Pius
XII, was pope from 1939 to 1958. It is reported by credible sources that during
World War II he was responsible for the rescue of more Jews than all the Allies
combined.
During
and after World War II, and again upon his death in 1958, Pope Pius XII was
praised by secular and religious Jewish leaders for his efforts to save Jews from the
Nazi Holocaust. During the last forty
years, however, many people with particular agendas have accused the Pope of “silence” and even of
criminal negligence, saying he could have said and done much more to lessen the
genocide that claimed millions of Jews.
These
attacks against Pius XII are based upon a false reading of history that does
not survive honest scrutiny. In a vicious fictional account of Pius during the
war years, “The Deputy”, written in 1963 by a little-known German
Protestant playwright, Rolf Hochhuth, Pius XII's wartime record has been put in
question.
Hochhuth |
In
this play, the main protagonist, a young Jesuit, Riccardo Fontana, says: “A Vicar of Christ who sees these things
before his eyes and still remains silent because of state policies, who delays
even one day... such a pope is a criminal.”
It
should be noted that as a boy, Hochhuth was a member of the Hitler Youth, and
his father, an officer in the German Army.
Pre-eminent
Jews have defended Pius XII but since Hochhuth’s libellous play, it has become
a liberal media meme to blame Pope Pius XII for being "silent" during
the Holocaust.
During
the period at the end of the war and immediately afterwards the World Jewish
Congress, the American Jewish Committee, Golda Meir, Albert Einstein, and many
others applauded the efforts of Pius XII and what he did to save so
many Jews.
Under the leadership and at the direction of Pius, the Church provided false birth certificates, religious disguises, and safe keeping in monasteries and convents. Pius oversaw efforts that helped save hundreds of thousands of Jews from deportation to Nazi death camps.
Under the leadership and at the direction of Pius, the Church provided false birth certificates, religious disguises, and safe keeping in monasteries and convents. Pius oversaw efforts that helped save hundreds of thousands of Jews from deportation to Nazi death camps.
Pope Pius inspects food for Jews and others in concentration camps. |
An
Israeli diplomat and scholar Pinchas Lapide concluded his careful review of
Pius XII's wartime activities with the following words: “The Catholic Church, under the pontificate of Pius XII, was
instrumental in saving the lives of as many as 860,000 Jews from certain death
at Nazi hands.”
He went on to add that this: “figure far exceeds those saved by all other Churches and rescue
organizations combined.” After recounting statements of appreciation from a
variety of preeminent Jewish spokespersons, he noted: “No Pope in history has been thanked more heartily by Jews.”
In
1961, during Eichmann’s Nazi War Crimes Trial, Jewish scholar Jeno Levai
testified that the Bishops of the Catholic Church “intervened again and again on the instructions of the Pope.” In
1968, he wrote that: “the one person
(Pius XII) who did more than anyone else to halt the dreadful crime and
alleviate its consequences, is today made the scapegoat for the failures of
others.”
In the book The Secret War Against the Jews, which
appeared in 1994, Jewish writers John Loftus and Mark Aarons write that: “Pope Pius XII probably rescued more Jews
than all the Allies combined.”
The
Pope's efforts did not go unrecognized by Jewish authorities, even during the
War. The Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem, Isaac Herzog, sent the Pope a personal
message of thanks on February 28, 1944, in which he said: “The people of Israel will never forget what His Holiness and his
illustrious delegates, inspired by the eternal principles of religion which
form the very foundations of true civilization, are doing for us unfortunate
brothers and sisters in the most tragic hour of our history, which is living
proof of Divine Providence in this world.”
In
September 1945, Dr. Joseph Nathan—who represented the Hebrew Commission
—stated: “Above all, we acknowledge the Supreme Pontiff and the religious men
and women who, executing the directives of the Holy Father, recognized the
persecuted as their brothers and, with great abnegation, hastened to help them,
disregarding the terrible dangers to which they were exposed.”
Dr.
A. Leo Kubowitzki, secretary general of the World Jewish Congress, came to
present “to the Holy Father, in the name
of the Union of Israelitic Communities, warmest thanks for the efforts of the
Catholic Church on behalf of Jews throughout Europe during the war.”
In
1958, at the death of Pope Pius XII, Golda Meir, then Israel's Minister of
Foreign Affairs, delivered a eulogy on behalf of the nation of Israel to the
United Nations, stating: “We share the
grief of the world over the death of His Holiness Pius XII. During a generation
of wars and dissensions, he affirmed the high ideals of peace and compassion.
During the 10 years of Nazi terror, when our people went through the horrors of
martyrdom, the Pope raised his voice to condemn the persecutors and to
commiserate with their victims. The life of our time has been enriched by a
voice which expressed the great moral truths above the tumults of daily
conflicts. We grieve over the loss of a great defender of peace.”
Albert
Einstein, who himself barely escaped annihilation at Nazi hands, stated in Time
Magazine (December 23, 1940): “Being a
lover of freedom, when the Nazi Revolution came in Germany, I looked to the
universities to defend it, but the universities were immediately silenced. Then
I looked to the great editors of the newspapers, but they, like the
universities, were silenced in a few short weeks. Then I looked to individual
writers... they too were mute. Only the Church,” Einstein concluded, “stood squarely across the path of Hitler's
campaign for suppressing the truth... I never had any special interest in the
Church before, but now I feel great affection and admiration... and am forced
thus to confess that what I once despised, I now praise unreservedly.”
Israele
Anton Zolli, the Chief Rabbi of Rome during the German occupation, wrote: “Volumes could be written on the multiform
works of Pius XII, and the countless priests, religious and laity who stood
with him throughout the world during the war.”
“No hero,” he went on to day, “in all of
history was more militant, more fought against, none more heroic, than Pius XII
in pursuing the works of true charity... and thus on behalf of all the
suffering children of God. What the Vatican did will be indelibly and eternally
engraved in our hearts... Priests and even high prelates did things that will
forever be an honour to Catholicism.”
Zolli
was so moved by the Pope's efforts that he became a devoted friend of Pius XII.
He eventually converted to the Catholic Faith, and took for his baptismal name,
in 1945, Eugenio, in honour of Eugenio Pacelli (Pius XII).
Rabbi Zolli's daughter,
the psychiatrist Myriam Zolli, has issued a strong defense of Pius XII. She
said the Pope was in steady contact with her father, and he worked diligently
to save Jews from persecution. In an interview in the Italian daily Il
Giornale, she recalled her father's prediction that Pope Pius XII would become
a scapegoat for the West's silence in the face of the Holocaust. She concluded
that: “the world's Jewish community owes
him a great debt.”
Pius
XII did speak out as a papal envoy to Germany from 1917 to 1929, Vatican
Secretary of State in the 1930's, and Pope during World War II, Pius XII
established a clear record of supporting the Jewish people against the Nazis.
Lapide wrote: “Of the 44 speeches which
the Nuncio Pacelli (later Pius XII) had made on German soil between 1917 and
1929, at least 40 contained attacks on Nazism or condemnations of Hitler's
doctrines.”
By their own testimony,
the Nazis knew they had an enemy, and Jewish leaders, a faithful ally in Pius
XII. To maximize church efforts and minimize Nazi backlash, Pius XII had to
modify tactics during the war and did much of his work silently so as not to
draw the attention of the Nazis to churches and monasteries. His pro-Jewish
efforts continued unabated throughout this period as the records show.
As Cardinal Pacelli, he drafted the famous papal encyclical,
Mit
Brennender Sorge (which means “with burning anxiety”). The encyclical warned of the Nazi threat to
racial minorities and specifically the Jews. Pius denounced Nazi paganism,
racism and anti-semitism. The document was smuggled into Germany in March,
1937, and read from all Catholic pulpits. The day after Pacelli's election as
Pope (March 3, 1939), the Nazi newspaper, BerlinerMorganpost, stated its
position clearly: “The election of
Cardinal Pacelli is not accepted with favour in Germany because he was always
opposed to Nazism.”
In
his 1942 Christmas message, Pius XII denounced the growing Holocaust. He cried
out for the “hundreds of thousands who without any fault of their own,
sometimes only by reason of their nationality or race, are marked down for
death or progressive extinction."
The New
York Times editorial (Dec. 25, 1942) was specific: “The voice of Pius XII is a lonely voice in the silence and darkness
enveloping Europe this Christmas... He is about the only ruler left on the
Continent of Europe who dares to raise his voice at all.”
The
Pope's Christmas message was also interpreted in a Gestapo report: “In a manner never known before... the Pope
has repudiated the National Socialist New European Order [Nazism]. It is true,
the Pope does not refer to the National Socialists in Germany by name, but his
speech is one long attack on everything we stand for. Here he is clearly
speaking on behalf of the Jews.”
Pius
XII followed the Dutch Catholic hierarchy's plan to name the Jews explicitly in
their condemnation of Nazi deportations, and he intended to issue a similar
statement himself. The Nazis threatened to arrest more Jews. The Dutch Reformed
Church agreed not to protest openly, but the Catholic hierarchy issued, in May
1943, their famous protest against the deportations.
The Nazis then launched an
all-out offensive against Jews (except those who had converted to the Dutch
Protestant Reformed Church). Ironically, it was the Dutch hierarchy's letter of
open condemnation which led to the arrest and execution of Saint Edith Stein,
the Jewish Catholic nun and philosopher.
The
news of the increased persecution reached Pius XII. His own protest was due to
go into L'Osservatore Romano (the
Vatican newspaper) that very evening, but he had the draft burnt saying, “If the protest of the Dutch Bishops has
cost the lives of 40,000 people, my intervention would take at least 200,000
people to their deaths.”
Such
was the result of openly naming the Jews; more death from vain gestures. There
is no doubt that if Pius XII had made such a vain gesture, instead of saving
more Jewish lives, he would then have been open to the criticism of having made
the situation of Jews worse by vain and inopportune public statements. Those
who now criticise him for not saying enough would then have attacked him for
saying too much.
The
Jewish historian Pinchas Lapide sums it up: “The
saddest and most thought-provoking conclusion is that whilst the Catholic
clergy of Holland protested more loudly, expressly and frequently against
Jewish persecutions than the religious hierarchy of any other Nazi-occupied
country, more Jews – some 11,000 or 79% of the total – were deported from
Holland; more than anywhere else in the West.”
Following
this, Pius XII adopted his policy of not naming the Jews explicitly. This was
partly because of his experience of the diplomatic “deafness” of the allied governments,
and partly because of his knowledge and experience of the increased persecution
of Jews that followed the condemnatory statements made by the religious
authorities. He devoted himself instead to the covert rescue operation to save
Jewish lives.
Pius
XII did act is decisive if secretive ways to continue his assistance of the
Jews. The real question is not what did the Pope say, but what did the Pope do?
Papal
policy in Nazi Europe was directed with an eye to local conditions. Hitler
described himself as “a complete pagan”, and he regarded the Catholic Church as
his greatest enemy, which he would destroy when he had the opportunity.
Prince
Sapicha, the Cardinal of Cracow in Poland, told the Pope, perfectly accurately,
that if there were open public denunciations, Catholics and Jews would be
massacred together in Poland. It was better to try and rescue as many as
possible through the religious houses, and allow the opposition army to build
up.
In
Vatican City itself and its holdings in Rome between 4,000 and 7,000 Jews —
were hidden, fed, clothed, and bedded in the 180 known places of refuge in
Vatican City, churches and basilicas, Church administrative buildings, and
parish houses.
Unknown
numbers of Jews were sheltered in Castel Gandolfo, the site of the Pope's
summer residence, private homes, hospitals, and nursing institutions, and the
Pope took personal responsibility for the care of the children of Jews deported
from Italy.
Later,
after the war was over, Pius XII received a large delegation of Roman Jews in
the Vatican, and ordered that the Imperial Steps be opened for them to enter
by. These steps were usually reserved for crowned Heads of State. The Pope
received them in the Sistine Chapel and, seeing that his Jewish visitors felt
uncomfortable in that place, he came down from his throne and warmly welcomed
them, telling them to feel completely at home, saying, “I am only the Vicar of Christ, but you are His very kith and kin.”
In
1967 Pinchas Lapide published his book Three Popes and the Jews which set
out to answer the charges raised in Rolf Hochhuth's play The Deputy which
contained criticisms of World War II Pope Pius XII and his response to the
unfolding Holocaust. After analyzing the
available information he concludes:
“. . . When armed force ruled well-nigh omnipotent,
and morality was at its lowest ebb, Pius XII commanded none of the former and
could only appeal to the latter, in confronting, with bare hands, the full
might of evil. A sounding protest, which might turn out to be self-thwarting -
or quiet, piecemeal rescue? Loud words - or prudent deeds? The dilemma must have
been sheer agony, for whichever course he chose, horrible consequences were
inevitable. Unable to cure the sickness of an entire civilization, and
unwilling to bear the brunt of Hitler's fury, the Pope, unlike many far
mightier than he, alleviated, relieved, retrieved, appealed, petitioned - and
saved as best he could by his own lights. Who, but a prophet or a martyr could
have done much more?”
As
Italian historian Monica Biffi wrote: “It
is a real ‘cold war’ that Pius XII waged against Hitler.” One understands
that in May, 1952, Pius XII was able to say: “What could we have done that we did not do?” Pius XII has been a
great Pope, filled with courage and wisdom; a Pope who is the glory of the
Church, to whom we owe our admiration, our gratitude, and our prayer.
Based
upon information published in the May-June-July, 2002 issue of “Michael” and
other sources.
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