Fr. Richard Henkes, S.A.C., A Picture of His Life A Picture of His Life | Page 29

soldiers in his unit and some of his superiors could only be called pigs. “The immorality is, so to speak, the daily food of the soldiers. From morning to night, always the same speech and the same nonsense.” In addition to homesickness, the concept of sensuality now ap- peared before Henkes—one can only guess what he wanted to do about it. We know that it was increasingly difficult for him to observe his spiritual agenda, and that he learned that willpower alone, even in piety, did not support him when he became less enthusiastic about the soldier’s life as more time passed. Richard feared being placed on the front lines; he did not want to be “cannon fodder.” He devel- oped a critical view of the military and politics. His homesickness for Ruppach, for Schönstatt, “after the dear MTA,” increased. His in- ner life—his spiritual life—became dry. He longed for the end of the war. Josef Engling, the pupil who had lived the Schönstatt piety and served as an example to many, was killed. Richard did not want to go to the front. However, the armistice of November 1918 came before he could be sent to the front lines. On November 26, 1918, he was released from service and returned to the student house with his age group. Those who had been soldiers were now different from the rest of the pupils. Richard Henkes, however, was different. Dear friends of his were dead and he had not imagined the world of the barracks— these experiences had made him insecure about life. The young man grappled with many questions in his life, from a practical and religious point of view. He was probably also disappointed with himself: his worldview, which he had once applied to his classmates, had proved to be too idealistic. But he was not yet completely burnt out—he still maintained regular prayer and attended Sunday Mass. Henkes concentrated on graduating, but otherwise he became quiet. Yet he did not give up his childhood wish to become a priest and missionary. During the July 1919 exam month, he asked for ad- mission to the Novitiate of the Community in Limburg. He was ini- tially rejected, then admitted - we do not know why. But before he received the habit of the Society in September 1919, and began his novitiate, he once again spent several weeks in his beloved Ruppach. 23