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Clerical fascism

Clerical fascism (also clero-fascism or clerico-fascism) is an ideology that combines the political and economic doctrines of fascism with clericalism. The term has been used to describe organizations and movements that combine religious elements with fascism, receive support from religious organizations which espouse sympathy for fascism, or fascist regimes in which clergy play a leading role.

History edit

The term clerical fascism (clero-fascism or clerico-fascism) emerged in the early 1920s in the Kingdom of Italy, referring to the faction of the Roman Catholic Partito Popolare Italiano (PPI) which supported Benito Mussolini and his régime. It was supposedly coined by Don Luigi Sturzo, a priest and Christian democrat leader who opposed Mussolini and went into exile in 1924,[1] although the term had also been used before Mussolini's March on Rome in 1922 to refer to Catholics in Northern Italy who advocated a synthesis of Roman Catholicism and fascism.[2]

Sturzo made a distinction between the "filofascists", who left the Catholic PPI in 1921 and 1922, and the "clerical fascists" who stayed in the party after the March on Rome, advocating collaboration with the fascist government.[3] Eventually, the latter group converged with Mussolini, abandoning the PPI in 1923 and creating the Centro Nazionale Italiano. The PPI was disbanded by the fascist régime in 1926.[4]

The term has since been used by scholars seeking to contrast authoritarian-conservative clerical fascism with more radical variants.[5] Christian fascists focus on internal religious politics, such as passing laws and regulations that reflect their view of Christianity. Radicalized forms of Christian fascism or clerical fascism (clero-fascism or clerico-fascism) were emerging on the far-right of the political spectrum in some European countries during the interwar period in the first half of the 20th century.[6]

Fascist Italy edit

 
Mussolini (far right) signing the Lateran Treaty (Vatican City, 11 February 1929)

In 1870, the newly formed Kingdom of Italy annexed the remaining Papal States, depriving the Pope of his temporal power. However, in the 1929 Lateran Treaty, Mussolini recognized the Pope as sovereign ruler of the Vatican City state, and Roman Catholicism became the state religion of Fascist Italy.[7][8]

In March 1929, a nationwide plebiscite was held to publicly endorse the Lateran Treaty. Opponents were intimidated by the fascist regime: the Catholic Action organisation (Azione Cattolica) and Mussolini claimed that "no" votes were of those "few ill-advised anti-clericals who refuse to accept the Lateran Pacts".[9] Nearly nine million Italians voted, or 90 per cent of the registered electorate, and only 136,000 voted "no".[10]

Almost immediately after the signing of the Treaty, relations between Mussolini and the Church soured again. Mussolini "referred to Catholicism as, in origin, a minor sect that had spread beyond Palestine only because grafted onto the organization of the Roman empire."[11] After the concordat, "he confiscated more issues of Catholic newspapers in the next three months than in the previous seven years."[11] Mussolini reportedly came close to being excommunicated from the Catholic Church around this time.[11]

In 1938, the Italian Racial Laws and Manifesto of Race were promulgated by the fascist regime to persecute Italian Jews[12] as well as Protestant Christians,[8][13][14][15] especially Evangelicals and Pentecostals.[13][14][15] Thousands of Italian Jews and a small number of Protestants died in the Nazi concentration camps.[12][15] In January 1939, the Jewish National Monthly reports "the only bright spot in Italy has been the Vatican, where fine humanitarian statements by the Pope have been issuing regularly".[citation needed] Pope Pius XI personally admitted Professor Vito Volterra, a famous Italian Jewish mathematician expelled from his position by the regime, into the Pontifical Academy of Science.[16][better source needed]

Despite Mussolini's close alliance with Hitler's Germany, Italy did not fully adopt Nazism's genocidal ideology towards the Jews. The Nazis were frustrated by the Italian authorities' refusal to co-operate in the round-ups of Jews, and no Jews were deported prior to the formation of the Italian Social Republic following the Armistice of Cassibile.[17] In the Italian-occupied Independent State of Croatia, German envoy Siegfried Kasche advised Berlin that Italian forces had "apparently been influenced" by Vatican opposition to German anti-Semitism.[18] As anti-Axis feeling grew in Italy, the use of Vatican Radio to broadcast papal disapproval of race murder and anti-Semitism angered the Nazis.[19] When Mussolini was overthrown in July 1943, the Germans moved to occupy Italy and commenced a round-up of Jews.

Around 4% of Resistance forces were formally Catholic organisations, but Catholics dominated other "independent groups" such as the Fiamme Verdi and Osoppo partisans, and there were also Catholic militants in the Garibaldi Brigades, such as Benigno Zaccagnini, who later served as a prominent Christian Democrat politician.[20] In Northern Italy, tensions between Catholics and communists in the movement led Catholics to form the Fiamme Verdi as a separate brigade of Christian Democrats.[21] After the war, the ideological divisions between former partisans re-emerged, becoming a hallmark of post-war Italian politics.[22][23]

Examples of clerical fascism edit

 
Roman Catholic priest Jozef Tiso (right), who was president of the Slovak Republic, a client state of Nazi Germany
 
Catholic prelates led by Archbishop Aloysius Stepinac at the funeral of Marko Došen, one of the senior Ustaše leaders, in September 1944

Examples of political movements which incorporate certain elements of clerical fascism into their ideologies include:

The National Union in Portugal led by Prime Ministers António de Oliveira Salazar and Marcelo Caetano is not considered Fascist by historians such as Stanley G. Payne, Thomas Gerard Gallagher, Juan José Linz, António Costa Pinto, Roger Griffin, Robert Paxton and Howard J. Wiarda, though it is considered Fascist by historians such as Manuel de Lucena, Jorge Pais de Sousa, Manuel Loff, and Hermínio Martins.[26][27][28][29] One of Salazar's actions was to ban the National Syndicalists/Fascists. Salazar distanced himself from fascism and Nazism, which he criticized as a "pagan Caesarism" that did not recognise either legal or moral limits.[30]

Likewise, the Fatherland Front in Austria led by Austrian Catholic Chancellors Engelbert Dollfuss and Kurt Schuschnigg is often not regarded as a fully fascist party. It has been called semi-Fascist and even imitation Fascist. Dollfuss was murdered by the Nazis, shot in his office by the SS and left to bleed to death. Initially, his regime received support from Fascist Italy, which formed the Stresa Front with the United Kingdom and France.[citation needed]

Use of the Term edit

Scholars who accept the use of the term clerical fascism debate about which of the listed examples should be dubbed "clerical fascist". In the examples which are cited above, the degree of official Catholic support and the degree of clerical influence over lawmaking and government both vary. Moreover, several authors reject the concept of a clerical fascist régime, arguing that an entire fascist régime does not become "clerical" if elements of the clergy support it, while others are not prepared to use the term "clerical fascism" outside the context of what they call the fascist epoch, between the ends of the two world wars (1918–1945).[31]

Some scholars consider certain contemporary movements forms of clerical fascism, such as Christian Identity and Christian Reconstructionism in the United States;[32] "the most virulent form" of Islamic fundamentalism,[33] Islamism;[34] and militant Hindu nationalism in India.[32]

The political theorist Roger Griffin warns against the "hyperinflation of clerical fascism".[35] According to Griffin, the use of the term "clerical fascism" should be limited to "the peculiar forms of politics that arise when religious clerics and professional theologians are drawn either into collusion with the secular ideology of fascism (an occurrence particularly common in interwar Europe); or, more rarely, manage to mix a theologically illicit cocktail of deeply held religious beliefs with a fascist commitment to saving the nation or race from decadence or collapse".[36] Griffin adds that "clerical fascism" "should never be used to characterize a political movement or a regime in its entirety, since it can at most be a faction within fascism", while he defines fascism as "a revolutionary, secular variant of ultranationalism bent on the total rebirth of society through human agency".[37]

In the case of the Slovak State, some scholars have rejected the use of the term clerical fascism as a label for the regime and they have particularly rejected the use of the term clerical fascist as a label for Jozef Tiso.[38]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Eatwell 2003.
  2. ^ Laqueur, Walter (25 October 2006). . Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 14 January 2008.
  3. ^ Santulli, Carlo (2001). Filofascisti e Partito Popolare (1923-1926) [Philo-fascists and the People's Party (1923-1926)] (Thesis) (in Italian). Università di Roma - La Sapienza. p. 5.
  4. ^ Carlo Santulli, Id.
  5. ^ Trevor-Roper, H. R. (1981). "The Phenomenon of Fascism". In Woolf, S. (ed.). Fascism in Europe. London: Methuen. p. 26., Cited in Eatwell (2003)
  6. ^ Feldman, Turda & Georgescu 2008.
  7. ^

    In the period following the signing of the 1929 Lateran Pact, which declared Catholicism as Italy's state religion in the context of a comprehensive regulation of Vatican and Italian government relations, Catholic cultural support for Mussolini is consolidated.

    — Wiley Feinstein, The Civilization of the Holocaust in Italy: Poets, Artists, Saints, Anti-semites (2003), p. 19, London: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, ISBN 0-8386-3988-7
  8. ^ a b Kertzer, David I. (2014). The Pope and Mussolini: The Secret History of Pius XI and the Rise of Fascism in Europe. New York: Random House. pp. 196–198. ISBN 978-0-8129-9346-2.
  9. ^ Pollard 2014, p. 49.
  10. ^ Pollard 2014, p. 61.
  11. ^ a b c D.M. Smith 1982, p. 162–163
  12. ^ a b Giordano, Alberto; Holian, Anna (2018). "The Holocaust in Italy". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 15 August 2018. In 1938, the Italian Fascist regime under Benito Mussolini enacted a series of racial laws that placed multiple restrictions on the country's Jewish population. At the time the laws were enacted, it is estimated that about 46,000 Jews lived in Italy, of whom about 9,000 were foreign born and thus subject to further restrictions such as residence requirements. [...] Estimates suggest that between September 1943 and March 1945, about 10,000 Jews were deported. The vast majority perished, principally at Auschwitz.
  13. ^ a b Pollard 2014, pp. 109–111.
  14. ^ a b Zanini, Paolo (2015). "Twenty years of persecution of Pentecostalism in Italy: 1935-1955". Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 20 (5). Taylor & Francis: 686–707. doi:10.1080/1354571X.2015.1096522. hdl:2434/365385. S2CID 146180634.; Zanini, Paolo (2017). "Il culmine della collaborazione antiprotestante tra Stato fascista e Chiesa cattolica: genesi e applicazione della circolare Buffarini Guidi". Società e Storia (in Italian). 155 (155). FrancoAngeli: 139–165. doi:10.3280/SS2017-155006.
  15. ^ a b c (in Italian). Assemblies of God in Italy. Archived from the original on 1 May 2017. Retrieved 15 August 2018.
  16. ^ See 'Scholars at the Vatican,' Commonweal, 4 December 1942, pp.187-188)
  17. ^ Gilbert (2004), pp. 307–308.
  18. ^ Gilbert (1986), p. 466.
  19. ^ Gilbert (2004), pp. 308, 311.
  20. ^ O'Reilly (2001), p. 178.
  21. ^ O'Reilly (2001), p. 218.
  22. ^ Clark, Simon (2018). "Post-War Italian Politics: Stasis and Chaos". Terror Vanquished: The Italian Approach to Defeating Terrorism. Arlington, Virginia: Center for Security Policy Studies at the Schar School of Policy and Government (George Mason University). pp. 30–42. ISBN 978-1-7329478-0-1. LCCN 2018955266.
  23. ^ Foot, John (March 2012). "The Legacy of the Italian Resistance". History Today. 62 (3).
  24. ^ Dijana Jelača, Maša Kolanović, Danijela Lugarić : The Cultural Life of Capitalism in Yugoslavia: (Post)Socialism and Its Other
  25. ^ Petrović, Predrag; Stakić, Isidora (29 May 2018). "Western Balkans: extremism research forum" (PDF). www.britishcouncil.rs. British Council. pp. 9–10. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  26. ^ Manuel de Lucena, Interpretações do Salazarismo, 1984
  27. ^ Jorge Pais de Sousa, O Fascismo Catedrático de Salazar, Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra, 2012
  28. ^ Loff, Manuel (2008). O nosso século é Fascista! o mundo visto por Salazar e Franco (1936-1945) [Our century is Fascist! the world seen by Salazar and Franco (1936-1945)] (in Portuguese).
  29. ^ Martins, Hermínio; Woolf, S. (1968). European Fascism.
  30. ^ Kay 1970, p. 68.
  31. ^ Griffin 2007, p. 213-227.
  32. ^ a b Berlet, Chip (2005). "Christian Identity: The Apocalyptic Style, Political Religion, Palingenesis, and Neo-Fascism". In Griffin, Roger (ed.). Fascism as a Totalitarian Movement. New York: Routledge. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-415-34793-8. Retrieved 23 November 2014. Lyons and I put Christian Identity into the category of clerical fascism, and we also included the militant theocratic Protestant movement called Christian Reconstructionism... a case can be made for... the Hindu nationalist (Hinduvata) Bharatiya Janata Party in India (which grew out of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh Hindu religious movement).
  33. ^ Berlet, Chip (2006). "When Alienation Turns Right: Populist Conspiracism, the Apocalyptic Style, and Neofascist Movements". In Langman, Lauren; Kalekin-Fishman, Devorah (eds.). The Evolution of Alienation: Trauma, Promise, and the Millennium. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 130. ISBN 9780742518353. In the most virulent form, theocratic Islamic fundamentalism could be a form of clerical fascism (theocratic fascism built around existing institutionalized clerics). This is a disputed view...
  34. ^ Mozaffari, Mehdi (March 2007). "What is Islamism? History and Definition of a Concept" (PDF). Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions. 8 (1): 17–33. doi:10.1080/14690760601121622. S2CID 9926518. Retrieved 23 November 2014. 'Clerical fascism' is perhaps the nearest concept which comes closest to Islamism.
  35. ^ Griffin 2007, p. 215.
  36. ^ Griffin 2007, p. 213.
  37. ^ Griffin 2007, p. 224.
  38. ^ Ward 2013, p. 267.

Bibliography edit

clerical, fascism, also, clero, fascism, clerico, fascism, ideology, that, combines, political, economic, doctrines, fascism, with, clericalism, term, been, used, describe, organizations, movements, that, combine, religious, elements, with, fascism, receive, s. Clerical fascism also clero fascism or clerico fascism is an ideology that combines the political and economic doctrines of fascism with clericalism The term has been used to describe organizations and movements that combine religious elements with fascism receive support from religious organizations which espouse sympathy for fascism or fascist regimes in which clergy play a leading role Contents 1 History 1 1 Fascist Italy 2 Examples of clerical fascism 2 1 Use of the Term 3 See also 4 References 5 BibliographyHistory editThe term clerical fascism clero fascism or clerico fascism emerged in the early 1920s in the Kingdom of Italy referring to the faction of the Roman Catholic Partito Popolare Italiano PPI which supported Benito Mussolini and his regime It was supposedly coined by Don Luigi Sturzo a priest and Christian democrat leader who opposed Mussolini and went into exile in 1924 1 although the term had also been used before Mussolini s March on Rome in 1922 to refer to Catholics in Northern Italy who advocated a synthesis of Roman Catholicism and fascism 2 Sturzo made a distinction between the filofascists who left the Catholic PPI in 1921 and 1922 and the clerical fascists who stayed in the party after the March on Rome advocating collaboration with the fascist government 3 Eventually the latter group converged with Mussolini abandoning the PPI in 1923 and creating the Centro Nazionale Italiano The PPI was disbanded by the fascist regime in 1926 4 The term has since been used by scholars seeking to contrast authoritarian conservative clerical fascism with more radical variants 5 Christian fascists focus on internal religious politics such as passing laws and regulations that reflect their view of Christianity Radicalized forms of Christian fascism or clerical fascism clero fascism or clerico fascism were emerging on the far right of the political spectrum in some European countries during the interwar period in the first half of the 20th century 6 Fascist Italy edit See also Fascist Italy 1922 1943 Roman Question and Freedom of religion in Italy History nbsp Mussolini far right signing the Lateran Treaty Vatican City 11 February 1929 In 1870 the newly formed Kingdom of Italy annexed the remaining Papal States depriving the Pope of his temporal power However in the 1929 Lateran Treaty Mussolini recognized the Pope as sovereign ruler of the Vatican City state and Roman Catholicism became the state religion of Fascist Italy 7 8 In March 1929 a nationwide plebiscite was held to publicly endorse the Lateran Treaty Opponents were intimidated by the fascist regime the Catholic Action organisation Azione Cattolica and Mussolini claimed that no votes were of those few ill advised anti clericals who refuse to accept the Lateran Pacts 9 Nearly nine million Italians voted or 90 per cent of the registered electorate and only 136 000 voted no 10 Almost immediately after the signing of the Treaty relations between Mussolini and the Church soured again Mussolini referred to Catholicism as in origin a minor sect that had spread beyond Palestine only because grafted onto the organization of the Roman empire 11 After the concordat he confiscated more issues of Catholic newspapers in the next three months than in the previous seven years 11 Mussolini reportedly came close to being excommunicated from the Catholic Church around this time 11 In 1938 the Italian Racial Laws and Manifesto of Race were promulgated by the fascist regime to persecute Italian Jews 12 as well as Protestant Christians 8 13 14 15 especially Evangelicals and Pentecostals 13 14 15 Thousands of Italian Jews and a small number of Protestants died in the Nazi concentration camps 12 15 In January 1939 the Jewish National Monthly reports the only bright spot in Italy has been the Vatican where fine humanitarian statements by the Pope have been issuing regularly citation needed Pope Pius XI personally admitted Professor Vito Volterra a famous Italian Jewish mathematician expelled from his position by the regime into the Pontifical Academy of Science 16 better source needed Despite Mussolini s close alliance with Hitler s Germany Italy did not fully adopt Nazism s genocidal ideology towards the Jews The Nazis were frustrated by the Italian authorities refusal to co operate in the round ups of Jews and no Jews were deported prior to the formation of the Italian Social Republic following the Armistice of Cassibile 17 In the Italian occupied Independent State of Croatia German envoy Siegfried Kasche advised Berlin that Italian forces had apparently been influenced by Vatican opposition to German anti Semitism 18 As anti Axis feeling grew in Italy the use of Vatican Radio to broadcast papal disapproval of race murder and anti Semitism angered the Nazis 19 When Mussolini was overthrown in July 1943 the Germans moved to occupy Italy and commenced a round up of Jews Around 4 of Resistance forces were formally Catholic organisations but Catholics dominated other independent groups such as the Fiamme Verdi and Osoppo partisans and there were also Catholic militants in the Garibaldi Brigades such as Benigno Zaccagnini who later served as a prominent Christian Democrat politician 20 In Northern Italy tensions between Catholics and communists in the movement led Catholics to form the Fiamme Verdi as a separate brigade of Christian Democrats 21 After the war the ideological divisions between former partisans re emerged becoming a hallmark of post war Italian politics 22 23 Examples of clerical fascism edit nbsp Roman Catholic priest Jozef Tiso right who was president of the Slovak Republic a client state of Nazi Germany nbsp Catholic prelates led by Archbishop Aloysius Stepinac at the funeral of Marko Dosen one of the senior Ustase leaders in September 1944 Examples of political movements which incorporate certain elements of clerical fascism into their ideologies include the Fatherland Front in Austria led by Austrian Catholic Chancellors Engelbert Dollfuss and Kurt Schuschnigg the Rexist Party in Belgium led by Leon Degrelle a Belgian Catholic the Brazilian Integralist Action in Brazil led by Brazilian Catholic Plinio Salgado the Nationalist Liberation Alliance in Argentina led by Juan Queralto es the Lapua Movement and the Patriotic People s Movement IKL in Finland led by the Lutherans kortti Vihtori Kosola and Vilho Annala respectively Pastor Elias Simojoki led the IKL s youth organization the Blue and Blacks the German Christians of the Nazi Party in Nazi Germany led by Ludwig Muller which attempted but failed to unify German Protestants during the Kirchenkampf Metaxism and the 4th of August Regime in Greece which was led by Ioannis Metaxas and heavily supported the Greek Orthodox Church the National Synarchist Union in Mexico led by Mexican Catholic Jose Antonio Urquiza before his assassination in 1938 it was a revival of the Catholic reaction that triggered the Cristero War midcentury the movement would become the focus of a conspiracy theory which alleged that it had infiltrated various institutions under the name El Yunque the National Radical Camp in Poland led by Boleslaw Piasecki Henryk Rossman Tadeusz Gluzinski and Jan Mosdorf which heavily incorporated Polish Catholicism into its ideology especially the Falangist faction the National Union in Portugal led by Prime Ministers Antonio de Oliveira Salazar and Marcelo Caetano the National Christian Defense League Iron Guard of Romania which was led by the devoutly Romanian Orthodox Corneliu Zelea Codreanu Serbian Action an ultranationalist and clerical fascist 24 movement active in Serbia since 2010 25 the Slovak People s Party Ľudaks in Slovakia led by President Jozef Tiso a Catholic priest the FET y de las JONS of Spain led by Spanish Catholic Francisco Franco which developed into National Catholicism the Silver Legion of America in the United States led by William Dudley Pelley which combined American Christianity specifically Protestantism with American white nationalism The National Union in Portugal led by Prime Ministers Antonio de Oliveira Salazar and Marcelo Caetano is not considered Fascist by historians such as Stanley G Payne Thomas Gerard Gallagher Juan Jose Linz Antonio Costa Pinto Roger Griffin Robert Paxton and Howard J Wiarda though it is considered Fascist by historians such as Manuel de Lucena Jorge Pais de Sousa Manuel Loff and Herminio Martins 26 27 28 29 One of Salazar s actions was to ban the National Syndicalists Fascists Salazar distanced himself from fascism and Nazism which he criticized as a pagan Caesarism that did not recognise either legal or moral limits 30 Likewise the Fatherland Front in Austria led by Austrian Catholic Chancellors Engelbert Dollfuss and Kurt Schuschnigg is often not regarded as a fully fascist party It has been called semi Fascist and even imitation Fascist Dollfuss was murdered by the Nazis shot in his office by the SS and left to bleed to death Initially his regime received support from Fascist Italy which formed the Stresa Front with the United Kingdom and France citation needed Use of the Term edit Scholars who accept the use of the term clerical fascism debate about which of the listed examples should be dubbed clerical fascist In the examples which are cited above the degree of official Catholic support and the degree of clerical influence over lawmaking and government both vary Moreover several authors reject the concept of a clerical fascist regime arguing that an entire fascist regime does not become clerical if elements of the clergy support it while others are not prepared to use the term clerical fascism outside the context of what they call the fascist epoch between the ends of the two world wars 1918 1945 31 Some scholars consider certain contemporary movements forms of clerical fascism such as Christian Identity and Christian Reconstructionism in the United States 32 the most virulent form of Islamic fundamentalism 33 Islamism 34 and militant Hindu nationalism in India 32 The political theorist Roger Griffin warns against the hyperinflation of clerical fascism 35 According to Griffin the use of the term clerical fascism should be limited to the peculiar forms of politics that arise when religious clerics and professional theologians are drawn either into collusion with the secular ideology of fascism an occurrence particularly common in interwar Europe or more rarely manage to mix a theologically illicit cocktail of deeply held religious beliefs with a fascist commitment to saving the nation or race from decadence or collapse 36 Griffin adds that clerical fascism should never be used to characterize a political movement or a regime in its entirety since it can at most be a faction within fascism while he defines fascism as a revolutionary secular variant of ultranationalism bent on the total rebirth of society through human agency 37 In the case of the Slovak State some scholars have rejected the use of the term clerical fascism as a label for the regime and they have particularly rejected the use of the term clerical fascist as a label for Jozef Tiso 38 See also editAlois Hudal Catholic Church and Nazi Germany Christian Nationalism Christofascism Criticism of Zionism Hindutva Islamofascism Kahanism National Union Italy 1923 Positive Christianity Religious nationalism Ratlines World War II aftermath References edit Eatwell 2003 Laqueur Walter 25 October 2006 The Origins of Fascism Islamic Fascism Islamophobia Antisemitism Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 14 January 2008 Santulli Carlo 2001 Filofascisti e Partito Popolare 1923 1926 Philo fascists and the People s Party 1923 1926 Thesis in Italian Universita di Roma La Sapienza p 5 Carlo Santulli Id Trevor Roper H R 1981 The Phenomenon of Fascism In Woolf S ed Fascism in Europe London Methuen p 26 Cited in Eatwell 2003 Feldman Turda amp Georgescu 2008 In the period following the signing of the 1929 Lateran Pact which declared Catholicism as Italy s state religion in the context of a comprehensive regulation of Vatican and Italian government relations Catholic cultural support for Mussolini is consolidated Wiley Feinstein The Civilization of the Holocaust in Italy Poets Artists Saints Anti semites 2003 p 19 London Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 0 8386 3988 7 a b Kertzer David I 2014 The Pope and Mussolini The Secret History of Pius XI and the Rise of Fascism in Europe New York Random House pp 196 198 ISBN 978 0 8129 9346 2 Pollard 2014 p 49 Pollard 2014 p 61 a b c D M Smith 1982 p 162 163 a b Giordano Alberto Holian Anna 2018 The Holocaust in Italy United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 15 August 2018 In 1938 the Italian Fascist regime under Benito Mussolini enacted a series of racial laws that placed multiple restrictions on the country s Jewish population At the time the laws were enacted it is estimated that about 46 000 Jews lived in Italy of whom about 9 000 were foreign born and thus subject to further restrictions such as residence requirements Estimates suggest that between September 1943 and March 1945 about 10 000 Jews were deported The vast majority perished principally at Auschwitz a b Pollard 2014 pp 109 111 a b Zanini Paolo 2015 Twenty years of persecution of Pentecostalism in Italy 1935 1955 Journal of Modern Italian Studies 20 5 Taylor amp Francis 686 707 doi 10 1080 1354571X 2015 1096522 hdl 2434 365385 S2CID 146180634 Zanini Paolo 2017 Il culmine della collaborazione antiprotestante tra Stato fascista e Chiesa cattolica genesi e applicazione della circolare Buffarini Guidi Societa e Storia in Italian 155 155 FrancoAngeli 139 165 doi 10 3280 SS2017 155006 a b c Risveglio Pentecostale in Italian Assemblies of God in Italy Archived from the original on 1 May 2017 Retrieved 15 August 2018 See Scholars at the Vatican Commonweal 4 December 1942 pp 187 188 Gilbert 2004 pp 307 308 Gilbert 1986 p 466 Gilbert 2004 pp 308 311 O Reilly 2001 p 178 O Reilly 2001 p 218 Clark Simon 2018 Post War Italian Politics Stasis and Chaos Terror Vanquished The Italian Approach to Defeating Terrorism Arlington Virginia Center for Security Policy Studies at the Schar School of Policy and Government George Mason University pp 30 42 ISBN 978 1 7329478 0 1 LCCN 2018955266 Foot John March 2012 The Legacy of the Italian Resistance History Today 62 3 Dijana Jelaca Masa Kolanovic Danijela Lugaric The Cultural Life of Capitalism in Yugoslavia Post Socialism and Its Other Petrovic Predrag Stakic Isidora 29 May 2018 Western Balkans extremism research forum PDF www britishcouncil rs British Council pp 9 10 Retrieved 24 October 2018 Manuel de Lucena Interpretacoes do Salazarismo 1984 Jorge Pais de Sousa O Fascismo Catedratico de Salazar Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra 2012 Loff Manuel 2008 O nosso seculo e Fascista o mundo visto por Salazar e Franco 1936 1945 Our century is Fascist the world seen by Salazar and Franco 1936 1945 in Portuguese Martins Herminio Woolf S 1968 European Fascism Kay 1970 p 68 Griffin 2007 p 213 227 a b Berlet Chip 2005 Christian Identity The Apocalyptic Style Political Religion Palingenesis and Neo Fascism In Griffin Roger ed Fascism as a Totalitarian Movement New York Routledge p 196 ISBN 978 0 415 34793 8 Retrieved 23 November 2014 Lyons and I put Christian Identity into the category of clerical fascism and we also included the militant theocratic Protestant movement called Christian Reconstructionism a case can be made for the Hindu nationalist Hinduvata Bharatiya Janata Party in India which grew out of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh Hindu religious movement Berlet Chip 2006 When Alienation Turns Right Populist Conspiracism the Apocalyptic Style and Neofascist Movements In Langman Lauren Kalekin Fishman Devorah eds The Evolution of Alienation Trauma Promise and the Millennium Rowman amp Littlefield p 130 ISBN 9780742518353 In the most virulent form theocratic Islamic fundamentalism could be a form of clerical fascism theocratic fascism built around existing institutionalized clerics This is a disputed view Mozaffari Mehdi March 2007 What is Islamism History and Definition of a Concept PDF Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 8 1 17 33 doi 10 1080 14690760601121622 S2CID 9926518 Retrieved 23 November 2014 Clerical fascism is perhaps the nearest concept which comes closest to Islamism Griffin 2007 p 215 Griffin 2007 p 213 Griffin 2007 p 224 Ward 2013 p 267 Bibliography editWalter K Andersen Bharatiya Janata Party Searching for the Hindu Nationalist Face in The New Politics of the Right Neo Populist Parties and Movements in Established Democracies ed Hans Georg Betz and Stefan Immerfall New York St Martin s Press 1998 pp 219 232 ISBN 0 312 21134 1 ISBN 0 312 21338 7 Stefan Arvidsson Aryan Idols The Indo European Mythology as Ideology and Science University of Chicago Press 2006 ISBN 0 226 02860 7 Partha Banerjee In the Belly of the Beast The Hindu Supremacist RSS and BJP of India Delhi Ajanta 1998 OCLC 43318775 Biondich Mark 2005 Religion and Nation in Wartime Croatia Reflections on the Ustasa Policy of Forced Religious Conversions 1941 1942 The Slavonic and East European Review 83 1 71 116 doi 10 1353 see 2005 0063 JSTOR 4214049 S2CID 151704526 Biondich Mark 2007a Controversies Surrounding the Catholic Church in Wartime Croatia 1941 45 The Independent State of Croatia 1941 45 Routledge pp 31 59 ISBN 9780415440554 Biondich Mark 2007b Radical Catholicism and Fascism in Croatia 1918 1945 Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 8 2 383 399 doi 10 1080 14690760701321346 S2CID 145148083 Charles Bloomberg and Saul Dubow eds Christian Nationalism and the Rise of the Afrikaner Broederbond in South Africa 1918 48 Bloomington Indiana University Press 1989 ISBN 0 253 31235 3 Braham Randolph L Miller Scott 2002 1998 The Nazis Last Victims The Holocaust in Hungary Detroit Wayne State University Press ISBN 0 8143 2737 0 Bulajic Milan 1994 The Role of the Vatican in the break up of the Yugoslav State The Mission of the Vatican in the Independent State of Croatia Ustashi Crimes of Genocide Belgrade Strucna knjiga Bulajic Milan 2002 Jasenovac The Jewish Serbian Holocaust the role of the Vatican in Nazi Ustasha Croatia 1941 1945 Belgrade Fund for Genocide Research Strucna knjiga ISBN 9788641902211 Cornwell John 1999 Hitler s Pope The Silence of Pius XII London Viking Books ISBN 9780670876204 editions PeHUCuKZwW4C Eatwell Roger 2003 Reflections on Fascism and Religion Archived from the original on 1 May 2007 Retrieved 14 February 2007 Ainslie T Embree The Function of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh To Define the Hindu Nation in Accounting for Fundamentalisms The Fundamentalism Project 4th ed Martin E Marty and R Scott Appleby Chicago University of Chicago Press 1994 pp 617 652 ISBN 0 226 50885 4 Falconi Carlo 1970 The Silence of Pius XII Boston and Toronto Little Brown and Company Feldman Matthew Turda Marius Georgescu Tudor eds 2008 Clerical Fascism in Interwar Europe Routledge ISBN 9781317968993 Gilbert Martin 1986 The Holocaust the Jewish tragedy Collins ISBN 0 00 216305 5 Gilbert Martin 2004 The Righteous The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 1 4299 0036 2 Griffin Roger ed 2005 Fascism Totalitarianism and Political Religion Routledge ISBN 9781136871689 Griffin Roger 2007 The Holy Storm Clerical fascism through the Lens of Modernism Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 8 2 213 227 doi 10 1080 14690760701321130 S2CID 143765495 Juergensmeyer Mark 1993 The New Cold War Religious Nationalism Confronts the Secular State Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 08651 1 Kay Hugh 1970 Salazar And Modern Portugal Hawthorn Books ISBN 9783785700785 Kertzer David I 2014 The Pope and Mussolini The Secret History of Pius XI and the Rise of Fascism in Europe Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198716167 Laqueur Walter 1966 Fascism Past Present Future New York Oxford Oxford University Press 1997 ISBN 0 19 511793 X Nicholas M Nagy Talavera The Green Shirts and the Others A History of Fascism in Hungary and Romania Iasi and Oxford The Center for Romanian Studies 2001 ISBN 973 9432 11 5 Nelis Jan Morelli Anne Praet Danny eds 2015 Catholicism and Fascism in Europe 1918 1945 Georg Olms ISBN 9783487421278 Novak Viktor 2011 Magnum Crimen Half a Century of Clericalism in Croatia Vol 1b Jagodina Gambit ISBN 9788676240494 Novak Viktor 2011 Magnum Crimen Half a Century of Clericalism in Croatia Vol 2 Jagodina Gambit ISBN 9788676240494 O Reilly Charles T 2001 Forgotten Battles Italy s War of Liberation 1943 1945b Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 0195 7 Walid Phares Lebanese Christian Nationalism The Rise and Fall of an Ethnic Resistance Boulder Col L Rienner 1995 ISBN 1 55587 535 1 Phayer Michael 2000 The Catholic Church and the Holocaust 1930 1965 Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253337252 Phayer Michael 2008 Pius XII the Holocaust and the Cold War Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253349309 Pollard John F 2008 Clerical Fascism Context Overview and Conclusion Clerical Fascism in Interwar Europe London New York Routledge pp 221 234 ISBN 9781317968993 Pollard John F 2014 The Vatican and Italian Fascism 1929 32 A Study in Conflict Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 26870 7 Rhodes Anthony 1973 The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators 1922 1945 New York Holt Rinehart and Winston ISBN 9780030077364 Rivelli Marco Aurelio 1998 Le genocide occulte Etat Independant de Croatie 1941 1945 Hidden Genocide The Independent State of Croatia 1941 1945 in French Lausanne L age d Homme ISBN 9782825111529 Rivelli Marco Aurelio 1999 L arcivescovo del genocidio Monsignor Stepinac il Vaticano e la dittatura ustascia in Croazia 1941 1945 The Archbishop of Genocide Monsignor Stepinac the Vatican and the Ustase dictatorship in Croatia 1941 1945 in Italian Milano Kaos ISBN 9788879530798 Rivelli Marco Aurelio 2002 Dio e con noi La Chiesa di Pio XII complice del nazifascismo God is with us The Church of Pius XII accomplice to Nazi Fascism in Italian Milano Kaos ISBN 9788879531047 Rothkirchen Livia 1989 Vatican Policy and the Jewish Problem in Independent Slovakia 1939 1945 In Marrus Michael R ed The Nazi Holocaust Vol 3 Wesport Meckler pp 1306 1332 ISBN 0 88736 255 9 or ISBN 0 88736 256 7 Rychlak Ronald J 2010 Hitler the War and the Pope Revised and expanded ed South Bend Our Sunday Visitor ISBN 9781612781969 Schindley Wanda Makara Petar eds 2005 Jasenovac Proceedings of the First International Conference and Exhibit on the Jasenovac Concentration Camps Dallas Publishing ISBN 9780912011646 Volovici Leon 1991 Nationalist Ideology and Antisemitism The Case of Romanian Intellectuals in the 1930s Oxford Pergamon Press ISBN 0 08 041024 3 Ward James Mace 2013 Priest Politician Collaborator Jozef Tiso and the Making of Fascist Slovakia Ithaka Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 6812 4 Wolff Richard J The Catholic Church and the Dictatorships in Slovakia and Croatia 1939 1945 Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia 88 no 1 4 1977 3 30 http www jstor org stable 44210893 Various authors Clerical Fascism in Interwar Europe special issue of Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions Volume 8 Issue 2 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clerical fascism amp oldid 1220215614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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