Ks_piotr_pawlukiewicz_zyjemy_jak_tredowaci
Marek looked at the woman sitting across from him. She was crying, silently. Her tears didn't smudge her makeup; they just sat there, heavy and ignored. Everyone around her looked away. To acknowledge her pain was to risk touching it, and in this city, pain was contagious. Marek reached into his pocket. He found a crumpled tissue.
Piotr Pawlukiewicz ’s teaching often revolved around the idea of spiritual isolation—the feeling that we are "living like lepers" ( żyjemy jak trędowaci ), hiding our wounds from others while desperately needing a touch that heals. ks_piotr_pawlukiewicz_zyjemy_jak_tredowaci
Among them sat Marek. To the world, he was a rising architect with a sharp suit and an even sharper smile. But beneath the linen shirt, Marek felt the "spots." Not physical ones, but the kind Father Piotr used to talk about in those raspy, late-night radio broadcasts—the leprosy of the soul. Marek looked at the woman sitting across from him
His hand trembled. To offer it was to break the code of the "healthy." It was to admit that he recognized her sorrow because he carried his own. He felt the phantom bell ringing again: Stay back. Keep the mask on. Everyone around her looked away
: Sin and shame as things that desensitize us and isolate us from the "Body."
This draft story explores that theme through a modern lens, reflecting his characteristic blend of humor, bluntness, and deep compassion.
Marek leaned forward. He didn't say anything profound. He didn't offer a sermon. He simply held out the tissue.