, beatified for sheltering
Jews during
the Holocaust. The foundress, Sister Margit, and the other Sisters faced new challenges with the rise of
Nazism and the outbreak of
World War II. While continuing their commitment to
social justice, they also worked to protect their
Jewish neighbors. Many of them were sheltered in the motherhouse and in homes organized and run by members of the congregation. On December 27, 1944, members of the pro-Nazi
Arrow Cross Party surrounded the hostel Sister
Sára Salkaházi ran and began to arrest the Jewish women being sheltered there, along with a Christian volunteer. Sister Sára arrived during the raid, and identified herself as the director of the house. She was immediately arrested and taken with the other women to the banks of the
Danube, where they were all stripped and shot, and their bodies then thrown into the river. Hers was never recovered. On September 17, 2006, with the authorization of
Pope Benedict XVI, she was
beatified as a
martyr in
Budapest by the
Cardinal Primate of
Hungary,
Péter Erdő. She is the first
Hungarian who was not a member of the Hungarian
royal family to be honored by the
Catholic Church in this way. The entire congregation is credited with having saved the lives of about one thousand Jews from the Nazis. == Separation ==