A native of Czechoslovakia who fled persecution by that country’s Communist regime and taught theology, ministered in parishes and served as a military chaplain in Minnesota for nearly 30 years before being appointed a Czech Republic bishop, died Aug. 10 in California. Bishop Emeritus Peter Esterka was 85.
“He has touched so many people,” said Joan Timmerman, who taught theology alongside then-Father Esterka at then-College of St. Catherine, now St. Catherine University, in St. Paul. Timmerman said she retired to Anaheim, California, in 2000 and helped Bishop Esterka, who lived simply but traveled extensively, with his mission to Czech Catholics across the United States, Canada and Australia.
Bishop Esterka’s funeral Mass will be 10:30 a.m. Aug. 20 at Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, California, with Bishop Kevin Vann of Orange presiding. A Mass also will be celebrated in Brno, Czech Republic, and burial will be in his birthplace, Dolni Bojanovice.
He was appointed auxiliary bishop of Brno and titular bishop of Cefala and entrusted with the spiritual care of Czech Catholics abroad July 5, 1999, by St. Pope John Paul II. His motto for his episcopal ordination was “Go into the whole world to preach the Gospel.”
In 2013, Bishop Esterka was awarded the “Gratias agit” award, given in Prague, Czech Republic, for helping spread the good name of that country abroad. His resignation as a bishop was accepted by Pope Francis in 2013, but he continued to minister to the Czech Catholic community until 2018.
That was the last year of his public ministry, said Timmerman, who helped write his obituary. It also was the year Bishop Esterka came back to Minnesota to celebrate Mass in Czech at St. Wenceslaus in New Prague as part of a two-day festival celebrating the 100th anniversary of Czechoslovakia’s formation.
Timmerman said Bishop Esterka did not have family in the United States, and when his health began to fail, she took him into her home. He entered hospice in April and died peacefully in her home, she said.
As a young man in 1957, Bishop Esterka fled from Czechoslovakia to Austria because of Communist persecution. He studied for the priesthood in Rome and was ordained in 1963. He earned a doctorate in theology and came to Minnesota in 1967, teaching at St. Kate’s until 1993. He also wrote a book, “Never Say Comrade,” about his escape from Czechoslovakia.
While teaching, Bishop Esterka also ministered at parishes, including Immaculate Heart of Mary in St. Paul, which has since merged with St. Luke to form St. Thomas More. He became a U.S. citizen in 1968 and joined the Air Force Reserves in 1974 as a military chaplain, retiring as a lieutenant colonel in 1995. He was based with the reserves in Minneapolis, with the 934th Tactical Airlift Group.
In 1978, Bishop Esterka began to devote himself more intensively to work among Czech Catholics in the U.S. and Canada. In 1986, he was appointed vicar for those two countries by Bishop Jaroslav Skarvada, who worked in Rome and cared for compatriots abroad. In 1994, Bishop Esterka’s ministry was extended to Australia.
Father Michael Skluzacek, director of pastoral formation at the St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity in St. Paul, told The Catholic Spirit that he consulted with then-Father Esterka before going with family members to visit Czechoslovakia in 1984, when it was still under the Communist regime.
Father Esterka was helpful, suggesting that Father Skluzacek not wear his priestly collar and that he apply for his visa as a teacher, not a priest. With those precautions, the Communist regime was likely to know he was a priest, but would leave him alone, Father Skluzacek said.
“That’s what I did, but it was still pretty scary,” Father Skluzacek said. “We were followed in Czechoslovakia.”
Father Skluzacek said he visited the Czech Republic again in 1993, after Communism had fallen and the new country along with the Slovak Republic was born. It was an entirely different and happier place, Father Skluzacek said.
But he still remembers Bishop Esterka’s kindness and good guidance, Father Skluzacek said. “He was such a joyful man.”
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Longtime theology professor at St. Kate's in St. Paul, later a bishop, dies at age 85 - TheCatholicSpirit.com : TheCatholicSpirit.com - The Catholic Spirit
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