eds.): Wearing Colours, Professing Colours. Catholic Fraternity Members in Resistance and Persecution. Biographies Supplement (Volume 2). Tradition und Zukunft (18). Vienna 2020. This is a biographical entry about a specific Franciscan priest (Wilhelm Pieller, religious name: Johannes Kapistran) who was involved in resistance or was persecuted.

    Lipp, Richard (Ed.): *The History of the Tyrolean Franciscan Province (Volume III). The Years 1938-1945.* Giessheim 1999, pp. 10-13. This volume of the order's history specifically covers the World War II and Nazi era.

    Klamper, Benedikta Maria: Priests Before Hitler's Tribunals. Munich 1966, pp. 101-102. This book deals with the persecution of priests by the Nazi regime; the cited pages likely mention a case from Tyrol.  

    September 2025

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