In 2005, Brandsma was chosen by the inhabitants of
Nijmegen as the greatest citizen to have lived there. A memorial church dedicated to him now stands in the city. Brandsma's studies on mysticism were the basis for the establishment in 1968 of the Titus Brandsma Institute in Nijmegen, dedicated to the study of
spirituality. It is a collaboration between the Dutch Carmelite friars and
Radboud University Nijmegen. In his biography of Brandsma,
The Man behind the Myth, Dutch journalist Ton Crijnen claims that Brandsma's character consisted of some vanity, a short temper, extreme energy, political innocence, true charity, unpretentious piety, thorough decisiveness, and great personal courage. His ideas were very much those of his own age and modern as well. He offset contemporary Catholicism's negative theological opinion about Judaism with a strong disaffection for any kind of
antisemitism in Hitler's Germany. Brandsma was honoured by the city of Dachau with a street adjoining the former camp, albeit one of the narrowest streets in the town. Brandsma participated in the international
Esperanto movement and is considered a
patron saint by the
International Union of Catholic Esperantists. File:'Scheveningen, 27 januari 1942' uit 'Mijn cel. Dagorde van een gevangene' van Titus Brandsma, Kroonstraat 114, Nijmegen.jpg| in Nijmegen File:Nimègue, statue Titus Brandsma.JPG|Statue of Brandsma on the grounds of Radboud University, Nijmegen File:Nijmegen, Titus Brandsma Gedachteniskerk foto12 2010-12-20 13.33.JPG|The Titus Brandsma Memorial Church in Nijmegen File:Nijmegen - Wachters aan het Keizer Karelplein voor de Titus Brandsma Gedachteniskerk - 1.jpg|One of the gatekeepers at the Titus Brandsma Memorial (Nijmegen) File:2020 Brug 792, naamplaat.jpg|The Titus Brandsma brug in
Amsterdam Nieuw-West File:Titus-Brandsma-Weg, Dachau 20220727 115907.jpg|The Titus-Brandsma-Weg in Dachau == Bibliography ==