In November of 1950, Fr. Kapaun met up with soldiers besieged by Korean troops at the Battle of Unsan. The Army chaplain chose to stay with the wounded and was imprisoned at a concentration camp near Pyoktong, North Korea, where he was tortured.
For six months he ministered to other prisoners, often giving others his own food rations, and was subjected to forced labor. He celebrated baptisms, heard confessions, offered the Mass and administered last rites. The priest eventually developed a blood clot in his leg and fell ill with dysentery and pneumonia.
According to the testimony of his prison mates, he died in prison on May 23, 1951 and was buried in a common grave near the Yalu River.
Fr. Hotze, a priest from the Diocese of Wichita, Kan., says he's been personally enriched by researching the story of Fr. Kapaun who is today considered a Servant of God.
“I learned about his life, what he did and everything he went through. We have stories told by his prison mates and how he cared for their wounds.”
Since July 1, 2011, the cause has been in the hands of the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints. “Our diocesis has turned in the investigation, all the documents, and all this information is now in their hands,” he said.