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Body of missing Wichita seminarian found

Brian Bergkamp. Courtesy of the Diocese of Wichita.

The body of a Kansas seminarian who drowned after rescuing a woman in the Arkansas River has been found.

Wichita Police said Brian Bergkamp's body was discovered July 28 in the Arkansas River, according to the Wichita Eagle.

Bergkamp, age 24, had finished his second year at seminary. He was scheduled to be ordained a priest in 2018.

The seminarian was kayaking with four friends July 9 on the Arkansas River. They hit rough water, and one of the women in the group fell out of her kayak.

Bergkamp plunged in after the woman and was able to help her reach safety, but he was then pulled under by the strong current, according to officials.

A July 18 memorial Mass at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception was attended by more than 1,000 people.

Those who knew the seminarian described him as selfless and said they were not surprised by his act of self-sacrifice to save the life of another.

"He would go out of his way to help someone and forget about his own, probably, self in the process. So what he did was a very natural thing for him," said Mt. St. Mary's University Vice Rector, Father Kenneth Brighenti, to KSN News.

"He said he just had a desire to help people, to save people. He thought about being a fireman or a paramedic or a policeman, but decided the priesthood was what he wanted to do," added Jan Haberly, director at Lord's Diner, which serves meals to those in need. Bergkamp had been an intern at the diner this summer.

Fellow seminarian Jimmy Schibi described Bergkamp as deeply faithful and generous.

"He was never about himself, always looking to do something for others, never thinking of himself," Schibi told the Wichita Eagle. "He cared. He totally cared about each little individual job he was doing."

"He gave up his life to be a priest, but before he could do that, he gave up his life for another," Schibi said. "Probably one of the most selfless individuals that I'd ever met."

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