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Pope Pius XII and the Holocaust

The papacy of Pius XII (Eugenio Pacelli) began on 2 March 1939 and continued to 9 October 1958, covering the period of the Second World War and the Holocaust, during which millions of Jews and Protestant Christians were murdered by Adolf Hitler's Germany.[1] Before becoming pope, Cardinal Pacelli served as a Vatican diplomat in Germany and as Vatican Secretary of State under Pius XI. His role during the Nazi period has been closely scrutinised and criticised. His supporters argue that Pius employed diplomacy to aid the victims of the Nazis during the war and, through directing his Church to provide discreet aid to Jews and others, saved hundreds of thousands of lives.[2] Pius maintained links to the German Resistance, and shared intelligence with the Allies. His strongest public condemnation of genocide was, however, considered inadequate by the Allied Powers, while the Nazis viewed him as an Allied sympathizer who had dishonoured his policy of Vatican neutrality.[3]

Members of the Canadian Royal 22e Regiment in audience with Pope Pius XII, following the 1944 Liberation of Rome

Some post-war critics have accused Pius of either being overly cautious, or of "not doing enough", or even of "silence" in the face of the Holocaust. Supporters have held that he saved thousands, if not tens or hundreds of thousands of Jews by ordering his Church to provide them with sanctuary and aid, and that he provided moral and intellectual leadership in opposition to the violent racism of Nazi ideology.[4][5][6][7]

As Secretary of State, he had been a critic of Nazism and helped draft the 1937 Mit brennender Sorge anti-Nazi encyclical. In his 1939 Summi Pontificatus first papal encyclical, Pius XII expressed dismay at the 1939 Invasion of Poland (without ascribing blame); reiterated Catholic teaching in support of universal brotherhood; and endorsed resistance against those opposed to the ethical principles of the "Revelation on Sinai" and the Sermon on the Mount.[8][9][10] At Christmas 1942, once evidence of the industrial slaughter of the Jews had emerged, he voiced concern at the murder of "hundreds of thousands" of "faultless" people because of their "nationality or race". The degree of Pius's efforts to block Nazi deportations of Jews remains a matter of scholarly debate.[11][12] Upon his death in 1958, Pius was praised emphatically by the Israeli Foreign Minister,[13] and other world leaders. President Dwight D. Eisenhower called him a "foe of tyranny" and a "friend and benefactor to those who were oppressed".[14] His insistence on Vatican neutrality and avoidance of directly naming the Nazis as the evildoers of World War II became the foundation for contemporary and later criticisms from some quarters. Studies of the Vatican archives and international diplomatic correspondence continue.

Background

Two Popes served through the Nazi period: Pope Pius XI (1922–1939) and Pope Pius XII (1939–1958). The Holy See strongly criticized Nazism through the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, with Cardinal Pacelli (later Pope Pius XII) being a particularly outspoken critic.[15] In 1933, the Vatican signed a Concordat (Reichskonkordat) with Germany, hoping to protect the rights of Catholics under the Nazi government. The terms of the Treaty were not kept by Hitler. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica: "From 1933 to 1936 [Pius XI] wrote several protests against the Third Reich, and his attitude toward fascist Italy changed dramatically after Nazi racial policies were introduced into Italy in 1938."[16]

Pius XI offered three encyclicals against the rising tide of European totalitarianism: Non abbiamo bisogno (1931; "We Do Not Need to Acquaint You" – against Italian Fascism); Mit brennender Sorge (1937; "With Deep Anxiety" – against Nazism) and Divini redemptoris (1937; "Divine Redeemer" – against atheist Communism). "Non abbiamo bisogno" directly challenged Italian fascism as a "pagan" movement which "snatches the young from the Church and from Jesus Christ, and which inculcates in its own young people hatred, violence and irreverence".[17] Pius XI also challenged the extremist nationalism of the Action Française movement and antisemitism in the United States.[16]

With Europe on the brink of war, Pius XI died on 10 February 1939 and Pacelli was elected to succeed him as Pope Pius XII. The Nazi Government was the only government not to send a representative to his coronation.[18] Pius lobbied world leaders hard to avoid war and then pursued a policy of cautious diplomacy following the outbreak of the war.[15][19]

From around 1942, the Nazis had begun to implement their final solution – the industrial extermination of Europe's Jews.

Protests to Nazi Germany prior to pontificate

As Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Pacelli made some 55 protests against Nazi policies, including its "ideology of race".[18] Pacelli also helped Pius XI draft the 1937 Mit brennender Sorge critique of Nazi ideology.[20] Written partly in response to the Nuremberg Laws, the document did not refer to Hitler or the Nazis by name, but condemned racial theories and the mistreatment of people based on race.[20] In 1938, Pacelli publicly restated the words of Pius XI on the incompatibility of Christianity and antisemitism: "It is impossible for a Christian to take part in anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism is inadmissible; spiritually we are all Semites."[18]

1938

Hungarian Eucharistic Congress

Cardinal Pacelli (the later Pope Pius XII) addressed the International Eucharistic Conference that took place in Budapest, Hungary, between 25 and 29 May 1938, and, according to Holocaust scholar and historian Michael Phayer, described the Jews as people "whose lips curse [Christ] and whose hearts reject him even today". Phayer asserts that the timing of the statement, during a period when Hungary was in the process of formulating new antisemitic laws, ran counter to a statement of Pope Pius XI of September 1937 urging Catholics to honour their spiritual father Abraham.[21][22]

Historians Ronald Rychlak and William Doino Jr. have argued that Pacelli was not referring to Jews because Time Magazine did not mention this in its report of the conference.[23][a] According to Rychlak and Doino, Pacelli, early in his talk, spoke about biblical history, recalled the Passion of Christ and referred to the masses that called for the Crucifixion who had been "deceived and excited by propaganda, lies, insults and imprecations at the foot of the Cross", but with no reference to Jews.[23] Later in the speech, Pacelli referred to those who were persecuting the Church at that time by doing things like expelling religion and perverting Christianity, and since Jews were not doing this, but Nazi Germany was, the Pope "was clearly equating the Nazis, not Jews, to those who persecuted the Church at earlier times".[23] They report that Pacelli then returned to the theme of Christ's sufferings that was being repeated in his day through, in their opinion, totalitarian regimes (not Jews) and exhorted his listeners, "Let us replace the cry of 'Crucify' made by Christ's enemies, with the 'Hosanna' of our fidelity and our love."[23]

Gabriel Wilensky, while accepting that Pacelli may indeed allude to communists and Nazis earlier in the speech, rejects Rychlak and Doino's interpretation that excludes Jews. Wilensky notes that when Pacelli speaks in a later passage of the call "Crucify him!" Pacelli is referring to the New Testament in which it is Jews who are described as calling out "Crucify him!"[24][b] Wilensky further notes that Pacelli's comments were stereotypical of the way Jews were once portrayed by the Church as Christ-killers and deicides. (See also La Civiltà Cattolica and Nostra aetate.)[24][c]

The influential Vatican journal La Civiltà Cattolica continued to print attacks against Hungarian Jews during this period, asserting that Hungary could be saved from Jewish influence which was "disastrous for the religious, moral, and social life of the Hungarian people" only if the government forbids them entry to the country.[25][26] Holocaust historian Paul O'Shea notes, "There is no evidence that he [Pacelli] objected to the anti-Jewish rants of Civiltà Cattolica, which, as Secretary of State to Pius XI, he at least tacitly approved. The Pope or his Secretary of State gave the final fiat for the editorial content of the journal. There is no way that Cardinal Pacelli could not have known of the Judeophobia written in Civiltà."[27]

1939

Nazis oppose election of Pacelli as Pope

The Nazi regime disapproved of Pacelli's election as Pope. Historian of the Holocaust Martin Gilbert wrote: "So outspoken were Pacelli’s criticisms that Hitler’s regime lobbied against him, trying to prevent his becoming the successor to Pius XI. When he did become Pope, as Pius XII, in March 1939, Nazi Germany was the only government not to send a representative to his coronation."[18] Joseph Goebbels noted in his diary on 4 March 1939 that Hitler was considering whether to abrogate the Concordat with Rome in light of Pacelli's election as Pope, adding, "This will surely happen when Pacelli undertakes his first hostile act."[28]

Efforts to avoid war

Pius XII lobbied world leaders to prevent the outbreak of World War II.[20] With Poland overrun, but France and the Low Countries yet to be attacked, Pius continued to hope for a negotiated peace to prevent the spread of the conflict. The similarly minded US President Franklin D. Roosevelt began to re-establish American diplomatic relations with the Vatican after a seventy-year hiatus and dispatched Myron C. Taylor as his personal representative.[29] American correspondence spoke of "parallel endeavours for peace and the alleviation of suffering".[30] Despite the early collapse of peace hopes, the Taylor mission continued at the Vatican.[29]

Reaction to the racial laws

In 1939, the newly elected Pope Pius XII appointed several prominent Jewish scholars to posts at the Vatican after they had been dismissed from Italian universities under Fascist leader Benito Mussolini's racial laws.[31] Pius later engineered an agreement – formally approved on 23 June 1939 – with Brazilian President Getúlio Vargas to issue 3,000 visas to "non-Aryan Catholics".

However, over the next eighteen months, Brazil's Conselho de Imigração e Colonização (CIC) continued to tighten the restrictions on visa issuance – including requiring a baptismal certificate dated before 1933, a substantial monetary transfer to the Banco do Brasil, and approval by the Brazilian Propaganda Office in Berlin – culminating in the cancellation of the program fourteen months later, after fewer than 1,000 visas had been issued, amid suspicions of "improper conduct" (i.e. continuing to practice Judaism) among those who had received visas.[32][33]

Encyclical letter Summi Pontificatus

Summi Pontificatus was the first encyclical of Pope Pius XII published on 20 October 1939. The encyclical is subtitled "On the Unity of Human Society".[34] During the drafting of the letter, the Second World War commenced with the Nazi/Soviet invasion of Catholic Poland. Couched in diplomatic language, Pius endorses Catholic resistance, and states disapproval of the war, racism, the Nazi/Soviet invasion of Poland and the persecutions of the Church.[35] Following themes addressed in Non abbiamo bisogno (1931), Mit brennender Sorge (1937) and Divini redemptoris (1937), Pius wrote of a need to bring back to the Church those who were following "a false standard ... misled by error, passion, temptation and prejudice, [who] have strayed away from faith in the true God".[10] He wrote of "Christians unfortunately more in name than in fact" showing "cowardice" in the face of persecution by these creeds, and endorsed resistance:

Who among "the Soldiers of Christ"—ecclesiastic or layman—does not feel himself incited and spurred on to a greater vigilance, to a more determined resistance, by the sight of the ever-increasing host of Christ's enemies; as he perceives the spokesmen of these tendencies deny or in practice neglect the vivifying truths and the values inherent in belief in God and in Christ; as he perceives them wantonly break the Tables of God's Commandments to substitute other tables and other standards stripped of the ethical content of the Revelation on Sinai, standards in which the spirit of the Sermon on the Mount and of the Cross has no place?

— Pius XII, Summi Pontificatus[10]

Pius wrote of a time requiring "charity" for victims who had a "right" to compassion.

John Cornwell notes the "powerful words" on the theme of the "unity of the human race" and the use of a quotation from Saint Paul that in Christ there is "neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision".[36] Frank Coppa wrote "It is true that Pius XII's first encyclical of 20 October 1939 rejected the claims of absolute state authority propounded by the totalitarian powers, but his denunciation was general rather than specific and difficult to decipher."[37]

The Western allies dropped leaflets over Germany containing a translation in German of the Pope's encyclical and broadcast its contents.[38] In Berlin von Bergen declared that the Pope had ceased to be neutral whilst in Italy Mussolini allowed it to be printed.[39] Guenter Lewy notes the Gestapo considered the contents to be sufficiently "innocuous and ambiguous" that they allowed it to be read from the pulpits.[40] He further asserts that the Pope's pronunciations in the encyclical relating to his intention "to give testimony to the truth" without fear of opposition, along with similar sentiments expressed by the German episcopate, "remained an empty formula in the face of the Jewish tragedy".[41][42] Saul Friedländer also notes that Pius said nothing about the persecution of Jews.[43] Susan Zuccotti opined that Pius failed "dismally" to live up to promises made in the encyclical in the "light of his subsequent silence in the face of appalling horrors". To Zucotti, the letter cannot be depicted as a campaign against anti-Judaism but was still "made a valuable statement".[44] Owen Chadwick notes that Germans, even allowing it to be read from many pulpits, stopped its printing and distribution and the Gestapo ordered inquiries into people who read or tried to distribute it. Chadwick concludes that Summi Pontificatus "in its way it was as strong an attack on Nazi Policies as Mit brennender Sorge of Pius XI".[45]

Ambiguous message on racism

In Summi Pontificatus, Pius XII reiterated Catholic commitment to human brotherhood, in a passage that some commentators have seen as an indirect condemnation of racism and anti-semitism:

In accordance with these principles of equality, the Church devotes her care to forming cultured native clergy and gradually increasing the number of native Bishops. And in order to give external expression to these, Our intentions, We have chosen the forthcoming Feast of Christ the King to raise to the Episcopal dignity at the Tomb of the Apostles twelve representatives of widely different peoples and races. In the midst of the disruptive contrasts which divide the human family, may this solemn act proclaim to all Our sons, scattered over the world, that the spirit, the teaching and the work of the Church can never be other than that which the Apostle of the Gentiles preached: "putting on the new, (man) him who is renewed unto knowledge, according to the image of him that created him. Where there is neither Gentile nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, barbarian nor Scythian, bond nor free. But Christ is all and in all" (Colossians iii. 10, 11).

— Pius XII, Summi Pontificatus[9]

Ronald Rychlak wrote that "the equating of Gentiles and Jews would have to be seen as a clear rejection of Hitler's fundamental ideology".[8] Martin Rhonheimer interpreted the text as lacking an "explicit" reference to racism, but containing "implicit" reference to it in the section on "The unity of the human race" which he thinks is possibly an echo of the never-issued encyclical against racism which would have dealt with antisemitism and the "Jewish question", topics not dealt with in Summi Pontificatus.[46] Rhonheimer considered that the encyclical did not condemn the "modern form" of social, political and economic antisemitism which was driven by traditional anti-Judaism and which he saw as shared by Catholics in various degrees.[46] (See also La Civiltà Cattolica and Pope Pius XI's speech to Belgian pilgrims.) Tim Parks has similarly observed that the text does not explicitly address racism, and David Kertzer notes that German newspapers interpreted the encyclical as supporting the German cause.[11]

Invasion of Poland

In Summi Pontificatus, in the aftermath of the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, Pius XII expressed dismay at the outbreak of war – "the dread tempest of war is already raging despite all Our efforts to avert it" – and declared his sympathy for the Polish people and hope of the resurrection of their nation:

The blood of countless human beings, even noncombatants, raises a piteous dirge over a nation such as Our dear Poland, which, for its fidelity to the Church, for its services in the defense of Christian civilization, written in indelible characters in the annals of history, has a right to the generous and brotherly sympathy of the whole world, while it awaits, relying on the powerful intercession of Mary, Help of Christians, the hour of a resurrection in harmony with the principles of justice and true peace.

— Pius XII, Summi Pontificatus[35]

Phayer (2000) interprets the encyclical as condemning war but not condemning the invasion.

The Catholic Church in Poland became subject to brutal Nazi repression.

In May 1942, the Pope appointed a German Apostolic Administrator to lands in Nazi-occupied Poland (Wurtheland). According to Phayer (2008), this was seen as implicit recognition of the breakup of Poland and that this, combined with Pius's failure to explicitly censure the invasion, led to a sense of betrayal amongst the Poles.[47]

In December 1942, the Polish President in exile wrote to Pius XII appealing that "the silence must be broken by the Apostolic See".[48]

Hidden encyclical

Walter Bussmann has argued that Pacelli, as Cardinal Secretary of State, dissuaded Pope Pius XI – who was nearing death at the time[49] – from condemning Kristallnacht in November 1938,[50] when he was informed of it by the papal nuncio in Berlin.[32] Likewise a draft, prepared by September 1938, for an encyclical Humani generis unitas ("On the Unity of the Human Race"), was, according to the two publishers of the draft text[51] and other sources, not forwarded to the Vatican by the Jesuit General Wlodimir Ledóchowski.[52] On 28 January 1939, eleven days before the death of Pope Pius XI, a disappointed Gundlach informed the author La Farge: "It cannot continue like this. The text has not been forwarded to the Vatican."

He had talked to the American assistant to Father General, who promised to look into the matter in December 1938, but did not report back.[53] It contained an open and clear condemnation of colonialism, racism and antisemitism.[52][54] Some historians have argued that Pacelli learned about its existence only after the death of Pius XI and did not promulgate it as Pope.[d] He did however use parts of it in his inaugural encyclical Summi Pontificatus, which he titled "On the Unity of Human Society".[34]

1940–1941

Pius assists German Resistance

The Holocaust was made possible by the German conquest of Europe. Pius XII attempted to stop this conquest. With Poland overrun but France and the Low Countries yet to be attacked, the German Resistance sought the Pope's assistance in preparations for a coup to oust Hitler. Colonel Hans Oster of the Abwehr sent Munich lawyer and devout Catholic Josef Müller on a clandestine trip to Rome to seek papal assistance in the developing plot.[55] Pius, communicating with Britain's Francis d'Arcy Osborne, channelled communications back and forth in secrecy.[56] The Pope warned the Belgian and Dutch Governments that Germany was planning an invasion for 10 May 1940.[57] According to Peter Hebblethwaite, the Germans "regarded the Pope's behaviour as equivalent to espionage".[58] Following the Fall of France, peace overtures continued to emanate from the Vatican, to which Churchill responded resolutely that Germany would first have to free its conquered territories.[59] The negotiations ultimately proved fruitless. Hitler's swift victories over France and the Low Countries deflated the will of the German military to resist Hitler.[60] The Resistance and Pius continued to communicate.

1940 request on behalf of Jews

In 1940 Pius asked members of the clergy, on Vatican letterhead, to do whatever they could on behalf of interned Jews.[61]

1942

1942 Christmas Address to College of Cardinals

In December 1942, in his Christmas discourse to members of the Roman curia, Pius XII remarks on how both the Church and its ministers experience the "sign of contradiction" as they try to defend truth and virtue for the well-being of souls. The Pope questions whether such efforts of love and sacrifice could nevertheless furnish reasons for lamentation, for pusillanimity, or for the weakening of apostolic courage and zeal. He responds in the negative:

The apostle's deserved lament ... is the regret that weighed on the heart of the Savior and made him pour out tears at the sight of Jerusalem, the place which to his invitation and his grace opposed such obstinate blindness and such stubborn lack of recognition, that would lead her along the path of blame, in the end to deicide.

— Pope Pius XII[62]

Historian Guido Knopp describes these comments of Pius as being "incomprehensible" at a time when "Jerusalem was being murdered by the million".[63]

The Netherlands

On 26 July 1942, Dutch bishops, including Archbishop Johannes de Jong, issued a decree that openly condemned Nazi deportations of Dutch workers and Jews. The Nazi response was the rounding up of over 40,000 Catholics of Jewish descent who were never heard from again. After this event, Sister Pascalina Lehnert said the Pope was convinced that while the Bishop's protest cost forty thousand lives, a protest by him would mean at least two hundred thousand innocent lives that he was not ready to sacrifice. While politicians, generals, and dictators might gamble with the lives of people, a Pope could not. Pius XII often repeated what he told the Italian ambassador to the Vatican in 1940, "We would like to utter words of fire against such actions [German atrocities] and the only thing restraining us from speaking is the fear of making the plight of the victims even worse."[64]

1942 letters

On 18 September 1942, Pius received a letter from Monsignor Montini (future Pope Paul VI), saying, "the massacres of the Jews reach frightening proportions and forms". Later that month, Myron Taylor, U.S. representative to the Vatican, warned Pius that the Vatican's "moral prestige" was being injured by silence on European atrocities. According to Phayer, this warning was echoed simultaneously by representatives from Great Britain, Brazil, Uruguay, Belgium, and Poland.[65]

Taylor passed a US Government memorandum to Pius on 26 September 1942, outlining intelligence received from the Jewish Agency for Palestine which said that Jews from across the Nazi Empire were being systematically "butchered". Taylor asked if the Vatican might have any information which might tend to "confirm the reports", and if so, what the Pope might be able to do to influence public opinion against the "barbarities".[66] Cardinal Maglione handed Harold H. Tittmann, Jr. a response to the letter on 10 October. The note thanked Washington for passing on the intelligence, and confirmed that reports of severe measures against the Jews had reached the Vatican from other sources, though it had not been possible to "verify their accuracy". Nevertheless, "every opportunity is being taken by the Holy See, however, to mitigate the suffering of these unfortunate people".[67]

In December 1942, when Tittmann asked Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione if Pius would issue a proclamation similar to the Allied declaration "German Policy of Extermination of the Jewish Race", Maglione replied that the Vatican was "unable to denounce publicly particular atrocities".[68]

Christmas 1942 message

In his Christmas address of 1942, Pius XII appealed to the world to take a long, hard look at "the ruins of a social order which has given such tragic proof of its ineptitude".[69]

Mankind owes that vow to the numberless exiles whom the hurricane of war has torn from their native land and scattered in the land of the stranger; who can make their own the lament of the Prophet: "Our inheritance is turned to aliens; our house to strangers." Mankind owes that vow to the hundreds of thousands of persons who, without any fault on their part, sometimes only because of their nationality or race, have been consigned to death or slow extermination.

— Pius XII, Christmas Radio Address, 1942

Reinhard Heydrich's Reich Central Security Office analyzed Pius' Christmas message and concluded:

In a manner never known before, the Pope has repudiated the National Socialist New European Order. His radio allocution was a masterpiece of clerical falsification of the National Socialist Weltanschauung … 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 … God, he says, regards all peoples and races as worthy of the same consideration. Here he is clearly speaking on behalf of the Jews ... That this speech is directed exclusively against the New Order in Europe as seen in National Socialism is clear in the papal statement that mankind owes a debt to "all who during the war have lost their Fatherland and who, although personally blameless have, simply on account of their nationality and origin, been killed or reduced to utter destitution". Here he is virtually accusing the German people of injustice towards the Jews, and makes himself the mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals.

On the contrary, according to Galeazzo Ciano, Mussolini commented on the pope's message with sarcasm: "This is a speech of platitudes which might better be made by the parish priest of Predappio."[70]

1943

Ad maiora mala vitanda

On 30 April 1943, Pius wrote to Bishop Von Preysing of Berlin to say: "We give to the pastors who are working on the local level the duty of determining if and to what degree the danger of reprisals and of various forms of oppression occasioned by episcopal declarations ... ad maiora mala vitanda (to avoid worse) ... seem to advise caution. Here lies one of the reasons, why We impose self-restraint on Ourselves in our speeches; the experience, that we made in 1942 with papal addresses, which We authorized to be forwarded to the Believers, justifies our opinion, as far as We see. ... The Holy See has done whatever was in its power, with charitable, financial and moral assistance. To say nothing of the substantial sums which we spent in American money for the fares of immigrants."[71]

News from Father Scavizzi

In the spring of 1943 Pirro Scavizzi, an Italian priest, told Pius that the murder of the Jews was "now total", even the elderly and infants were being destroyed "without mercy". Pius is reported to have broken down and wept uncontrollably.[72]

Pius said to Father Scavizzi, "I have often considered excommunication, to castigate in the eyes of the entire world the fearful crime of genocide. But after much praying and many tears, I realize that my condemnation would not only fail to help the Jews, it might even worsen their situation ... No doubt a protest would gain me the praise and respect of the civilized world, but it would have submitted the poor Jews to an even worse persecution."[73]

Attempted kidnapping

In 1943, plans were allegedly formulated by Hitler to occupy the Vatican and arrest Pius and the cardinals of the Roman Curia.[74][75][76] According to Rev. Peter Gumpel, a historian in charge of Pius' canonization process, the Pope told leading bishops that should he be arrested by Nazi forces, his resignation would take immediate effect and that the Holy See would move to another country, specifically Portugal, where the College of Cardinals would elect a new pope.[77] Some historians argue that the reason Hitler wanted to capture the Pope was because he was concerned Pius would continue speaking against the way the Nazis treated the Jews.[77][78] However, the plan was never brought to fruition, and was reportedly foiled by Nazi general Karl Wolff. Both British historian Owen Chadwick and Jesuit ADSS editor Robert A. Graham dismissed the existence of a plot as a creation of the Political Warfare Executive. However, subsequent to those accounts, Dan Kurzman in 2007 published a work which he maintains establishes the plot as fact.[79][80]

German occupation of Rome

According to Joseph Lichten, the Vatican was called upon by the Jewish Community Council in Rome to help fill a Nazi demand of one hundred Troy Pounds (37.3 kilograms) of gold. The Council had been able to muster seventy pounds (26.1 kg.), but unless the entire amount was produced within thirty-six hours had been told three hundred Jews would be imprisoned. The Pope offered an interest-free loan without a time limit, according to Chief Rabbi Zolli of Rome.[81][82] However, the Roman Jewish community managed to meet the requirement, and delivered the gold to the occupiers on September 28.[83] Despite the payment of the ransom, 1,015 Jews were deported on 16 October 1943 in the Roman razzia, and 839 of them were murdered in concentration and death camps.[84] Many others were also killed on 24 March 1944, at the Fosse Ardeatine.

Nuncio Orsenigo's appeal to Hitler

 
Cesare Orsenigo with Hitler and von Ribbentrop

In November 1943, nuncio Cesare Orsenigo spoke to the leader of the Third Reich on behalf of Pope Pius XII. In his conversation with Hitler, he talked about the status of persecuted peoples in the Third Reich, apparently referring to Jews. This conversation with the Nazi leader led to no success. Over large parts of the conversation Hitler simply ignored Orsenigo; he went to the window and did not listen.[85][e]

1944–1945

Actions of Angelo Roncalli

Part of the historical debate surrounding Pius XII has concerned the role of nuncio Angelo Roncalli, the future John XXIII, in rescuing Jews during the War. While some historians have argued that Roncalli was acting as a nuncio on behalf of the Pope, others have said that he was acting on his own when he intervened on behalf of Jews, as it would appear by the rather independent position he took during the Jewish orphans controversy.[86] According to Michael Phayer, Roncalli always said that he had been acting on the orders of Pius XII in his actions to rescue Jews.[87][page needed]

According to the Raoul Wallenberg Foundation, Roncalli forwarded a request for the Vatican to inquire whether other neutral countries could grant asylum to Jews, to inform the German government that the Palestine Jewish Agency had 5,000 immigration certificates available and to ask Vatican Radio to broadcast that helping Jews was an act of mercy approved by the Church. In 1944, Roncalli used diplomatic couriers, papal representatives and the Sisters of Our Lady of Zion to transport and issue baptismal certificates, immigration certificates and visas – many of them forged – to Hungarian Jews. A dispatch dated Aug. 16, 1944 from Roncalli to the papal nuncio to Hungary illustrates the intensity of "Operation Baptism".[citation needed]

Roman razzia

On 28 October 1943, Ernst von Weizsäcker, the German Ambassador to the Vatican, telegrammed Berlin that "the Pope has not yet let himself be persuaded to make an official condemnation of the deportation of the Roman Jews. ... Since it is currently thought that the Germans will take no further steps against the Jews in Rome, the question of our relations with the Vatican may be considered closed."[88][89]

After receiving a sentence of death, Adolf Eichmann wrote in his diary an account of the round up of Roman Jews: "At that time, my office received the copy of a letter, that I immediately gave to my direct superiors, sent by the Catholic Church in Rome, in the person of Bishop Hudal, to the commander of the German forces in Rome, General Stahel. The Church was vigorously protesting the arrest of Jews of Italian citizenship, requesting that such actions be interrupted immediately throughout Rome and its surroundings. To the contrary, the Pope would denounce it publicly ... The Curia was especially angry because these incidents were taking place practically under Vatican windows. But, precisely at that time, without paying any attention to the Church's position, the Italian Fascist Government passed a law ordering the deportation of all Italian Jews to concentration camps. ... The objections given and the excessive delay in the steps necessary to complete the implementation of the operation resulted in a great part of Italian Jews being able to hide and escape capture."[90]

Historian Susan Zuccotti, author of Under His Very Windows: The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy, wrote "If the Pope remained silent, however, he allowed nuns, monks, priests, and prelates in his diocese, including several at the Vicaraite, to involve themselves in Jewish rescue. Many Church institutions, including Vatican properties sheltered Jews along with other types of fugitives for long periods."[91][92] James Kurth in his essay The Defamation of Pope Pius XII, writes that she [Susan Zuccotti] "is intent on arguing that Pius XII even allowed the deportation of the Jews of Rome from 'under his very windows'. To do so, she has to be silent about the much greater number of Roman Jews that the Church, with the approval of the Pope, hid within a wide network of monasteries, convents, schools, and hospitals, 'under the very windows' of the Gestapo and the collaborating Fascist police."[93] Kurth concludes his article "It is a demonstration of the depravity and hypocrisy of these liberals and radicals that they seek to achieve the silence and passivity of the Pope and the Church during this current and ongoing holocaust [abortion], by falsely accusing them of committing the crimes of silence and passivity during the Holocaust of sixty years ago."[93]

In August 2006, extracts from the 60-year-old diary of a nun of the Convent of Santi Quattro Coronati[94] were published in the Italian press, stating that Pope Pius XII ordered Rome's convents and monasteries to hide Jews during the Second World War.[95]

Conversions of Jews to Catholicism

The conversion of Jews to Catholicism during the Holocaust is one of the most controversial aspects of the record of Pope Pius XII during that period. According to Roth and Ritner, "this is a key point because, in debates about Pius XII, his defenders regularly point to denunciations of racism and defense of Jewish converts as evidence of opposition to antisemitism of all sorts".[96] The Holocaust is one of the most acute examples of the "recurrent and acutely painful issue in the Catholic-Jewish dialogue", namely "Christian efforts to convert Jews".[97]

Meeting with Churchill

In August 1944, following the Liberation of Rome Pius met British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, who was visiting the city. At their meeting, the Pope acknowledged the justice of punishing war criminals, but expressed a hope that the people of Italy would not be punished, but, with the war continuing, he hoped that they would be made "full allies".[98]

Holocaust by country

Austria

In 1941, Cardinal Theodor Innitzer of Vienna informed Pius of Jewish deportations in Vienna.

Croatia

Archbishop Stepinac called a synod of Croatian bishops in November 1941. The synod appealed to Croatian leader Ante Pavelić to treat Jews "as humanely as possible, considering that there were German troops in the country". The Vatican replied with praise to Marcone with praise for what the synod had done for "citizens of Jewish origin", although Israeli historian Menachem Shelah demonstrates that the synod concerned itself only with converted Jews. Pius XII personally praised the synod for "courage and decisiveness".[99]

France

Later in 1941, when asked by French Marshal Philippe Pétain if the Vatican objected to anti-Jewish laws, Pius responded that the Church condemned antisemitism, but would not comment on specific rules. Similarly, when Philippe Pétain's regime adopted the "Jewish statutes", the Vichy ambassador to the Vatican, Léon Bérard (a French politician), was told that the legislation did not conflict with Catholic teachings.[100] Valerio Valeri, the nuncio to France was "embarrassed" when he learned of this publicly from Pétain[101] and personally checked the information with Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione[102] who confirmed the Vatican's position.[103]

Yet in June 1942 Pius personally protested against the mass deportations of Jews from France, ordering the papal nuncio to protest to Marshal Pétain against "the inhuman arrests and deportations of Jews".[104] In October 1941 Harold Tittman, a U.S. delegate to the Vatican, asked the pope to condemn the atrocities against Jews; Pius replied that the Vatican wished to remain "neutral",[105] reiterating the neutrality policy which Pius invoked as early as September 1940.[100]

Hungary

Before the Holocaust began, an International Eucharistic Conference took place in Budapest in Hungary during 1938. Cardinal Pacelli addressed the congress and described the Jews as people "whose lips curse [Christ] and whose hearts reject him even today". Michael Phayer asserts that the timing of the statement, during a period when Hungary was in the process of formulating new antisemitic laws, ran counter to Pope Pius XI's September statement urging Catholics to honour their spiritual father Abraham.[101]

In March 1944, through the papal nuncio in Budapest, Angelo Rotta, the pope urged the Hungarian government to moderate its treatment of the Jews.[106] The pope also ordered Rotta and other papal legates to hide and shelter Jews.[107] These protests, along with others from the King of Sweden, the International Red Cross, the United States, and Britain led to the cessation of deportations on 8 July 1944.[108] Also in 1944, Pius appealed to 13 Latin American governments to accept "emergency passports", although it also took the intervention of the U.S. State Department for those countries to honor the documents.[109]

Lithuania

Cardinal Secretary of State Luigi Maglione received a request from Chief Rabbi of Palestine Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog in the spring of 1939 to intercede on behalf of Lithuanian Jews about to be deported to Germany.[106] Pius called Ribbentrop on 11 March, repeatedly protesting against the treatment of Jews. In his 1940 encyclical Summi Pontificatus, Pius rejected antisemitism, stating that in the Catholic Church there is "neither Gentile nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision".[110] In 1940 Pius asked members of the clergy, on Vatican letterhead, to do whatever they could on behalf of interned Jews.[61]

The Netherlands

After Germany invaded the Low Countries during 1940, Pius XII sent expressions of sympathy to the Queen of the Netherlands, the King of Belgium, and the Grand Duchess of Luxembourg. When Mussolini learned of the warnings and the telegrams of sympathy, he took them as a personal affront and had his ambassador to the Vatican file an official protest, charging that Pius XII had taken sides against Italy's ally Germany. Mussolini's foreign minister claimed that Pius XII was "ready to let himself be deported to a concentration camp, rather than do anything against his conscience".[111]

When Dutch bishops protested against the wartime deportation of Jews in 1942, the Nazis responded with harsher measures rounding up 92 converts including Edith Stein who were then deported and murdered. "The brutality of the retaliation made an enormous impression on Pius XII."[112][f]

Slovakia

In September 1941 Pius objected to a Slovakian Jewish Code,[113] which, unlike the earlier Vichy codes, prohibited intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews.[101]

In 1942, the Slovakian charge d'affaires told Pius that Slovakian Jews were being sent to concentration camps. On 11 March 1942, several days before the first transport was due to leave, the chargé d'affaires in Bratislava reported to the Vatican: "I have been assured that this atrocious plan is the handwork of ... Prime Minister (Tuka), who confirmed the plan ... he dared to tell me – he who makes such a show of his Catholicism – that he saw nothing inhuman or un-Christian in it ... the deportation of 80,000 persons to Poland, is equivalent to condemning a great number of them to certain death." The Vatican protested to the Slovak government that it "deplore[s] these ... measures which gravely hurt the natural human rights of persons, merely because of their race".[114]

On 7 April 1943, Monsignor Domenico Tardini, one of Pius's closest advisors, told Pius that it would be politically advantageous after the war to take steps to help Slovakian Jews.[115]

Alleged silence

Historian Susan Zuccotti argued that "Pius XII, the head of the Roman Catholic Church during the Second World War, did not speak out publicly against the destruction of the Jews. This fact is rarely contested, nor can it be. Evidence of a public protest, if it existed, would be easy to produce. It does not exist."[116][117][118] Ecclesiastical historian William Doino (author of The Pius War: Responses to the Critics of Pius XII) contests Zuccotti's assertion, and has said that Pius XII was "emphatically not 'silent', and did in fact condemn the Nazis' horrific crimes–through Vatican Radio, his first encyclical, Summi Pontificatus, his major addresses (especially his Christmas allocutions), and the L’Osservatore Romano" and he "intervened, time and time again, for persecuted Jews, particularly during the German occupation of Rome, and was cited and hailed by the Catholic rescuers themselves as their leader and director".[119] Indeed, Pius XII said in the Christmas address that mankind owed a vow "to the hundreds of thousands of persons who, without any fault on their part, sometimes only because of their nationality or race, have been consigned to death or slow extermination."[69]

In A History of Christianity, Michael Burleigh writes:

For reasons either of personal character or of professional training as a diplomat, his [Pius's] statements were exceedingly cautious and wrapped up in involuted language that is difficult for many to understand, especially in this age of the resonant sound-bite and ubiquitous rent-a-moralist.[120][g]

According to Giovanni Maria Vian of the Vatican Jesuit journal La Civiltà Cattolica the roots of Pius's alleged "silence", what he terms "a black legend", begins in early 1939 with the complaint of the French Catholic intellectual Emmanuel Mounier who questioned the failure of the Pope to censure the Italian aggression of Italy towards Albania and wrote off "the scandal of this silence".[121] He further notes that in 1951 another French Catholic intellectual, François Mauriac, wrote in the introduction to a book by "the Jew Poliakov" that "we never had the comfort of hearing the successor of Galilee, Simon Peter, [i.e Pius XII] use clear and precise words, rather than diplomatic allusions, to condemn the countless crucifixions of the 'brothers of the Lord' [i.e. Jewish people]".[121]

The British representative to the Vatican wrote the following in 1942: "A policy of silence in regard to such offences against the conscience of the world must necessarily involve a renunciation of moral leadership and a consequent atrophy of the influence of the Vatican".[122] Pius himself noted on 3 August 1946 "We condemned on various occasions in the past the persecution that a fanatical anti-Semitism inflicted on the Hebrew people."[123] Garry Wills comments that "this is a deliberate falsehood. He never publicly mentioned the Holocaust."[123][h][i] Michael Phayer notes that with the exception of the "very guarded terms" used in the 1942 Christmas message, Pope Pius did not speak out publicly about the Holocaust.[46][124] Paul Johnson wrote "The Pope gave no guidance. Pius XII advised all Catholic everywhere to fight with valour and charity" and "What made Pius keep silent, apart from natural timidity and fear for the safety of the Vatican itself, was undoubtedly his belief that a total breach between Rome and Hitler would lead to a separatist German Catholic Church."[125][j][k]

Ronald Rychlak notes that Pius was recorded as saying "No doubt a protest would have gained me praise and respect of the civilized world, but it would have submitted the poor Jew to an even worse fate."[126][l] Guenter Lewy notes that some writers have suggested that a public protest by the Pope would only have made things worse for the Jews but comments "Since the condition of the Jews could hardly have become worse, and might have changed for the better, as a result of a papal denunciation, one could ask why the Church did not risk the well being and safety of the Catholics and of the Vatican."[127] Michael Phayer notes Pius XII making similar excuses in 1940 but comments that "This justification cannot be taken seriously."[124][m] It is worth pointing out though, that while European Jews were being exterminated, the Nazis never systematically killed Mischlinge, or people of partial Jewish descent. Frank Coppa wrote: "During World War II as well, Papa Pacelli's diplomatic focus often restricted his moral mission, refusing to openly condemn Nazism's evil actions including its genocide when it appeared it might triumph, but denouncing it as satanic when it was defeated."[37]

Martin Rhonheimer comments "Well-intentioned Catholic apologists continue to produce reports of Church condemnations of Nazism and racism. But these do not really answer the Church's critics. The real problem is not the Church's relationship to National Socialism and racism, but the Church's relationship to the Jews. Here we need what the Church today urges: a 'purification of memory and conscience.' The Catholic Church's undeniable hostility to National Socialism and racism cannot be used to justify its silence about the persecution of the Jews. It is one thing to explain this silence historically and make it understandable. It is quite another to use such explanations for apologetic purposes."[46]

Cardinal Tisserant, a senior member of the Roman Curia wrote to Cardinal Suhard, the Archbishop of Paris, as Nazi forces were overrunning France in June 1940. Tisserant expressed his concern at the racism of the Nazis, the systematic destruction of their victims and the moral reserve of Pope Pius XII: "I'm afraid that history may be obliged in time to come to blame the Holy See for a policy accommodated to its own advantage and little more. And that is extremely sad – above all when one has lived under Pius XI."[128]

President Franklin D. Roosevelt sent Myron C. Taylor as his special representative to the Vatican in September 1941. His assistant, Harold Tittman, repeatedly pointed out to Pius the dangers to his moral leadership by his failure to speak out against the violations of the natural law carried out by the Nazis.[129] Pius XII responded that he could not name the Nazis without at the same time mentioning the Bolsheviks.[130]

Pius XII also never publicly condemned the Nazi massacre of 1.8–1.9 million mainly Catholic Polish gentiles (including 2,935 members of the Catholic Clergy),[131][132] nor did he ever publicly condemn the Soviet Union for the deaths of over 100,000 mainly Catholic Polish gentile citizens including an untold number of clergy.[133]

In an interview Father Peter Gumpel stated that Robert Kempner's (former U.S. Nuremberg war crimes prosecutor) foreword to Jeno Levai's 1968 book "Hungarian Jewry and the Papacy" asserts that Pope Pius did indeed complain through diplomatic channels about the situation of Hungarian Jews but that any public protestation would have been of no use.[134][135]

Praise from Jewish leaders

Post-war praise by Jewish leaders

Pinchas Lapide, a Jewish theologian and Israeli diplomat to Milan in the 1960s, wrote in Three Popes and the Jews that Catholics were "instrumental in saving at least 700,000 but probably as many as 860,000 Jews from certain death at Nazi hands".[136] Some historians have questioned this oft-cited number,[137] which Lapide reached by "deducting all reasonable claims of rescue" by non-Catholics from the number of Jews he claims succeeded in escaping to the free world from Nazi-controlled areas during the Holocaust.[138]

According to Rabbi David Dalin, in the aftermath of the war, some of the Jewish leaders who hailed Pius XII a righteous gentile for his work in saving thousands of Jews included the scientist Albert Einstein, the Israeli Prime Ministers Golda Meir and Moshe Sharett, and the Chief Rabbi Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog.[139]

The Chief Rabbi of Rome, Israel Zolli, took refuge in the Vatican following the Nazi occupation of Rome in 1943. Upon the arrival of the Allied Forces in Rome, on June 4, 1944, Israel Zolli resumed the post of Grand Rabbi and in the following July he celebrated a solemn ceremony in the Synagogue, which was broadcast by radio, to publicly express the gratitude of the Jewish community to Pius XII, for the help given to them during the Nazi persecution. Furthermore, on 25 July 1944 he went to the Vatican for an audience to officially thank the pope for what he, personally or through Catholics, had done in favor of the Jews, hosting them or hiding them in convents and monasteries, to save them from the racist hatred of the SS. Nazis; thus decreasing the already immense number of victims.[140] After the war he converted to Catholicism and took the name "Eugenio" in honour of Pope Pius XII.

On 21 September 1945, the general secretary of the World Jewish Council, Dr. Leon Kubowitzky, presented an amount of money to the pope, "in recognition of the work of the Holy See in rescuing Jews from Fascist and Nazi persecutions".[141] After the war, in the autumn of 1945, Harry Greenstein from Baltimore, a close friend of Chief Rabbi Herzog of Jerusalem, told Pius how grateful Jews were for all he had done for them. The pope replied, "My only regret is not to have been able to save a greater number of Jews."[142]

Catholic scholar Kevin Madigan interprets such praise from prominent Jewish leaders, including Golda Meir, as less than sincere; an attempt to secure Vatican recognition of the State of Israel.[143]

Historiography

Early accounts

Early literature on the war time leadership of Pius XII was positive, including Halecki and Murray's Pius XII: Eugenio Pacelli, Pope of Peace (1954) and Nazareno Padellaro's Portrait of Pius XII (first published in Italian in 1949). Later, more critical accounts were written.[2]

Pius XII died in October 1958. In 1959 the German bishops issued a series of statements regarding the Holocaust which acknowledged German guilt, in particular that of Catholics and their bishops. Michael Phayer considered it no accident that they waited until Pius's death before speaking out and that all those who had not kept silent were post-war appointees.[144] During Adolf Eichmann's much publicized trial in 1960 a question arose relating to the Vatican's knowledge of the Holocaust and if Pope Pius's refusal to speak out was based on fears on what would happen to German Catholics. This sparked public debate in Germany on the relationship of the Church to the Holocaust and Michael Phayer identifies this as when Pius's XII high repute began to wane.[145]

E. W. Bockenforde's article published in the Catholic periodical "Hochland" in 1961 resulted in vehement attacks by many Catholics.[146] In 1962 the historian Friedrich Heer commented that "In 1945 the situation was so critical that only a gigantic attempt at concealment was ... able to save and restore the face of official Christianity in Germany ... I have to confess that all Catholics, from the highest to the lowest – priest, chaplains, laymen (anti-Semitic to this day) – are co-responsible for the mass murder of the Jews."[147]

In 1960 Guenter Lewy began work on his book "The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany", combing the records of the German diocesan, State and party archives, and finally publishing the work in 1964. Though recognising that the Church is hierarchical, it is not immune to the influence of its branches and therefore he does not focus purely on the role of Pius XII.[148][n] Lewy wrote "It is symptomatic of the boldness with which some Catholic writers after 1945 have falsified important documents from the Nazi period."[149][150]

In 1963, Rolf Hochhuth staged his play The Representative (or The Deputy) which depicted Pius as an antisemite and indifferent to the Holocaust. The depiction was called "unhistorical" and lacking "credible substantiation" by the Encyclopedia Britannica. John Cornwell, himself a critic of Pius, described the play as "historical fiction based on scant documentation" and "is so wide of the mark as to be ludicrous".[151][152]

Saul Friedländer, whose parents were murdered in Auschwitz, published his book Pius XII and the Third Reich amidst the controversy around The Deputy, in 1964. It relied heavily on primary sources and concentrated on diplomatic correspondence between the Holy See and Germany.[153][o] Friedländer hoped that the Vatican would open up its own archives and in 1964 Pope Paul VI commissioned a group of Jesuit scholars to edit and publish the Vatican's records. These were published in eleven volumes between 1965 and 1981.[154]

Carlo Falconi published in 1965 "The Silence of the Pope" and followed this with "The Popes of the Twentieth Century" in 1967 in which he criticised Pius XII for "failing to speak out"; "he also was guilty of inadmissible silence about the millions of civilian victims of Nazism – Jews, Poles, Serbs, Russians, gypsies, and others".[155] Falconi was the first to research and publicise the atrocities committed by Croatian Ustashe against Jews and Serbs.[156] Joseph Bottum considers these early attacks, by Lewy, Friedländer, and Falconi, as "more serious and scholarly" and "by today's standards, quite moderate and thoughtful".[157]

The Deputy

 
A rare 1899 handwriting of Eugenio Pacelli with text in Latin

In 1963, Rolf Hochhuth's controversial drama Der Stellvertreter. Ein christliches Trauerspiel (The Deputy, a Christian tragedy, released in English in 1964) portrayed Pope Pius XII as a hypocrite who remained silent about the Holocaust. Books such as Dr. Joseph Lichten's A Question of Judgment (1963), written in response to The Deputy, defended Pius XII's actions during the war. Lichten labelled any criticism of the pope's actions during World War II as "a stupefying paradox" and said, "no one who reads the record of Pius XII's actions on behalf of Jews can subscribe to Hochhuth's accusation".[158] Critical scholarly works like Guenter Lewy's The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany (1964) also followed the publication of The Deputy. Lewy's conclusion was that "the Pope and his advisers—influenced by the long tradition of moderate anti-Semitism so widely accepted in Vatican circles—did not view the plight of the Jews with a real sense of urgency and moral outrage. For this assertion no documentation is possible, but it is a conclusion difficult to avoid."[159] Carlo Falconi (1967) described Hochhuth's depiction as crude and inaccurate, but he does not accept the explanations put forward by apologists of Pius regarding his alleged silence. In particular he rejects the defence of not making things worse by public denunciation since no fate could have been worse than what the Jews were undergoing and that on the one occasion when bishops did speak out against the euthanasia of disabled people the Nazis backed down. He also rejected the defence that the Pope did not know of what was happening since in his opinion this is directly contradicted by instances in which Pius did make diplomatic interventions.[160] In 2002 the play was adapted into the film Amen.

An article on Jesuit Vatican journal La Civiltà Cattolica in March 2009 indicated that the accusations that Hochhuth's play made widely known originated not among Jews but in the Communist bloc. It was Moscow Radio, on 2 June 1945, that first direct against Pius XII the accusation of refusing to speak out against the exterminations in Nazi concentration camps. It was also the first to call him "Hitler's Pope".[161] The same journal during the pontificate of Pius was still accusing the Jews of being "Christ killers" and of indulging in ritual murder as late as 1942.[162]

Defector and former Securitate General Ion Mihai Pacepa has stated that the play of Hochhuth and numerous publications attacking Pius XII as allegedly having been a Nazi sympathizer were fabrications from the KGB and Eastern bloc Marxist secret services leading a campaign to discredit the moral authority of the Church and Christianity in the West.[163] Pacepa also claims that he was involved in contacting East bloc agents close to the Vatican in order to fabricate the story to be used for the attack against the wartime pope.[163]

Recent literature

Hitler's Pope and The Myth of Hitler's Pope

In recent decades, the legacy of Pius XII in relation to the Holocaust has been the subject of critical and supportive literature. Authors such as John Cornwell, Garry Wills, Michael Phayer, James Carroll, Susan Zuccotti and Daniel Goldhagen have written critical assessments, while Jewish historians such as Richard Breitman, David Dalin, Martin Gilbert, Pinchas Lapide, Jeno Levai and Michael Tagliacozzo, as well as non-Jewish scholars such as Pierre Blet, Antonio Gaspari, Robert Graham, Peter Gumpel, Margherita Marchione, Michael O'Carroll, Piertro Palazzini, Kenneth Whitehead, Ralph McInerny, Michael Feldkamp, M. L. T. Brown and Andrea Tornielli have written extensively on the work he did to aid the Jews during the war.[164]

In 1999, John Cornwell's controversial Hitler's Pope was highly critical of Pius, arguing that he had not "done enough", or "spoken out enough" against the Holocaust. Cornwell argued that Pius's entire career as the nuncio to Germany, cardinal secretary of state, and pope was characterized by a desire to increase and centralize the power of the Papacy, and that he subordinated opposition to the Nazis to that goal. He further argued that Pius was antisemitic and that this stance prevented him from caring about the European Jews.[165] (Cornwell's views have developed (as noted below), now stating he is unable to judge the Pope's motivation). In the assessment of the Encyclopedia Britannica, Cornwell's depiction of the Pope as antisemitic, lacked "credible substantiation".[2] Kenneth L. Woodward stated in his review in Newsweek that "errors of fact and ignorance of context appear on almost every page".[166]

Cornwell's work was the first to have access to testimonies from Pius's beatification process as well as to many documents from Pacelli's nunciature which had just been opened under the seventy-five year rule by the Vatican State Secretary archives.[167] Cornwell's work was highly controversial. Much praise of Cornwell centered around his disputed claim that he was a practising Catholic who had attempted to absolve Pius with his work.[167]

Susan Zuccotti's Under His Very Windows: The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy (2000) and Michael Phayer's The Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965 (2000) provided further critical, though more scholarly analysis of Pius' legacy.[168]

In 2005, Jesuit historian Vincent Lapomarda wrote:

Recent works by José M. Sánchez, Pius XII and the Holocaust (2001) and Justus George Lawler's Popes and Politics (2002) show how really outrageous are the positions of many of those who have attacked Pope Pius XII. To condemn Pius for not seizing every opportunity to protest the crimes against the Jews overlooks the fact that he could not even save his own priests. What is amazing is that the Catholic Church under the Pope's leadership did far more to help Jews than any other international agency or person ...

— Vincent A. Lapomarda, The Jesuits and the Third Reich[164]

A number of scholars have replied with favourable accounts of the Pius XII, including Margherita Marchione's Yours Is a Precious Witness: Memoirs of Jews and Catholics in Wartime Italy (1997), Pope Pius XII: Architect for Peace (2000) and Consensus and Controversy: Defending Pope Pius XII (2002); Pierre Blet's Pius XII and the Second World War, According to the Archives of the Vatican (1999); and Ronald J. Rychlak's Hitler, the War and the Pope (2000).[168] Ecclesiastical historian William Doino, author of The Pius War: Responses to the Critics of Pius XII, concluded that Pius was "emphatically not silent".[119]

In specific riposte to Cornwell's moniker, American rabbi and historian, David Dalin, published The Myth of Hitler's Pope: How Pope Pius XII Rescued Jews from the Nazis in 2005 and reaffirmed previous accounts of Pius having been a saviour of thousands of Europe's Jews. In a review of the book, the eminent Holocaust historian and Churchill biographer, Sir Martin Gilbert, wrote that Dalin's work was "an essential contribution to our understanding of the reality of Pope Pius XII's support for Jews at their time of greatest danger. Hopefully, his account will replace the divisively harmful version of papal neglect, and even collaboration, that has held the field for far too long."[18]

Five years after the publication of Hitler's Pope, Cornwell stated: "I would now argue, in the light of the debates and evidence following Hitler's Pope, that Pius XII had so little scope of action that it is impossible to judge the motives for his silence during the war, while Rome was under the heel of Mussolini and later occupied by Germany."[169][170] In 2009 Cornwell wrote of the "fellow travellers" i.e. those priests in Nazi Germany who accepted the benefits that came with the Reichskonkordat but who failed to condemn the Nazi regime at the same time. He cites Cardinal Pacelli (the future Pope Pius XII) as being an example of a "fellow traveller" who was willing to accept the generosity of Hitler in the educational sphere (more schools, teachers and pupil places), so long as the Church withdrew from the social and political sphere, at the same time as Jews were being dismissed from universities and Jewish pupil places were being reduced. For this he considers Pacelli as effectively being in collusion with the Nazi cause, if not by intent. He further argues that Monsignor Kass, who was involved in negotiations for the Reichskonkordat, and at that time the head of the Roman Catholic Centre Party, persuaded his party members, with the acquiescence of Pacelli, in the summer of 1933 to enable Hitler to acquire dictatorial powers. He argues that the Catholic Centre Party vote was decisive in the adoption of dictatorial powers by Hitler and that the party's subsequent dissolution was at Pacelli's prompting.[171]

Controversy – "The Pius Wars"

There have been many books published on the subject of Pius XII and the holocaust, often coupled with heated debate, such that it has been described as the "Pius Wars".[157]

Michael Burleigh comments that "Making use of the Holocaust as the biggest moral club to use against the Church, simply because one does not like its policies on abortion, contraception, homosexual priests or the Middle East, is as obscene as any attempt to exploit the deaths of six million European Jews for political purposes."[172][173][p]

A spokesperson for the nineteen Catholic scholars who wrote a letter to Pope Benedict XVI in 2010 asking that the process of sainthood for Pius XII be slowed down, and which asserted that "Pope Pius XII did not issue a clearly worded statement, unconditionally condemning the wholesale slaughter and murder of European Jews", affirmed that "We're all practicing Catholics. We're faithful to the Holy Father."[174]

Joseph Bottum notes Philip Jenkins opinion that criticisms are not really about Pius XII: "Philip Jenkins understands it as not particular to Pius XII at all, but merely a convenient trope by which American commentators express what he calls an entirely new form of anti-Catholicism. Others see it in a continuum of more old-fashioned American distaste for the Whore of Babylon that dwells in Rome, spinning Jesuitical plots."[157][175]

Daniel Goldhagen describes defenders of the Church using Pius XII as a lightning rod to divert peoples attention away from the broader issues, focusing attention on favorable points and concealing others. He further argues that those who use a person's identity as a Jew, Catholic or German as a tool to further their cause betray a great deal about themselves as such tactics are often used to stifle sober debate by switching attention away from the truth as exemplified by the charge of "anti-Catholicism" by apologists.[176][q] Daniel Goldhagen notes Father Peter Gumpel's comments that describes opponents of Pius XII as the "Jewish faction" which has something against Catholics.[177][r]

Garry Wills acknowledges that Pius's response to the Holocaust may have been founded on a sincere, if mistaken, belief that he was doing the correct thing. However, he deprecates arguments "defending Pius with false readings of history" and for "distortions by which the Vatican tries to deny its own sorry story with regard to the Jews. Pius's denial of his own silence, perpetrated by those who must make false claims in order to defend the words of a saint, would make him the source of a new round of deceit structured into past dishonesties."[179]

International Catholic-Jewish Historical Commission

In 1999, in an attempt to address some of this controversy, the International Catholic-Jewish Historical Commission (Historical Commission), a group of three Catholic and three Jewish scholars was appointed, respectively, by the Holy See's Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews (Holy See's Commission) and the International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Consultations (IJCIC), to whom a preliminary report was issued in October 2000.[180]

The Commission did not discover any documents, but had the agreed-upon task to review the existing Vatican volumes, that make up the Actes et Documents du Saint Siege (ADSS)[181] The Commission was internally divided over the question of access to additional documents from the Holy See, access to the news media by individual commission members, and, questions to be raised in the preliminary report. It was agreed to include all 47 individual questions by the six members, and use them as Preliminary Report.[182] In addition to the 47 questions, the commission issued no findings of its own. It stated that it was not their task to sit in judgement of the Pope and his advisers but to contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the papacy during the Holocaust.[183]

The 47 questions by the six scholars were grouped into three parts:

  • (a) 27 specific questions on existing documents,[184] mostly asking for background and additional information such as drafts of the encyclical Mit brennender Sorge, which was largely written by Eugenio Pacelli.[185]
  • (b) Fourteen questions dealt with themes of individual volumes,[186] such as the question how Pius viewed the role of the Church during the war.[187]
  • (c) Six general questions,[188] such as the absence of any anti-communist sentiments in the documents.[189]

The disagreement between members over additional documents locked up under the Holy See's 70 year rule resulted in a discontinuation of the Commission in 2001 on friendly terms.[182] Unsatisfied with the findings, Dr. Michael Marrus, one of the three Jewish members of the Commission, said the commission "ran up against a brick wall. ... It would have been really helpful to have had support from the Holy See on this issue."[190]

Yad Vashem controversy

An inscription at Yad Vashem states that Pius XII's record during the Holocaust was controversial, and that he negotiated a concordat with the Nazis, maintained Vatican neutrality during the war and, formerly stated that he took no initiatives to save Jews.

In 1985, Pietro Palazzini was honored by the museum, where he protested the repeated criticisms against Pius, on whose instructions Palazzini declared to have acted. Palazzini, a theological advisor to the Pontiff, had taught and written about the moral theology of Pope Pius XII.[191]

David G. Dalin argues in The Myth of Hitler's Pope that Yad Vashem should honor Pope Pius XII as a "Righteous Gentile", and documents that Pius was praised by all the leading Jews of his day for his role in saving more Jews than Oskar Schindler.

David Rosen has taken exception to the caption, stating when Pius died both Moshe Sharett and Golda Meir sent telegrams stating that when darkness reigned over Europe, he was one of the few who raised his voice in protest. "What Yad Vashem says is not necessarily wrong," conceded Rosen, "but it doesn't give us all the information." Rabbi Rosen later quoted historian Martin Gilbert, who says that Pius saved thousands of Jews.[192]

In light of recent developments and research, on 1 July 2012, Yad Vashem changed the inscription to note a "considerable number of secret rescue activities" by the Church.[193] Whereas the old text claimed the Pope "did not intervene" in the deportation of Jews from Rome, the new inscription says that he "did not publicly protest".[194] The display also added text from Pius' Christmas 1942 radio speech in which he speaks of "hundreds of thousands of persons who, without any fault on their part", were killed, but it also points out that he did not specifically name the Jews.[195] The new wording also removed the former claim that Concordat was signed "even at the price of recognizing the Nazi regime".[196] Yad Vashem indicated that the new inscription is due to "research that has been done in the recent years and presents a more complex picture than previously presented",[193] including in part the opening of the Pope's archives.[194]

We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah

In 2000, Pope John Paul II, on behalf of all people, apologized to Jews by inserting a prayer at the Western Wall that read "We're deeply saddened by the behavior of those in the course of history who have caused the children of God to suffer, and asking your forgiveness, we wish to commit ourselves to genuine brotherhood with the people of the Covenant."[197]

This papal apology, one of many issued by Pope John Paul II for past human and Church failings throughout history, was especially significant because John Paul II emphasized Church guilt for, and the Second Vatican Council's condemnation of, antisemitism.[198] The papal letter We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah urged Catholics to repent "of past errors and infidelities" and "renew the awareness of the Hebrew roots of their faith".[198][199]

Developments since 2008

A special conference of scholars on Pius XII on the 50th anniversary of his death was held in Rome on 15–17 September 2008, by Pave the Way Foundation.[200] Pope Benedict XVI held a reception for the conference participants on 19 September 2008 where he praised Pius XII as a pope who made every effort to save Jews during the war.[201] A second conference was held on 6–8 November 2008 by the Pontifical Academy for Life.[202]

On 9 October 2008, the 50th anniversary of Pius XII's death, Benedict XVI celebrated pontifical mass in his memory. Shortly prior to, and after the mass, dialectics continued between some Jewish religious leaders and the Vatican as Rabbi Shear Yeshuv Cohen of Haifa addressed the Synod of Bishops and expressed his disappointment towards Pius XII's "silence" during the war.[203]

The CRIF, an organization which represent Jews in France, has opposed the beatification of Pius XII.[204]

In a self-penned article in the New York Daily News, Gary Krupp of the Pave the Way Foundation described how he and fellow researchers had discovered many documents detailing little-known activities of Pacelli from early in his career and later as Pius in which he gave assistance to Jews and wrote that "it's time for our 'historians' to correct this academic negligence and honestly research the open archives". He also wrote "We must acknowledge what Pius actually did rather than criticize him for what he should have done. Pope Pius should be commended for his courageous actions that saved more Jewish lives than all the world's leaders combined."[205]

The methodology of Pave the Way Foundation relating to the historical record of Pope Pius XII has been subject to harsh criticism from many scholars and long-established Jewish organizations.[206] Professor Dwork, Rose Professor of Holocaust History and Director of the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University, said Krupp's research was "amateurish, worse than amateurish — risible" and that "He may be well-meaning, but his lack of experience in international affairs and historical research makes Mr. Krupp highly vulnerable to being manipulated by factions inside the Vatican."[206]

In February 2010 nineteen Catholic scholars of theology and history asked Pope Benedict XVI to slow the process of the sainthood cause of Pope Pius XII. The scholars said existing research "leads us to the view that Pope Pius XII did not issue a clearly worded statement, unconditionally condemning the wholesale slaughter and murder of European Jews" and "At the same time, some evidence also compels us to see that Pius XII's diplomatic background encouraged him as head of a neutral state, the Vatican, to assist Jews by means that were not made public during the war. It is essential that further research be conducted to resolve both these questions"; furthermore, "Mistrust and apprehension still exist", as "For many Jews and Catholics, Pius XII takes on a role much larger than his historical papacy. In essence, Pius XII has become a symbol of centuries-old Christian anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism."[174]

On 1 July 2012, Yad Vashem changed the inscription regarding Pius to soften its criticism and admit rescue efforts by the Vatican.[193] Yad Vashem indicated that the new inscription is due to "research that has been done in the recent years and presents a more complex picture than previously presented".[193]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Papal Legate Pacelli, without descending from the high religious plane of the Congress, was more specific about Catholicism's enemies 'the lugubrious array of the militant godless, shaking the clenched fist of anti-Christ'. Cried he: 'Where now are Herod and Pilate, Nero and Diocletian, and Julian the Apostate, and all the persecutors of the First Century?' St. Ambrose replies: 'The Christians who have been massacred have won the victory; the vanquished were their persecutors.' Ashes and dust are the enemies of Christianity; ashes and dust are all that they have desired, pursued perhaps even tasted for a short moment of power and terrestrial glory." Time Magazine, 6 June 1938
  2. ^ "Now it was the day of Preparation of the Passover; it was about the sixth hour. He said to the Jews, 'Behold your King!' They cried out, 'Away with him, away with him, crucify him!'" John 19:14–19:15
  3. ^ A contemporary Hungarian bishop claimed that the holocaust was appropriate punishment for the Jews. See Friedländer (2007), p. 620 for quotation of Archbishop of Eger.
  4. ^ On 16 March, four days after coronation, Gundlach informs LaFarge, that the documents were given to Pius XI shortly before his death, but that the new Pope had so far no opportunity to learn about it. (Passelecq & Suchecky (1998), p. 126)
  5. ^ M. Biffi, in Mons. Cesare Orsenigo, page 241, note 43, says that Orsenigo first told of this incident to Professor E. Senatra a few days after it had occurred. A. Rhodes in The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators, 1922–1945, page 343. notes that it was reported in Petrus Blatt, April 7, 1963, and quoted in Documentation Catholique, 18 August 1963.
  6. ^ When Hitler showed increasing belligerence toward the Church, Pius met the challenge with a decisiveness that astonished the world. His encyclical Mit brenneder Sorge was the "first great official public document to dare to confront and criticize Nazism" and "one of the greatest such condemnations ever issued by the Vatican". Smuggled into Germany, it was read from all the Catholic pulpits on Palm Sunday in March 1937. It exposed the fallacy and denounced the Nazi myth of blood and soil; it decried its neopaganism, its war of annihilation against the Church, and even described the Fuhrer himself as a "mad prophet possessed of repulsive arrogance". The Nazis were infuriated, and in retaliation closed and sealed all the presses that had printed it and took numerous vindictive measures against the Church, including staging a long series of immorality trials of the Catholic clergy. (Bokenkotter (2004), pp. 389–392)
  7. ^ Paul Johnson wrote "Later he [Pius XII] defended his early war-statements by claiming that both sides construed them to be in their favour. In that case what was the point of issuing them?" (Johnson (1976), p. 490)
  8. ^ Pius's inaccurate characterization of Catholics as "wholeheartedly" opposed to Hitler's regime demonstrated his full acceptance of the German bishops' rejection of collective guilt in their Fulda statement of 1945. (Phayer (2000), p. 161)
  9. ^ It is of course not even remotely true to say that there was a positive intention not to help the Jews. It would be false, indeed slanderous, to claim that the Church deliberately delivered the Jews to their Nazi executioners. Nor can anyone claim that there was no desire, at least on the part of the Holy See, to help the Jews.[46]
  10. ^ In early 1942 Pius told the American diplomat Tittman that he could not speak out because "German people, in the bitterness of their defeat, will reproach him later on for having contributed, if only indirectly, to this defeat." Phayer considers this an implied warped standard that places concern of Germans towards the Pope against the millions of murdered Jews. Cardinal Tardini noted that "Pius was by temperament mild and rather shy. He was not made to be a fighter". (Phayer (2008), p. ix)
  11. ^ See Phayer (2000), p. 101 re Pius's concern over the possible bombing of Rome compared with the extermination of the Jews.
  12. ^ Pius told Robert Leiber that he did not speak out about the murder of Jews since he did not wish to compromise his position as a potential peacemaker at the end of the war.(Phayer (2000), p. 57)
  13. ^ Phayer also dismisses the claims of apologists that Pius chose the path of silence after hearing that Catholics of Jewish descent were killed, because of the protestations of Archbishop de Jong in 1942, since he had previously remained silent over the Croatian genocide in which Catholics had slaughtered Jews and Serbs and well as other episodes. (Phayer (2000), pp. 44–45)
  14. ^ Lewy considers the possibility that Pius speaking out might have made things worse but wrote "no amount of casuistry about silence in the face of a crime that is permissible in order to prevent worse will alleviate the arduous task of search for it. Situations exist when moral guilt is incurred by omission. Silence has its limits." (Cornwell (1999), p. 377)
  15. ^ Friedländer concluded that "the Sovereign Pontiff seems to have had a predilection for Germany which does not appear to have been diminished by the nature of the Nazi regime and which was disavowed up to 1944". (Cornwell (1999), p. 376)
  16. ^ Ralph McInerny also linked it to contemporary hatred of the Church’s stand against abortion; David Dalin argued that it was an intra-Catholic fight over the future of the papacy, with the Holocaust being merely used as a tool.[157]
  17. ^ See also Goldhagen (2002), pp. 393–423 for extended analysis of Goldhagen's opinion of how defenders of Pius and the Church have attacked him.
  18. ^ Gumpel responded that he had many Jewish friends and his comments were not addressed to Jews in general but noting "Some Jews have greatly damaged the Catholic Church." Gerhard Bodendorfer, the head of an Austrian Christian-Jewish dialogue group, protested that Father Gumpel's comments "came out of the lowest drawer of anti-Semitism".[178]

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  199. ^ "We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah". Jewish Virtual Library. 12 March 1998.
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  201. ^ Pope Benedict XVI (19 September 2008). "Address of His Holiness Benedict XVI at the Conclusion of the Symposium Organized by the "Pave the Way Foundation"". Libreria Editrice Vaticana.
  202. ^ "Vatican recalls life and teachings of Pius XII 50 years after his death". Catholic News Agency. 17 June 2008.
  203. ^ Donadio, Rachel (9 October 2008). "Italy: Pope Defends Pius's Efforts During World War II". The New York Times. Synod Controversy
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  205. ^ Krupp, Gary (1 May 2009). "Stop persecuting Pius — WWII pontiff is branded "Hitler's Pope", but he did much to save the Jews". New York Daily News.
  206. ^ a b Vitello, Paul (7 March 2010). "Wartime Pope Has a Huge Fan: A Jewish Knight". The New York Times.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Conway, John S. (January 1965). "The Silence of Pope Pius XII". The Review of Politics. 27 (1): 105–131. doi:10.1017/s0034670500006665. JSTOR 1405429. S2CID 145551847.
  • Coppa, Frank J. "Pope Pius XII: From the Diplomacy of Impartiality to the Silence of the Holocaust." Journal of Church and State 55.2 (2013): 286-306 online.
  • Deák, István (2001). Essays on Hitler's Europe. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-6630-8.
  • Friedländer, Saul (1966). Pius XII and the Third Reich: A Documentation. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-374-92930-0.
  • Friedländer, Saul (2009). Nazi Germany and the Jews: The Years of Persecution 1933-1939. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-197985-9.
  • Gallo, Patrick J., ed. (2006). Pius XII, the Holocaust and the Revisionists: Essays. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-8066-1.
  • Heift, Andreas (1999). Der Vatikan im Zweiten Weltkrieg - Vom Schweigen und Bekennen (in German). GRIN Verlag. ISBN 978-3-638-74901-5.
  • Pham, John-Peter (2004). Heirs of the Fisherman: Behind the Scenes of Papal Death and Succession. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-534635-0.
  • Reitlinger, Gerald (2016) [1953]. The Final Solution: The Attempt to Exterminate the Jews of Europe, 1939-1945. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 978-1-5304-7812-5.
  • Scheinmann, M.M. (1954). Der Vatikan in Zweiten Weltreig (in German). Berlin.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Scholder, Klaus (1987). The Churches and the Third Reich. SCM Press. ISBN 978-0-334-01919-0.
  • Zolli, Eugenio (2008) [1954]. Before the Dawn: Autobiographical Reflections. Ignatius Press. ISBN 978-1-58617-287-9. Also see Amazon Online Reader

External links

  • Group Gives New Proof of Pius XII's Help for Jews.
  • Hitler's Pope A Judgment Historically Unsustainable by Tarcisio Bertone
  • Understanding the Vatican During the Nazi Period by Michael Marrus

pope, pius, holocaust, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, april, 2016, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, papacy, pius, eugenio, pacelli, began, march, 1939. The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met April 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The papacy of Pius XII Eugenio Pacelli began on 2 March 1939 and continued to 9 October 1958 covering the period of the Second World War and the Holocaust during which millions of Jews and Protestant Christians were murdered by Adolf Hitler s Germany 1 Before becoming pope Cardinal Pacelli served as a Vatican diplomat in Germany and as Vatican Secretary of State under Pius XI His role during the Nazi period has been closely scrutinised and criticised His supporters argue that Pius employed diplomacy to aid the victims of the Nazis during the war and through directing his Church to provide discreet aid to Jews and others saved hundreds of thousands of lives 2 Pius maintained links to the German Resistance and shared intelligence with the Allies His strongest public condemnation of genocide was however considered inadequate by the Allied Powers while the Nazis viewed him as an Allied sympathizer who had dishonoured his policy of Vatican neutrality 3 Members of the Canadian Royal 22e Regiment in audience with Pope Pius XII following the 1944 Liberation of RomeSome post war critics have accused Pius of either being overly cautious or of not doing enough or even of silence in the face of the Holocaust Supporters have held that he saved thousands if not tens or hundreds of thousands of Jews by ordering his Church to provide them with sanctuary and aid and that he provided moral and intellectual leadership in opposition to the violent racism of Nazi ideology 4 5 6 7 As Secretary of State he had been a critic of Nazism and helped draft the 1937 Mit brennender Sorge anti Nazi encyclical In his 1939 Summi Pontificatus first papal encyclical Pius XII expressed dismay at the 1939 Invasion of Poland without ascribing blame reiterated Catholic teaching in support of universal brotherhood and endorsed resistance against those opposed to the ethical principles of the Revelation on Sinai and the Sermon on the Mount 8 9 10 At Christmas 1942 once evidence of the industrial slaughter of the Jews had emerged he voiced concern at the murder of hundreds of thousands of faultless people because of their nationality or race The degree of Pius s efforts to block Nazi deportations of Jews remains a matter of scholarly debate 11 12 Upon his death in 1958 Pius was praised emphatically by the Israeli Foreign Minister 13 and other world leaders President Dwight D Eisenhower called him a foe of tyranny and a friend and benefactor to those who were oppressed 14 His insistence on Vatican neutrality and avoidance of directly naming the Nazis as the evildoers of World War II became the foundation for contemporary and later criticisms from some quarters Studies of the Vatican archives and international diplomatic correspondence continue Contents 1 Background 2 Protests to Nazi Germany prior to pontificate 3 1938 3 1 Hungarian Eucharistic Congress 4 1939 4 1 Nazis oppose election of Pacelli as Pope 4 2 Efforts to avoid war 4 3 Reaction to the racial laws 4 4 Encyclical letter Summi Pontificatus 4 4 1 Ambiguous message on racism 4 4 2 Invasion of Poland 4 5 Hidden encyclical 5 1940 1941 5 1 Pius assists German Resistance 5 2 1940 request on behalf of Jews 6 1942 6 1 1942 Christmas Address to College of Cardinals 6 2 The Netherlands 6 3 1942 letters 6 4 Christmas 1942 message 7 1943 7 1 Ad maiora mala vitanda 7 2 News from Father Scavizzi 7 3 Attempted kidnapping 7 4 German occupation of Rome 7 5 Nuncio Orsenigo s appeal to Hitler 8 1944 1945 8 1 Actions of Angelo Roncalli 8 2 Roman razzia 8 3 Conversions of Jews to Catholicism 8 4 Meeting with Churchill 9 Holocaust by country 9 1 Austria 9 2 Croatia 9 3 France 9 4 Hungary 9 5 Lithuania 9 6 The Netherlands 9 7 Slovakia 10 Alleged silence 11 Praise from Jewish leaders 11 1 Post war praise by Jewish leaders 12 Historiography 12 1 Early accounts 12 2 The Deputy 12 3 Recent literature 12 3 1 Hitler s Pope and The Myth of Hitler s Pope 12 4 Controversy The Pius Wars 13 International Catholic Jewish Historical Commission 14 Yad Vashem controversy 15 We Remember A Reflection on the Shoah 16 Developments since 2008 17 See also 17 1 Notes 17 2 References 18 Bibliography 19 Further reading 20 External linksBackground EditTwo Popes served through the Nazi period Pope Pius XI 1922 1939 and Pope Pius XII 1939 1958 The Holy See strongly criticized Nazism through the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s with Cardinal Pacelli later Pope Pius XII being a particularly outspoken critic 15 In 1933 the Vatican signed a Concordat Reichskonkordat with Germany hoping to protect the rights of Catholics under the Nazi government The terms of the Treaty were not kept by Hitler According to the Encyclopedia Britannica From 1933 to 1936 Pius XI wrote several protests against the Third Reich and his attitude toward fascist Italy changed dramatically after Nazi racial policies were introduced into Italy in 1938 16 Pius XI offered three encyclicals against the rising tide of European totalitarianism Non abbiamo bisogno 1931 We Do Not Need to Acquaint You against Italian Fascism Mit brennender Sorge 1937 With Deep Anxiety against Nazism and Divini redemptoris 1937 Divine Redeemer against atheist Communism Non abbiamo bisogno directly challenged Italian fascism as a pagan movement which snatches the young from the Church and from Jesus Christ and which inculcates in its own young people hatred violence and irreverence 17 Pius XI also challenged the extremist nationalism of the Action Francaise movement and antisemitism in the United States 16 With Europe on the brink of war Pius XI died on 10 February 1939 and Pacelli was elected to succeed him as Pope Pius XII The Nazi Government was the only government not to send a representative to his coronation 18 Pius lobbied world leaders hard to avoid war and then pursued a policy of cautious diplomacy following the outbreak of the war 15 19 From around 1942 the Nazis had begun to implement their final solution the industrial extermination of Europe s Jews Protests to Nazi Germany prior to pontificate EditAs Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pacelli made some 55 protests against Nazi policies including its ideology of race 18 Pacelli also helped Pius XI draft the 1937 Mit brennender Sorge critique of Nazi ideology 20 Written partly in response to the Nuremberg Laws the document did not refer to Hitler or the Nazis by name but condemned racial theories and the mistreatment of people based on race 20 In 1938 Pacelli publicly restated the words of Pius XI on the incompatibility of Christianity and antisemitism It is impossible for a Christian to take part in anti Semitism Anti Semitism is inadmissible spiritually we are all Semites 18 1938 EditHungarian Eucharistic Congress Edit Cardinal Pacelli the later Pope Pius XII addressed the International Eucharistic Conference that took place in Budapest Hungary between 25 and 29 May 1938 and according to Holocaust scholar and historian Michael Phayer described the Jews as people whose lips curse Christ and whose hearts reject him even today Phayer asserts that the timing of the statement during a period when Hungary was in the process of formulating new antisemitic laws ran counter to a statement of Pope Pius XI of September 1937 urging Catholics to honour their spiritual father Abraham 21 22 Historians Ronald Rychlak and William Doino Jr have argued that Pacelli was not referring to Jews because Time Magazine did not mention this in its report of the conference 23 a According to Rychlak and Doino Pacelli early in his talk spoke about biblical history recalled the Passion of Christ and referred to the masses that called for the Crucifixion who had been deceived and excited by propaganda lies insults and imprecations at the foot of the Cross but with no reference to Jews 23 Later in the speech Pacelli referred to those who were persecuting the Church at that time by doing things like expelling religion and perverting Christianity and since Jews were not doing this but Nazi Germany was the Pope was clearly equating the Nazis not Jews to those who persecuted the Church at earlier times 23 They report that Pacelli then returned to the theme of Christ s sufferings that was being repeated in his day through in their opinion totalitarian regimes not Jews and exhorted his listeners Let us replace the cry of Crucify made by Christ s enemies with the Hosanna of our fidelity and our love 23 Gabriel Wilensky while accepting that Pacelli may indeed allude to communists and Nazis earlier in the speech rejects Rychlak and Doino s interpretation that excludes Jews Wilensky notes that when Pacelli speaks in a later passage of the call Crucify him Pacelli is referring to the New Testament in which it is Jews who are described as calling out Crucify him 24 b Wilensky further notes that Pacelli s comments were stereotypical of the way Jews were once portrayed by the Church as Christ killers and deicides See also La Civilta Cattolica and Nostra aetate 24 c The influential Vatican journal La Civilta Cattolica continued to print attacks against Hungarian Jews during this period asserting that Hungary could be saved from Jewish influence which was disastrous for the religious moral and social life of the Hungarian people only if the government forbids them entry to the country 25 26 Holocaust historian Paul O Shea notes There is no evidence that he Pacelli objected to the anti Jewish rants of Civilta Cattolica which as Secretary of State to Pius XI he at least tacitly approved The Pope or his Secretary of State gave the final fiat for the editorial content of the journal There is no way that Cardinal Pacelli could not have known of the Judeophobia written in Civilta 27 1939 EditNazis oppose election of Pacelli as Pope Edit The Nazi regime disapproved of Pacelli s election as Pope Historian of the Holocaust Martin Gilbert wrote So outspoken were Pacelli s criticisms that Hitler s regime lobbied against him trying to prevent his becoming the successor to Pius XI When he did become Pope as Pius XII in March 1939 Nazi Germany was the only government not to send a representative to his coronation 18 Joseph Goebbels noted in his diary on 4 March 1939 that Hitler was considering whether to abrogate the Concordat with Rome in light of Pacelli s election as Pope adding This will surely happen when Pacelli undertakes his first hostile act 28 Efforts to avoid war Edit Pius XII lobbied world leaders to prevent the outbreak of World War II 20 With Poland overrun but France and the Low Countries yet to be attacked Pius continued to hope for a negotiated peace to prevent the spread of the conflict The similarly minded US President Franklin D Roosevelt began to re establish American diplomatic relations with the Vatican after a seventy year hiatus and dispatched Myron C Taylor as his personal representative 29 American correspondence spoke of parallel endeavours for peace and the alleviation of suffering 30 Despite the early collapse of peace hopes the Taylor mission continued at the Vatican 29 Reaction to the racial laws Edit In 1939 the newly elected Pope Pius XII appointed several prominent Jewish scholars to posts at the Vatican after they had been dismissed from Italian universities under Fascist leader Benito Mussolini s racial laws 31 Pius later engineered an agreement formally approved on 23 June 1939 with Brazilian President Getulio Vargas to issue 3 000 visas to non Aryan Catholics However over the next eighteen months Brazil s Conselho de Imigracao e Colonizacao CIC continued to tighten the restrictions on visa issuance including requiring a baptismal certificate dated before 1933 a substantial monetary transfer to the Banco do Brasil and approval by the Brazilian Propaganda Office in Berlin culminating in the cancellation of the program fourteen months later after fewer than 1 000 visas had been issued amid suspicions of improper conduct i e continuing to practice Judaism among those who had received visas 32 33 Encyclical letter Summi Pontificatus Edit Main article Summi Pontificatus Summi Pontificatus was the first encyclical of Pope Pius XII published on 20 October 1939 The encyclical is subtitled On the Unity of Human Society 34 During the drafting of the letter the Second World War commenced with the Nazi Soviet invasion of Catholic Poland Couched in diplomatic language Pius endorses Catholic resistance and states disapproval of the war racism the Nazi Soviet invasion of Poland and the persecutions of the Church 35 Following themes addressed in Non abbiamo bisogno 1931 Mit brennender Sorge 1937 and Divini redemptoris 1937 Pius wrote of a need to bring back to the Church those who were following a false standard misled by error passion temptation and prejudice who have strayed away from faith in the true God 10 He wrote of Christians unfortunately more in name than in fact showing cowardice in the face of persecution by these creeds and endorsed resistance Who among the Soldiers of Christ ecclesiastic or layman does not feel himself incited and spurred on to a greater vigilance to a more determined resistance by the sight of the ever increasing host of Christ s enemies as he perceives the spokesmen of these tendencies deny or in practice neglect the vivifying truths and the values inherent in belief in God and in Christ as he perceives them wantonly break the Tables of God s Commandments to substitute other tables and other standards stripped of the ethical content of the Revelation on Sinai standards in which the spirit of the Sermon on the Mount and of the Cross has no place Pius XII Summi Pontificatus 10 Pius wrote of a time requiring charity for victims who had a right to compassion John Cornwell notes the powerful words on the theme of the unity of the human race and the use of a quotation from Saint Paul that in Christ there is neither Greek nor Jew circumcision nor uncircumcision 36 Frank Coppa wrote It is true that Pius XII s first encyclical of 20 October 1939 rejected the claims of absolute state authority propounded by the totalitarian powers but his denunciation was general rather than specific and difficult to decipher 37 The Western allies dropped leaflets over Germany containing a translation in German of the Pope s encyclical and broadcast its contents 38 In Berlin von Bergen declared that the Pope had ceased to be neutral whilst in Italy Mussolini allowed it to be printed 39 Guenter Lewy notes the Gestapo considered the contents to be sufficiently innocuous and ambiguous that they allowed it to be read from the pulpits 40 He further asserts that the Pope s pronunciations in the encyclical relating to his intention to give testimony to the truth without fear of opposition along with similar sentiments expressed by the German episcopate remained an empty formula in the face of the Jewish tragedy 41 42 Saul Friedlander also notes that Pius said nothing about the persecution of Jews 43 Susan Zuccotti opined that Pius failed dismally to live up to promises made in the encyclical in the light of his subsequent silence in the face of appalling horrors To Zucotti the letter cannot be depicted as a campaign against anti Judaism but was still made a valuable statement 44 Owen Chadwick notes that Germans even allowing it to be read from many pulpits stopped its printing and distribution and the Gestapo ordered inquiries into people who read or tried to distribute it Chadwick concludes that Summi Pontificatus in its way it was as strong an attack on Nazi Policies as Mit brennender Sorge of Pius XI 45 Ambiguous message on racism Edit In Summi Pontificatus Pius XII reiterated Catholic commitment to human brotherhood in a passage that some commentators have seen as an indirect condemnation of racism and anti semitism In accordance with these principles of equality the Church devotes her care to forming cultured native clergy and gradually increasing the number of native Bishops And in order to give external expression to these Our intentions We have chosen the forthcoming Feast of Christ the King to raise to the Episcopal dignity at the Tomb of the Apostles twelve representatives of widely different peoples and races In the midst of the disruptive contrasts which divide the human family may this solemn act proclaim to all Our sons scattered over the world that the spirit the teaching and the work of the Church can never be other than that which the Apostle of the Gentiles preached putting on the new man him who is renewed unto knowledge according to the image of him that created him Where there is neither Gentile nor Jew circumcision nor uncircumcision barbarian nor Scythian bond nor free But Christ is all and in all Colossians iii 10 11 Pius XII Summi Pontificatus 9 Ronald Rychlak wrote that the equating of Gentiles and Jews would have to be seen as a clear rejection of Hitler s fundamental ideology 8 Martin Rhonheimer interpreted the text as lacking an explicit reference to racism but containing implicit reference to it in the section on The unity of the human race which he thinks is possibly an echo of the never issued encyclical against racism which would have dealt with antisemitism and the Jewish question topics not dealt with in Summi Pontificatus 46 Rhonheimer considered that the encyclical did not condemn the modern form of social political and economic antisemitism which was driven by traditional anti Judaism and which he saw as shared by Catholics in various degrees 46 See also La Civilta Cattolica and Pope Pius XI s speech to Belgian pilgrims Tim Parks has similarly observed that the text does not explicitly address racism and David Kertzer notes that German newspapers interpreted the encyclical as supporting the German cause 11 Invasion of Poland Edit Main articles Pope Pius XII and Poland and Reorganization of dioceses during World War II In Summi Pontificatus in the aftermath of the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union Pius XII expressed dismay at the outbreak of war the dread tempest of war is already raging despite all Our efforts to avert it and declared his sympathy for the Polish people and hope of the resurrection of their nation The blood of countless human beings even noncombatants raises a piteous dirge over a nation such as Our dear Poland which for its fidelity to the Church for its services in the defense of Christian civilization written in indelible characters in the annals of history has a right to the generous and brotherly sympathy of the whole world while it awaits relying on the powerful intercession of Mary Help of Christians the hour of a resurrection in harmony with the principles of justice and true peace Pius XII Summi Pontificatus 35 Phayer 2000 interprets the encyclical as condemning war but not condemning the invasion The Catholic Church in Poland became subject to brutal Nazi repression In May 1942 the Pope appointed a German Apostolic Administrator to lands in Nazi occupied Poland Wurtheland According to Phayer 2008 this was seen as implicit recognition of the breakup of Poland and that this combined with Pius s failure to explicitly censure the invasion led to a sense of betrayal amongst the Poles 47 In December 1942 the Polish President in exile wrote to Pius XII appealing that the silence must be broken by the Apostolic See 48 Hidden encyclical Edit Walter Bussmann has argued that Pacelli as Cardinal Secretary of State dissuaded Pope Pius XI who was nearing death at the time 49 from condemning Kristallnacht in November 1938 50 when he was informed of it by the papal nuncio in Berlin 32 Likewise a draft prepared by September 1938 for an encyclical Humani generis unitas On the Unity of the Human Race was according to the two publishers of the draft text 51 and other sources not forwarded to the Vatican by the Jesuit General Wlodimir Ledochowski 52 On 28 January 1939 eleven days before the death of Pope Pius XI a disappointed Gundlach informed the author La Farge It cannot continue like this The text has not been forwarded to the Vatican He had talked to the American assistant to Father General who promised to look into the matter in December 1938 but did not report back 53 It contained an open and clear condemnation of colonialism racism and antisemitism 52 54 Some historians have argued that Pacelli learned about its existence only after the death of Pius XI and did not promulgate it as Pope d He did however use parts of it in his inaugural encyclical Summi Pontificatus which he titled On the Unity of Human Society 34 1940 1941 EditPius assists German Resistance Edit Main article Pius XII and the German Resistance The Holocaust was made possible by the German conquest of Europe Pius XII attempted to stop this conquest With Poland overrun but France and the Low Countries yet to be attacked the German Resistance sought the Pope s assistance in preparations for a coup to oust Hitler Colonel Hans Oster of the Abwehr sent Munich lawyer and devout Catholic Josef Muller on a clandestine trip to Rome to seek papal assistance in the developing plot 55 Pius communicating with Britain s Francis d Arcy Osborne channelled communications back and forth in secrecy 56 The Pope warned the Belgian and Dutch Governments that Germany was planning an invasion for 10 May 1940 57 According to Peter Hebblethwaite the Germans regarded the Pope s behaviour as equivalent to espionage 58 Following the Fall of France peace overtures continued to emanate from the Vatican to which Churchill responded resolutely that Germany would first have to free its conquered territories 59 The negotiations ultimately proved fruitless Hitler s swift victories over France and the Low Countries deflated the will of the German military to resist Hitler 60 The Resistance and Pius continued to communicate 1940 request on behalf of Jews Edit In 1940 Pius asked members of the clergy on Vatican letterhead to do whatever they could on behalf of interned Jews 61 1942 Edit1942 Christmas Address to College of Cardinals Edit In December 1942 in his Christmas discourse to members of the Roman curia Pius XII remarks on how both the Church and its ministers experience the sign of contradiction as they try to defend truth and virtue for the well being of souls The Pope questions whether such efforts of love and sacrifice could nevertheless furnish reasons for lamentation for pusillanimity or for the weakening of apostolic courage and zeal He responds in the negative The apostle s deserved lament is the regret that weighed on the heart of the Savior and made him pour out tears at the sight of Jerusalem the place which to his invitation and his grace opposed such obstinate blindness and such stubborn lack of recognition that would lead her along the path of blame in the end to deicide Pope Pius XII 62 Historian Guido Knopp describes these comments of Pius as being incomprehensible at a time when Jerusalem was being murdered by the million 63 The Netherlands Edit On 26 July 1942 Dutch bishops including Archbishop Johannes de Jong issued a decree that openly condemned Nazi deportations of Dutch workers and Jews The Nazi response was the rounding up of over 40 000 Catholics of Jewish descent who were never heard from again After this event Sister Pascalina Lehnert said the Pope was convinced that while the Bishop s protest cost forty thousand lives a protest by him would mean at least two hundred thousand innocent lives that he was not ready to sacrifice While politicians generals and dictators might gamble with the lives of people a Pope could not Pius XII often repeated what he told the Italian ambassador to the Vatican in 1940 We would like to utter words of fire against such actions German atrocities and the only thing restraining us from speaking is the fear of making the plight of the victims even worse 64 1942 letters Edit On 18 September 1942 Pius received a letter from Monsignor Montini future Pope Paul VI saying the massacres of the Jews reach frightening proportions and forms Later that month Myron Taylor U S representative to the Vatican warned Pius that the Vatican s moral prestige was being injured by silence on European atrocities According to Phayer this warning was echoed simultaneously by representatives from Great Britain Brazil Uruguay Belgium and Poland 65 Taylor passed a US Government memorandum to Pius on 26 September 1942 outlining intelligence received from the Jewish Agency for Palestine which said that Jews from across the Nazi Empire were being systematically butchered Taylor asked if the Vatican might have any information which might tend to confirm the reports and if so what the Pope might be able to do to influence public opinion against the barbarities 66 Cardinal Maglione handed Harold H Tittmann Jr a response to the letter on 10 October The note thanked Washington for passing on the intelligence and confirmed that reports of severe measures against the Jews had reached the Vatican from other sources though it had not been possible to verify their accuracy Nevertheless every opportunity is being taken by the Holy See however to mitigate the suffering of these unfortunate people 67 In December 1942 when Tittmann asked Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione if Pius would issue a proclamation similar to the Allied declaration German Policy of Extermination of the Jewish Race Maglione replied that the Vatican was unable to denounce publicly particular atrocities 68 Christmas 1942 message Edit Main article Pope Pius XII s 1942 Christmas address In his Christmas address of 1942 Pius XII appealed to the world to take a long hard look at the ruins of a social order which has given such tragic proof of its ineptitude 69 Mankind owes that vow to the numberless exiles whom the hurricane of war has torn from their native land and scattered in the land of the stranger who can make their own the lament of the Prophet Our inheritance is turned to aliens our house to strangers Mankind owes that vow to the hundreds of thousands of persons who without any fault on their part sometimes only because of their nationality or race have been consigned to death or slow extermination Pius XII Christmas Radio Address 1942 Reinhard Heydrich s Reich Central Security Office analyzed Pius Christmas message and concluded In a manner never known before the Pope has repudiated the National Socialist New European Order His radio allocution was a masterpiece of clerical falsification of the National Socialist Weltanschauung 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 God he says regards all peoples and races as worthy of the same consideration Here he is clearly speaking on behalf of the Jews That this speech is directed exclusively against the New Order in Europe as seen in National Socialism is clear in the papal statement that mankind owes a debt to all who during the war have lost their Fatherland and who although personally blameless have simply on account of their nationality and origin been killed or reduced to utter destitution Here he is virtually accusing the German people of injustice towards the Jews and makes himself the mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals On the contrary according to Galeazzo Ciano Mussolini commented on the pope s message with sarcasm This is a speech of platitudes which might better be made by the parish priest of Predappio 70 1943 EditAd maiora mala vitanda Edit On 30 April 1943 Pius wrote to Bishop Von Preysing of Berlin to say We give to the pastors who are working on the local level the duty of determining if and to what degree the danger of reprisals and of various forms of oppression occasioned by episcopal declarations ad maiora mala vitanda to avoid worse seem to advise caution Here lies one of the reasons why We impose self restraint on Ourselves in our speeches the experience that we made in 1942 with papal addresses which We authorized to be forwarded to the Believers justifies our opinion as far as We see The Holy See has done whatever was in its power with charitable financial and moral assistance To say nothing of the substantial sums which we spent in American money for the fares of immigrants 71 News from Father Scavizzi Edit In the spring of 1943 Pirro Scavizzi an Italian priest told Pius that the murder of the Jews was now total even the elderly and infants were being destroyed without mercy Pius is reported to have broken down and wept uncontrollably 72 Pius said to Father Scavizzi I have often considered excommunication to castigate in the eyes of the entire world the fearful crime of genocide But after much praying and many tears I realize that my condemnation would not only fail to help the Jews it might even worsen their situation No doubt a protest would gain me the praise and respect of the civilized world but it would have submitted the poor Jews to an even worse persecution 73 Attempted kidnapping Edit Main article Alleged plot to kidnap Pope Pius XII In 1943 plans were allegedly formulated by Hitler to occupy the Vatican and arrest Pius and the cardinals of the Roman Curia 74 75 76 According to Rev Peter Gumpel a historian in charge of Pius canonization process the Pope told leading bishops that should he be arrested by Nazi forces his resignation would take immediate effect and that the Holy See would move to another country specifically Portugal where the College of Cardinals would elect a new pope 77 Some historians argue that the reason Hitler wanted to capture the Pope was because he was concerned Pius would continue speaking against the way the Nazis treated the Jews 77 78 However the plan was never brought to fruition and was reportedly foiled by Nazi general Karl Wolff Both British historian Owen Chadwick and Jesuit ADSS editor Robert A Graham dismissed the existence of a plot as a creation of the Political Warfare Executive However subsequent to those accounts Dan Kurzman in 2007 published a work which he maintains establishes the plot as fact 79 80 German occupation of Rome Edit According to Joseph Lichten the Vatican was called upon by the Jewish Community Council in Rome to help fill a Nazi demand of one hundred Troy Pounds 37 3 kilograms of gold The Council had been able to muster seventy pounds 26 1 kg but unless the entire amount was produced within thirty six hours had been told three hundred Jews would be imprisoned The Pope offered an interest free loan without a time limit according to Chief Rabbi Zolli of Rome 81 82 However the Roman Jewish community managed to meet the requirement and delivered the gold to the occupiers on September 28 83 Despite the payment of the ransom 1 015 Jews were deported on 16 October 1943 in the Roman razzia and 839 of them were murdered in concentration and death camps 84 Many others were also killed on 24 March 1944 at the Fosse Ardeatine Nuncio Orsenigo s appeal to Hitler Edit Cesare Orsenigo with Hitler and von RibbentropIn November 1943 nuncio Cesare Orsenigo spoke to the leader of the Third Reich on behalf of Pope Pius XII In his conversation with Hitler he talked about the status of persecuted peoples in the Third Reich apparently referring to Jews This conversation with the Nazi leader led to no success Over large parts of the conversation Hitler simply ignored Orsenigo he went to the window and did not listen 85 e 1944 1945 EditActions of Angelo Roncalli Edit Main article Pope John XXIII and Judaism Part of the historical debate surrounding Pius XII has concerned the role of nuncio Angelo Roncalli the future John XXIII in rescuing Jews during the War While some historians have argued that Roncalli was acting as a nuncio on behalf of the Pope others have said that he was acting on his own when he intervened on behalf of Jews as it would appear by the rather independent position he took during the Jewish orphans controversy 86 According to Michael Phayer Roncalli always said that he had been acting on the orders of Pius XII in his actions to rescue Jews 87 page needed According to the Raoul Wallenberg Foundation Roncalli forwarded a request for the Vatican to inquire whether other neutral countries could grant asylum to Jews to inform the German government that the Palestine Jewish Agency had 5 000 immigration certificates available and to ask Vatican Radio to broadcast that helping Jews was an act of mercy approved by the Church In 1944 Roncalli used diplomatic couriers papal representatives and the Sisters of Our Lady of Zion to transport and issue baptismal certificates immigration certificates and visas many of them forged to Hungarian Jews A dispatch dated Aug 16 1944 from Roncalli to the papal nuncio to Hungary illustrates the intensity of Operation Baptism citation needed Roman razzia Edit Main article Pope Pius XII and the Roman razzia On 28 October 1943 Ernst von Weizsacker the German Ambassador to the Vatican telegrammed Berlin that the Pope has not yet let himself be persuaded to make an official condemnation of the deportation of the Roman Jews Since it is currently thought that the Germans will take no further steps against the Jews in Rome the question of our relations with the Vatican may be considered closed 88 89 After receiving a sentence of death Adolf Eichmann wrote in his diary an account of the round up of Roman Jews At that time my office received the copy of a letter that I immediately gave to my direct superiors sent by the Catholic Church in Rome in the person of Bishop Hudal to the commander of the German forces in Rome General Stahel The Church was vigorously protesting the arrest of Jews of Italian citizenship requesting that such actions be interrupted immediately throughout Rome and its surroundings To the contrary the Pope would denounce it publicly The Curia was especially angry because these incidents were taking place practically under Vatican windows But precisely at that time without paying any attention to the Church s position the Italian Fascist Government passed a law ordering the deportation of all Italian Jews to concentration camps The objections given and the excessive delay in the steps necessary to complete the implementation of the operation resulted in a great part of Italian Jews being able to hide and escape capture 90 Historian Susan Zuccotti author of Under His Very Windows The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy wrote If the Pope remained silent however he allowed nuns monks priests and prelates in his diocese including several at the Vicaraite to involve themselves in Jewish rescue Many Church institutions including Vatican properties sheltered Jews along with other types of fugitives for long periods 91 92 James Kurth in his essay The Defamation of Pope Pius XII writes that she Susan Zuccotti is intent on arguing that Pius XII even allowed the deportation of the Jews of Rome from under his very windows To do so she has to be silent about the much greater number of Roman Jews that the Church with the approval of the Pope hid within a wide network of monasteries convents schools and hospitals under the very windows of the Gestapo and the collaborating Fascist police 93 Kurth concludes his article It is a demonstration of the depravity and hypocrisy of these liberals and radicals that they seek to achieve the silence and passivity of the Pope and the Church during this current and ongoing holocaust abortion by falsely accusing them of committing the crimes of silence and passivity during the Holocaust of sixty years ago 93 In August 2006 extracts from the 60 year old diary of a nun of the Convent of Santi Quattro Coronati 94 were published in the Italian press stating that Pope Pius XII ordered Rome s convents and monasteries to hide Jews during the Second World War 95 Conversions of Jews to Catholicism Edit The conversion of Jews to Catholicism during the Holocaust is one of the most controversial aspects of the record of Pope Pius XII during that period According to Roth and Ritner this is a key point because in debates about Pius XII his defenders regularly point to denunciations of racism and defense of Jewish converts as evidence of opposition to antisemitism of all sorts 96 The Holocaust is one of the most acute examples of the recurrent and acutely painful issue in the Catholic Jewish dialogue namely Christian efforts to convert Jews 97 Meeting with Churchill Edit In August 1944 following the Liberation of Rome Pius met British Prime Minister Winston Churchill who was visiting the city At their meeting the Pope acknowledged the justice of punishing war criminals but expressed a hope that the people of Italy would not be punished but with the war continuing he hoped that they would be made full allies 98 Holocaust by country EditAustria Edit In 1941 Cardinal Theodor Innitzer of Vienna informed Pius of Jewish deportations in Vienna Croatia Edit Main article Catholic clergy involvement with the Ustase Archbishop Stepinac called a synod of Croatian bishops in November 1941 The synod appealed to Croatian leader Ante Pavelic to treat Jews as humanely as possible considering that there were German troops in the country The Vatican replied with praise to Marcone with praise for what the synod had done for citizens of Jewish origin although Israeli historian Menachem Shelah demonstrates that the synod concerned itself only with converted Jews Pius XII personally praised the synod for courage and decisiveness 99 France Edit Later in 1941 when asked by French Marshal Philippe Petain if the Vatican objected to anti Jewish laws Pius responded that the Church condemned antisemitism but would not comment on specific rules Similarly when Philippe Petain s regime adopted the Jewish statutes the Vichy ambassador to the Vatican Leon Berard a French politician was told that the legislation did not conflict with Catholic teachings 100 Valerio Valeri the nuncio to France was embarrassed when he learned of this publicly from Petain 101 and personally checked the information with Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione 102 who confirmed the Vatican s position 103 Yet in June 1942 Pius personally protested against the mass deportations of Jews from France ordering the papal nuncio to protest to Marshal Petain against the inhuman arrests and deportations of Jews 104 In October 1941 Harold Tittman a U S delegate to the Vatican asked the pope to condemn the atrocities against Jews Pius replied that the Vatican wished to remain neutral 105 reiterating the neutrality policy which Pius invoked as early as September 1940 100 Hungary Edit Before the Holocaust began an International Eucharistic Conference took place in Budapest in Hungary during 1938 Cardinal Pacelli addressed the congress and described the Jews as people whose lips curse Christ and whose hearts reject him even today Michael Phayer asserts that the timing of the statement during a period when Hungary was in the process of formulating new antisemitic laws ran counter to Pope Pius XI s September statement urging Catholics to honour their spiritual father Abraham 101 In March 1944 through the papal nuncio in Budapest Angelo Rotta the pope urged the Hungarian government to moderate its treatment of the Jews 106 The pope also ordered Rotta and other papal legates to hide and shelter Jews 107 These protests along with others from the King of Sweden the International Red Cross the United States and Britain led to the cessation of deportations on 8 July 1944 108 Also in 1944 Pius appealed to 13 Latin American governments to accept emergency passports although it also took the intervention of the U S State Department for those countries to honor the documents 109 Lithuania Edit Cardinal Secretary of State Luigi Maglione received a request from Chief Rabbi of Palestine Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog in the spring of 1939 to intercede on behalf of Lithuanian Jews about to be deported to Germany 106 Pius called Ribbentrop on 11 March repeatedly protesting against the treatment of Jews In his 1940 encyclical Summi Pontificatus Pius rejected antisemitism stating that in the Catholic Church there is neither Gentile nor Jew circumcision nor uncircumcision 110 In 1940 Pius asked members of the clergy on Vatican letterhead to do whatever they could on behalf of interned Jews 61 The Netherlands Edit After Germany invaded the Low Countries during 1940 Pius XII sent expressions of sympathy to the Queen of the Netherlands the King of Belgium and the Grand Duchess of Luxembourg When Mussolini learned of the warnings and the telegrams of sympathy he took them as a personal affront and had his ambassador to the Vatican file an official protest charging that Pius XII had taken sides against Italy s ally Germany Mussolini s foreign minister claimed that Pius XII was ready to let himself be deported to a concentration camp rather than do anything against his conscience 111 When Dutch bishops protested against the wartime deportation of Jews in 1942 the Nazis responded with harsher measures rounding up 92 converts including Edith Stein who were then deported and murdered The brutality of the retaliation made an enormous impression on Pius XII 112 f Slovakia Edit In September 1941 Pius objected to a Slovakian Jewish Code 113 which unlike the earlier Vichy codes prohibited intermarriage between Jews and non Jews 101 In 1942 the Slovakian charge d affaires told Pius that Slovakian Jews were being sent to concentration camps On 11 March 1942 several days before the first transport was due to leave the charge d affaires in Bratislava reported to the Vatican I have been assured that this atrocious plan is the handwork of Prime Minister Tuka who confirmed the plan he dared to tell me he who makes such a show of his Catholicism that he saw nothing inhuman or un Christian in it the deportation of 80 000 persons to Poland is equivalent to condemning a great number of them to certain death The Vatican protested to the Slovak government that it deplore s these measures which gravely hurt the natural human rights of persons merely because of their race 114 On 7 April 1943 Monsignor Domenico Tardini one of Pius s closest advisors told Pius that it would be politically advantageous after the war to take steps to help Slovakian Jews 115 Alleged silence EditHistorian Susan Zuccotti argued that Pius XII the head of the Roman Catholic Church during the Second World War did not speak out publicly against the destruction of the Jews This fact is rarely contested nor can it be Evidence of a public protest if it existed would be easy to produce It does not exist 116 117 118 Ecclesiastical historian William Doino author of The Pius War Responses to the Critics of Pius XII contests Zuccotti s assertion and has said that Pius XII was emphatically not silent and did in fact condemn the Nazis horrific crimes through Vatican Radio his first encyclical Summi Pontificatus his major addresses especially his Christmas allocutions and the L Osservatore Romano and he intervened time and time again for persecuted Jews particularly during the German occupation of Rome and was cited and hailed by the Catholic rescuers themselves as their leader and director 119 Indeed Pius XII said in the Christmas address that mankind owed a vow to the hundreds of thousands of persons who without any fault on their part sometimes only because of their nationality or race have been consigned to death or slow extermination 69 In A History of Christianity Michael Burleigh writes For reasons either of personal character or of professional training as a diplomat his Pius s statements were exceedingly cautious and wrapped up in involuted language that is difficult for many to understand especially in this age of the resonant sound bite and ubiquitous rent a moralist 120 g According to Giovanni Maria Vian of the Vatican Jesuit journal La Civilta Cattolica the roots of Pius s alleged silence what he terms a black legend begins in early 1939 with the complaint of the French Catholic intellectual Emmanuel Mounier who questioned the failure of the Pope to censure the Italian aggression of Italy towards Albania and wrote off the scandal of this silence 121 He further notes that in 1951 another French Catholic intellectual Francois Mauriac wrote in the introduction to a book by the Jew Poliakov that we never had the comfort of hearing the successor of Galilee Simon Peter i e Pius XII use clear and precise words rather than diplomatic allusions to condemn the countless crucifixions of the brothers of the Lord i e Jewish people 121 The British representative to the Vatican wrote the following in 1942 A policy of silence in regard to such offences against the conscience of the world must necessarily involve a renunciation of moral leadership and a consequent atrophy of the influence of the Vatican 122 Pius himself noted on 3 August 1946 We condemned on various occasions in the past the persecution that a fanatical anti Semitism inflicted on the Hebrew people 123 Garry Wills comments that this is a deliberate falsehood He never publicly mentioned the Holocaust 123 h i Michael Phayer notes that with the exception of the very guarded terms used in the 1942 Christmas message Pope Pius did not speak out publicly about the Holocaust 46 124 Paul Johnson wrote The Pope gave no guidance Pius XII advised all Catholic everywhere to fight with valour and charity and What made Pius keep silent apart from natural timidity and fear for the safety of the Vatican itself was undoubtedly his belief that a total breach between Rome and Hitler would lead to a separatist German Catholic Church 125 j k Ronald Rychlak notes that Pius was recorded as saying No doubt a protest would have gained me praise and respect of the civilized world but it would have submitted the poor Jew to an even worse fate 126 l Guenter Lewy notes that some writers have suggested that a public protest by the Pope would only have made things worse for the Jews but comments Since the condition of the Jews could hardly have become worse and might have changed for the better as a result of a papal denunciation one could ask why the Church did not risk the well being and safety of the Catholics and of the Vatican 127 Michael Phayer notes Pius XII making similar excuses in 1940 but comments that This justification cannot be taken seriously 124 m It is worth pointing out though that while European Jews were being exterminated the Nazis never systematically killed Mischlinge or people of partial Jewish descent Frank Coppa wrote During World War II as well Papa Pacelli s diplomatic focus often restricted his moral mission refusing to openly condemn Nazism s evil actions including its genocide when it appeared it might triumph but denouncing it as satanic when it was defeated 37 Martin Rhonheimer comments Well intentioned Catholic apologists continue to produce reports of Church condemnations of Nazism and racism But these do not really answer the Church s critics The real problem is not the Church s relationship to National Socialism and racism but the Church s relationship to the Jews Here we need what the Church today urges a purification of memory and conscience The Catholic Church s undeniable hostility to National Socialism and racism cannot be used to justify its silence about the persecution of the Jews It is one thing to explain this silence historically and make it understandable It is quite another to use such explanations for apologetic purposes 46 Cardinal Tisserant a senior member of the Roman Curia wrote to Cardinal Suhard the Archbishop of Paris as Nazi forces were overrunning France in June 1940 Tisserant expressed his concern at the racism of the Nazis the systematic destruction of their victims and the moral reserve of Pope Pius XII I m afraid that history may be obliged in time to come to blame the Holy See for a policy accommodated to its own advantage and little more And that is extremely sad above all when one has lived under Pius XI 128 President Franklin D Roosevelt sent Myron C Taylor as his special representative to the Vatican in September 1941 His assistant Harold Tittman repeatedly pointed out to Pius the dangers to his moral leadership by his failure to speak out against the violations of the natural law carried out by the Nazis 129 Pius XII responded that he could not name the Nazis without at the same time mentioning the Bolsheviks 130 Pius XII also never publicly condemned the Nazi massacre of 1 8 1 9 million mainly Catholic Polish gentiles including 2 935 members of the Catholic Clergy 131 132 nor did he ever publicly condemn the Soviet Union for the deaths of over 100 000 mainly Catholic Polish gentile citizens including an untold number of clergy 133 In an interview Father Peter Gumpel stated that Robert Kempner s former U S Nuremberg war crimes prosecutor foreword to Jeno Levai s 1968 book Hungarian Jewry and the Papacy asserts that Pope Pius did indeed complain through diplomatic channels about the situation of Hungarian Jews but that any public protestation would have been of no use 134 135 Praise from Jewish leaders EditPost war praise by Jewish leaders Edit Pinchas Lapide a Jewish theologian and Israeli diplomat to Milan in the 1960s wrote in Three Popes and the Jews that Catholics were instrumental in saving at least 700 000 but probably as many as 860 000 Jews from certain death at Nazi hands 136 Some historians have questioned this oft cited number 137 which Lapide reached by deducting all reasonable claims of rescue by non Catholics from the number of Jews he claims succeeded in escaping to the free world from Nazi controlled areas during the Holocaust 138 According to Rabbi David Dalin in the aftermath of the war some of the Jewish leaders who hailed Pius XII a righteous gentile for his work in saving thousands of Jews included the scientist Albert Einstein the Israeli Prime Ministers Golda Meir and Moshe Sharett and the Chief Rabbi Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog 139 The Chief Rabbi of Rome Israel Zolli took refuge in the Vatican following the Nazi occupation of Rome in 1943 Upon the arrival of the Allied Forces in Rome on June 4 1944 Israel Zolli resumed the post of Grand Rabbi and in the following July he celebrated a solemn ceremony in the Synagogue which was broadcast by radio to publicly express the gratitude of the Jewish community to Pius XII for the help given to them during the Nazi persecution Furthermore on 25 July 1944 he went to the Vatican for an audience to officially thank the pope for what he personally or through Catholics had done in favor of the Jews hosting them or hiding them in convents and monasteries to save them from the racist hatred of the SS Nazis thus decreasing the already immense number of victims 140 After the war he converted to Catholicism and took the name Eugenio in honour of Pope Pius XII On 21 September 1945 the general secretary of the World Jewish Council Dr Leon Kubowitzky presented an amount of money to the pope in recognition of the work of the Holy See in rescuing Jews from Fascist and Nazi persecutions 141 After the war in the autumn of 1945 Harry Greenstein from Baltimore a close friend of Chief Rabbi Herzog of Jerusalem told Pius how grateful Jews were for all he had done for them The pope replied My only regret is not to have been able to save a greater number of Jews 142 Catholic scholar Kevin Madigan interprets such praise from prominent Jewish leaders including Golda Meir as less than sincere an attempt to secure Vatican recognition of the State of Israel 143 Historiography EditMain article Pius Wars Early accounts Edit Early literature on the war time leadership of Pius XII was positive including Halecki and Murray s Pius XII Eugenio Pacelli Pope of Peace 1954 and Nazareno Padellaro s Portrait of Pius XII first published in Italian in 1949 Later more critical accounts were written 2 Pius XII died in October 1958 In 1959 the German bishops issued a series of statements regarding the Holocaust which acknowledged German guilt in particular that of Catholics and their bishops Michael Phayer considered it no accident that they waited until Pius s death before speaking out and that all those who had not kept silent were post war appointees 144 During Adolf Eichmann s much publicized trial in 1960 a question arose relating to the Vatican s knowledge of the Holocaust and if Pope Pius s refusal to speak out was based on fears on what would happen to German Catholics This sparked public debate in Germany on the relationship of the Church to the Holocaust and Michael Phayer identifies this as when Pius s XII high repute began to wane 145 E W Bockenforde s article published in the Catholic periodical Hochland in 1961 resulted in vehement attacks by many Catholics 146 In 1962 the historian Friedrich Heer commented that In 1945 the situation was so critical that only a gigantic attempt at concealment was able to save and restore the face of official Christianity in Germany I have to confess that all Catholics from the highest to the lowest priest chaplains laymen anti Semitic to this day are co responsible for the mass murder of the Jews 147 In 1960 Guenter Lewy began work on his book The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany combing the records of the German diocesan State and party archives and finally publishing the work in 1964 Though recognising that the Church is hierarchical it is not immune to the influence of its branches and therefore he does not focus purely on the role of Pius XII 148 n Lewy wrote It is symptomatic of the boldness with which some Catholic writers after 1945 have falsified important documents from the Nazi period 149 150 In 1963 Rolf Hochhuth staged his play The Representative or The Deputy which depicted Pius as an antisemite and indifferent to the Holocaust The depiction was called unhistorical and lacking credible substantiation by the Encyclopedia Britannica John Cornwell himself a critic of Pius described the play as historical fiction based on scant documentation and is so wide of the mark as to be ludicrous 151 152 Saul Friedlander whose parents were murdered in Auschwitz published his book Pius XII and the Third Reich amidst the controversy around The Deputy in 1964 It relied heavily on primary sources and concentrated on diplomatic correspondence between the Holy See and Germany 153 o Friedlander hoped that the Vatican would open up its own archives and in 1964 Pope Paul VI commissioned a group of Jesuit scholars to edit and publish the Vatican s records These were published in eleven volumes between 1965 and 1981 154 Carlo Falconi published in 1965 The Silence of the Pope and followed this with The Popes of the Twentieth Century in 1967 in which he criticised Pius XII for failing to speak out he also was guilty of inadmissible silence about the millions of civilian victims of Nazism Jews Poles Serbs Russians gypsies and others 155 Falconi was the first to research and publicise the atrocities committed by Croatian Ustashe against Jews and Serbs 156 Joseph Bottum considers these early attacks by Lewy Friedlander and Falconi as more serious and scholarly and by today s standards quite moderate and thoughtful 157 The Deputy Edit A rare 1899 handwriting of Eugenio Pacelli with text in LatinMain article The Deputy In 1963 Rolf Hochhuth s controversial drama Der Stellvertreter Ein christliches Trauerspiel The Deputy a Christian tragedy released in English in 1964 portrayed Pope Pius XII as a hypocrite who remained silent about the Holocaust Books such as Dr Joseph Lichten s A Question of Judgment 1963 written in response to The Deputy defended Pius XII s actions during the war Lichten labelled any criticism of the pope s actions during World War II as a stupefying paradox and said no one who reads the record of Pius XII s actions on behalf of Jews can subscribe to Hochhuth s accusation 158 Critical scholarly works like Guenter Lewy s The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany 1964 also followed the publication of The Deputy Lewy s conclusion was that the Pope and his advisers influenced by the long tradition of moderate anti Semitism so widely accepted in Vatican circles did not view the plight of the Jews with a real sense of urgency and moral outrage For this assertion no documentation is possible but it is a conclusion difficult to avoid 159 Carlo Falconi 1967 described Hochhuth s depiction as crude and inaccurate but he does not accept the explanations put forward by apologists of Pius regarding his alleged silence In particular he rejects the defence of not making things worse by public denunciation since no fate could have been worse than what the Jews were undergoing and that on the one occasion when bishops did speak out against the euthanasia of disabled people the Nazis backed down He also rejected the defence that the Pope did not know of what was happening since in his opinion this is directly contradicted by instances in which Pius did make diplomatic interventions 160 In 2002 the play was adapted into the film Amen An article on Jesuit Vatican journal La Civilta Cattolica in March 2009 indicated that the accusations that Hochhuth s play made widely known originated not among Jews but in the Communist bloc It was Moscow Radio on 2 June 1945 that first direct against Pius XII the accusation of refusing to speak out against the exterminations in Nazi concentration camps It was also the first to call him Hitler s Pope 161 The same journal during the pontificate of Pius was still accusing the Jews of being Christ killers and of indulging in ritual murder as late as 1942 162 Defector and former Securitate General Ion Mihai Pacepa has stated that the play of Hochhuth and numerous publications attacking Pius XII as allegedly having been a Nazi sympathizer were fabrications from the KGB and Eastern bloc Marxist secret services leading a campaign to discredit the moral authority of the Church and Christianity in the West 163 Pacepa also claims that he was involved in contacting East bloc agents close to the Vatican in order to fabricate the story to be used for the attack against the wartime pope 163 Recent literature Edit Hitler s Pope and The Myth of Hitler s Pope Edit Main articles Hitler s Pope and The Myth of Hitler s Pope In recent decades the legacy of Pius XII in relation to the Holocaust has been the subject of critical and supportive literature Authors such as John Cornwell Garry Wills Michael Phayer James Carroll Susan Zuccotti and Daniel Goldhagen have written critical assessments while Jewish historians such as Richard Breitman David Dalin Martin Gilbert Pinchas Lapide Jeno Levai and Michael Tagliacozzo as well as non Jewish scholars such as Pierre Blet Antonio Gaspari Robert Graham Peter Gumpel Margherita Marchione Michael O Carroll Piertro Palazzini Kenneth Whitehead Ralph McInerny Michael Feldkamp M L T Brown and Andrea Tornielli have written extensively on the work he did to aid the Jews during the war 164 In 1999 John Cornwell s controversial Hitler s Pope was highly critical of Pius arguing that he had not done enough or spoken out enough against the Holocaust Cornwell argued that Pius s entire career as the nuncio to Germany cardinal secretary of state and pope was characterized by a desire to increase and centralize the power of the Papacy and that he subordinated opposition to the Nazis to that goal He further argued that Pius was antisemitic and that this stance prevented him from caring about the European Jews 165 Cornwell s views have developed as noted below now stating he is unable to judge the Pope s motivation In the assessment of the Encyclopedia Britannica Cornwell s depiction of the Pope as antisemitic lacked credible substantiation 2 Kenneth L Woodward stated in his review in Newsweek that errors of fact and ignorance of context appear on almost every page 166 Cornwell s work was the first to have access to testimonies from Pius s beatification process as well as to many documents from Pacelli s nunciature which had just been opened under the seventy five year rule by the Vatican State Secretary archives 167 Cornwell s work was highly controversial Much praise of Cornwell centered around his disputed claim that he was a practising Catholic who had attempted to absolve Pius with his work 167 Susan Zuccotti s Under His Very Windows The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy 2000 and Michael Phayer s The Catholic Church and the Holocaust 1930 1965 2000 provided further critical though more scholarly analysis of Pius legacy 168 In 2005 Jesuit historian Vincent Lapomarda wrote Recent works by Jose M Sanchez Pius XII and the Holocaust 2001 and Justus George Lawler s Popes and Politics 2002 show how really outrageous are the positions of many of those who have attacked Pope Pius XII To condemn Pius for not seizing every opportunity to protest the crimes against the Jews overlooks the fact that he could not even save his own priests What is amazing is that the Catholic Church under the Pope s leadership did far more to help Jews than any other international agency or person Vincent A Lapomarda The Jesuits and the Third Reich 164 A number of scholars have replied with favourable accounts of the Pius XII including Margherita Marchione s Yours Is a Precious Witness Memoirs of Jews and Catholics in Wartime Italy 1997 Pope Pius XII Architect for Peace 2000 and Consensus and Controversy Defending Pope Pius XII 2002 Pierre Blet s Pius XII and the Second World War According to the Archives of the Vatican 1999 and Ronald J Rychlak s Hitler the War and the Pope 2000 168 Ecclesiastical historian William Doino author of The Pius War Responses to the Critics of Pius XII concluded that Pius was emphatically not silent 119 In specific riposte to Cornwell s moniker American rabbi and historian David Dalin published The Myth of Hitler s Pope How Pope Pius XII Rescued Jews from the Nazis in 2005 and reaffirmed previous accounts of Pius having been a saviour of thousands of Europe s Jews In a review of the book the eminent Holocaust historian and Churchill biographer Sir Martin Gilbert wrote that Dalin s work was an essential contribution to our understanding of the reality of Pope Pius XII s support for Jews at their time of greatest danger Hopefully his account will replace the divisively harmful version of papal neglect and even collaboration that has held the field for far too long 18 Five years after the publication of Hitler s Pope Cornwell stated I would now argue in the light of the debates and evidence following Hitler s Pope that Pius XII had so little scope of action that it is impossible to judge the motives for his silence during the war while Rome was under the heel of Mussolini and later occupied by Germany 169 170 In 2009 Cornwell wrote of the fellow travellers i e those priests in Nazi Germany who accepted the benefits that came with the Reichskonkordat but who failed to condemn the Nazi regime at the same time He cites Cardinal Pacelli the future Pope Pius XII as being an example of a fellow traveller who was willing to accept the generosity of Hitler in the educational sphere more schools teachers and pupil places so long as the Church withdrew from the social and political sphere at the same time as Jews were being dismissed from universities and Jewish pupil places were being reduced For this he considers Pacelli as effectively being in collusion with the Nazi cause if not by intent He further argues that Monsignor Kass who was involved in negotiations for the Reichskonkordat and at that time the head of the Roman Catholic Centre Party persuaded his party members with the acquiescence of Pacelli in the summer of 1933 to enable Hitler to acquire dictatorial powers He argues that the Catholic Centre Party vote was decisive in the adoption of dictatorial powers by Hitler and that the party s subsequent dissolution was at Pacelli s prompting 171 Controversy The Pius Wars Edit There have been many books published on the subject of Pius XII and the holocaust often coupled with heated debate such that it has been described as the Pius Wars 157 Michael Burleigh comments that Making use of the Holocaust as the biggest moral club to use against the Church simply because one does not like its policies on abortion contraception homosexual priests or the Middle East is as obscene as any attempt to exploit the deaths of six million European Jews for political purposes 172 173 p A spokesperson for the nineteen Catholic scholars who wrote a letter to Pope Benedict XVI in 2010 asking that the process of sainthood for Pius XII be slowed down and which asserted that Pope Pius XII did not issue a clearly worded statement unconditionally condemning the wholesale slaughter and murder of European Jews affirmed that We re all practicing Catholics We re faithful to the Holy Father 174 Joseph Bottum notes Philip Jenkins opinion that criticisms are not really about Pius XII Philip Jenkins understands it as not particular to Pius XII at all but merely a convenient trope by which American commentators express what he calls an entirely new form of anti Catholicism Others see it in a continuum of more old fashioned American distaste for the Whore of Babylon that dwells in Rome spinning Jesuitical plots 157 175 Daniel Goldhagen describes defenders of the Church using Pius XII as a lightning rod to divert peoples attention away from the broader issues focusing attention on favorable points and concealing others He further argues that those who use a person s identity as a Jew Catholic or German as a tool to further their cause betray a great deal about themselves as such tactics are often used to stifle sober debate by switching attention away from the truth as exemplified by the charge of anti Catholicism by apologists 176 q Daniel Goldhagen notes Father Peter Gumpel s comments that describes opponents of Pius XII as the Jewish faction which has something against Catholics 177 r Garry Wills acknowledges that Pius s response to the Holocaust may have been founded on a sincere if mistaken belief that he was doing the correct thing However he deprecates arguments defending Pius with false readings of history and for distortions by which the Vatican tries to deny its own sorry story with regard to the Jews Pius s denial of his own silence perpetrated by those who must make false claims in order to defend the words of a saint would make him the source of a new round of deceit structured into past dishonesties 179 International Catholic Jewish Historical Commission EditMain article International Catholic Jewish Historical Commission In 1999 in an attempt to address some of this controversy the International Catholic Jewish Historical Commission Historical Commission a group of three Catholic and three Jewish scholars was appointed respectively by the Holy See s Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews Holy See s Commission and the International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Consultations IJCIC to whom a preliminary report was issued in October 2000 180 The Commission did not discover any documents but had the agreed upon task to review the existing Vatican volumes that make up the Actes et Documents du Saint Siege ADSS 181 The Commission was internally divided over the question of access to additional documents from the Holy See access to the news media by individual commission members and questions to be raised in the preliminary report It was agreed to include all 47 individual questions by the six members and use them as Preliminary Report 182 In addition to the 47 questions the commission issued no findings of its own It stated that it was not their task to sit in judgement of the Pope and his advisers but to contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the papacy during the Holocaust 183 The 47 questions by the six scholars were grouped into three parts a 27 specific questions on existing documents 184 mostly asking for background and additional information such as drafts of the encyclical Mit brennender Sorge which was largely written by Eugenio Pacelli 185 b Fourteen questions dealt with themes of individual volumes 186 such as the question how Pius viewed the role of the Church during the war 187 c Six general questions 188 such as the absence of any anti communist sentiments in the documents 189 The disagreement between members over additional documents locked up under the Holy See s 70 year rule resulted in a discontinuation of the Commission in 2001 on friendly terms 182 Unsatisfied with the findings Dr Michael Marrus one of the three Jewish members of the Commission said the commission ran up against a brick wall It would have been really helpful to have had support from the Holy See on this issue 190 Yad Vashem controversy EditAn inscription at Yad Vashem states that Pius XII s record during the Holocaust was controversial and that he negotiated a concordat with the Nazis maintained Vatican neutrality during the war and formerly stated that he took no initiatives to save Jews In 1985 Pietro Palazzini was honored by the museum where he protested the repeated criticisms against Pius on whose instructions Palazzini declared to have acted Palazzini a theological advisor to the Pontiff had taught and written about the moral theology of Pope Pius XII 191 David G Dalin argues in The Myth of Hitler s Pope that Yad Vashem should honor Pope Pius XII as a Righteous Gentile and documents that Pius was praised by all the leading Jews of his day for his role in saving more Jews than Oskar Schindler David Rosen has taken exception to the caption stating when Pius died both Moshe Sharett and Golda Meir sent telegrams stating that when darkness reigned over Europe he was one of the few who raised his voice in protest What Yad Vashem says is not necessarily wrong conceded Rosen but it doesn t give us all the information Rabbi Rosen later quoted historian Martin Gilbert who says that Pius saved thousands of Jews 192 In light of recent developments and research on 1 July 2012 Yad Vashem changed the inscription to note a considerable number of secret rescue activities by the Church 193 Whereas the old text claimed the Pope did not intervene in the deportation of Jews from Rome the new inscription says that he did not publicly protest 194 The display also added text from Pius Christmas 1942 radio speech in which he speaks of hundreds of thousands of persons who without any fault on their part were killed but it also points out that he did not specifically name the Jews 195 The new wording also removed the former claim that Concordat was signed even at the price of recognizing the Nazi regime 196 Yad Vashem indicated that the new inscription is due to research that has been done in the recent years and presents a more complex picture than previously presented 193 including in part the opening of the Pope s archives 194 We Remember A Reflection on the Shoah EditIn 2000 Pope John Paul II on behalf of all people apologized to Jews by inserting a prayer at the Western Wall that read We re deeply saddened by the behavior of those in the course of history who have caused the children of God to suffer and asking your forgiveness we wish to commit ourselves to genuine brotherhood with the people of the Covenant 197 This papal apology one of many issued by Pope John Paul II for past human and Church failings throughout history was especially significant because John Paul II emphasized Church guilt for and the Second Vatican Council s condemnation of antisemitism 198 The papal letter We Remember A Reflection on the Shoah urged Catholics to repent of past errors and infidelities and renew the awareness of the Hebrew roots of their faith 198 199 Developments since 2008 EditA special conference of scholars on Pius XII on the 50th anniversary of his death was held in Rome on 15 17 September 2008 by Pave the Way Foundation 200 Pope Benedict XVI held a reception for the conference participants on 19 September 2008 where he praised Pius XII as a pope who made every effort to save Jews during the war 201 A second conference was held on 6 8 November 2008 by the Pontifical Academy for Life 202 On 9 October 2008 the 50th anniversary of Pius XII s death Benedict XVI celebrated pontifical mass in his memory Shortly prior to and after the mass dialectics continued between some Jewish religious leaders and the Vatican as Rabbi Shear Yeshuv Cohen of Haifa addressed the Synod of Bishops and expressed his disappointment towards Pius XII s silence during the war 203 The CRIF an organization which represent Jews in France has opposed the beatification of Pius XII 204 In a self penned article in the New York Daily News Gary Krupp of the Pave the Way Foundation described how he and fellow researchers had discovered many documents detailing little known activities of Pacelli from early in his career and later as Pius in which he gave assistance to Jews and wrote that it s time for our historians to correct this academic negligence and honestly research the open archives He also wrote We must acknowledge what Pius actually did rather than criticize him for what he should have done Pope Pius should be commended for his courageous actions that saved more Jewish lives than all the world s leaders combined 205 The methodology of Pave the Way Foundation relating to the historical record of Pope Pius XII has been subject to harsh criticism from many scholars and long established Jewish organizations 206 Professor Dwork Rose Professor of Holocaust History and Director of the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University said Krupp s research was amateurish worse than amateurish risible and that He may be well meaning but his lack of experience in international affairs and historical research makes Mr Krupp highly vulnerable to being manipulated by factions inside the Vatican 206 In February 2010 nineteen Catholic scholars of theology and history asked Pope Benedict XVI to slow the process of the sainthood cause of Pope Pius XII The scholars said existing research leads us to the view that Pope Pius XII did not issue a clearly worded statement unconditionally condemning the wholesale slaughter and murder of European Jews and At the same time some evidence also compels us to see that Pius XII s diplomatic background encouraged him as head of a neutral state the Vatican to assist Jews by means that were not made public during the war It is essential that further research be conducted to resolve both these questions furthermore Mistrust and apprehension still exist as For many Jews and Catholics Pius XII takes on a role much larger than his historical papacy In essence Pius XII has become a symbol of centuries old Christian anti Judaism and anti Semitism 174 On 1 July 2012 Yad Vashem changed the inscription regarding Pius to soften its criticism and admit rescue efforts by the Vatican 193 Yad Vashem indicated that the new inscription is due to research that has been done in the recent years and presents a more complex picture than previously presented 193 See also EditCatholic resistance to Nazi Germany Nazi persecution of the Catholic Church Pontifical Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews Pope Pius XII and the raid on the Roman ghetto Relations between Catholicism and Judaism Rescue of Jews by Catholics during the Holocaust Pope Pius XII and Judaism Pope Pius XII and the Roman razzia Catholic Church and Nazi Germany Pius WarsNotes Edit Papal Legate Pacelli without descending from the high religious plane of the Congress was more specific about Catholicism s enemies the lugubrious array of the militant godless shaking the clenched fist of anti Christ Cried he Where now are Herod and Pilate Nero and Diocletian and Julian the Apostate and all the persecutors of the First Century St Ambrose replies The Christians who have been massacred have won the victory the vanquished were their persecutors Ashes and dust are the enemies of Christianity ashes and dust are all that they have desired pursued perhaps even tasted for a short moment of power and terrestrial glory Time Magazine 6 June 1938 Now it was the day of Preparation of the Passover it was about the sixth hour He said to the Jews Behold your King They cried out Away with him away with him crucify him John 19 14 19 15 A contemporary Hungarian bishop claimed that the holocaust was appropriate punishment for the Jews See Friedlander 2007 p 620 for quotation of Archbishop of Eger On 16 March four days after coronation Gundlach informs LaFarge that the documents were given to Pius XI shortly before his death but that the new Pope had so far no opportunity to learn about it Passelecq amp Suchecky 1998 p 126 M Biffi in Mons Cesare Orsenigo page 241 note 43 says that Orsenigo first told of this incident to Professor E Senatra a few days after it had occurred A Rhodes in The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators 1922 1945 page 343 notes that it was reported in Petrus Blatt April 7 1963 and quoted in Documentation Catholique 18 August 1963 When Hitler showed increasing belligerence toward the Church Pius met the challenge with a decisiveness that astonished the world His encyclical Mit brenneder Sorge was the first great official public document to dare to confront and criticize Nazism and one of the greatest such condemnations ever issued by the Vatican Smuggled into Germany it was read from all the Catholic pulpits on Palm Sunday in March 1937 It exposed the fallacy and denounced the Nazi myth of blood and soil it decried its neopaganism its war of annihilation against the Church and even described the Fuhrer himself as a mad prophet possessed of repulsive arrogance The Nazis were infuriated and in retaliation closed and sealed all the presses that had printed it and took numerous vindictive measures against the Church including staging a long series of immorality trials of the Catholic clergy Bokenkotter 2004 pp 389 392 Paul Johnson wrote Later he Pius XII defended his early war statements by claiming that both sides construed them to be in their favour In that case what was the point of issuing them Johnson 1976 p 490 Pius s inaccurate characterization of Catholics as wholeheartedly opposed to Hitler s regime demonstrated his full acceptance of the German bishops rejection of collective guilt in their Fulda statement of 1945 Phayer 2000 p 161 It is of course not even remotely true to say that there was a positive intention not to help the Jews It would be false indeed slanderous to claim that the Church deliberately delivered the Jews to their Nazi executioners Nor can anyone claim that there was no desire at least on the part of the Holy See to help the Jews 46 In early 1942 Pius told the American diplomat Tittman that he could not speak out because German people in the bitterness of their defeat will reproach him later on for having contributed if only indirectly to this defeat Phayer considers this an implied warped standard that places concern of Germans towards the Pope against the millions of murdered Jews Cardinal Tardini noted that Pius was by temperament mild and rather shy He was not made to be a fighter Phayer 2008 p ix See Phayer 2000 p 101 re Pius s concern over the possible bombing of Rome compared with the extermination of the Jews Pius told Robert Leiber that he did not speak out about the murder of Jews since he did not wish to compromise his position as a potential peacemaker at the end of the war Phayer 2000 p 57 Phayer also dismisses the claims of apologists that Pius chose the path of silence after hearing that Catholics of Jewish descent were killed because of the protestations of Archbishop de Jong in 1942 since he had previously remained silent over the Croatian genocide in which Catholics had slaughtered Jews and Serbs and well as other episodes Phayer 2000 pp 44 45 Lewy considers the possibility that Pius speaking out might have made things worse but wrote no amount of casuistry about silence in the face of a crime that is permissible in order to prevent worse will alleviate the arduous task of search for it Situations exist when moral guilt is incurred by omission Silence has its limits Cornwell 1999 p 377 Friedlander concluded that the Sovereign Pontiff seems to have had a predilection for Germany which does not appear to have been diminished by the nature of the Nazi regime and which was disavowed up to 1944 Cornwell 1999 p 376 Ralph McInerny also linked it to contemporary hatred of the Church s stand against abortion David Dalin argued that it was an intra Catholic fight over the future of the papacy with the Holocaust being merely used as a tool 157 See also Goldhagen 2002 pp 393 423 for extended analysis of Goldhagen s opinion of how defenders of Pius and the Church have attacked him Gumpel responded that he had many Jewish friends and his comments were not addressed to Jews in general but noting Some Jews have greatly damaged the Catholic Church Gerhard Bodendorfer the head of an Austrian Christian Jewish dialogue group protested that Father Gumpel s comments came out of the lowest drawer of anti Semitism 178 References Edit Gilbert Martin 2001 Final Solution In Dear Ian Foot Richard D eds The Oxford Companion to World War II Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 285 292 ISBN 0 19 280670 X a b c Coppa Frank J 29 June 2006 Pius XII Assessment Encyclopaedia Britannica Roman Catholicism the period of the world wars Encyclopaedia Britannica 17 February 2016 Bogle James 31 March 1996 The Real Story of Pius XII and the Jews Catholic League 860 000 lives saved the truth about Pius XII and the Jews National Association of Catholic Families Autumn 1991 Dalin David G 2005 The myth of Hitler s Pope how Pope Pius XII rescued Jews from the Nazis Regnery Publ ISBN 0 89526 034 4 OCLC 266029457 Lapide 1967 pp 214 215 a b Rychlak 2000 p 274 a b Pius XII 1939 para 48 a b c Pius XII 1939 para 6 amp 7 a b Parks Tim The Pope s Many Silences Tim Parks ISSN 0028 7504 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Hitler s Pope Martin Gilbert The American Spectator Aug 18 2006 Netton Ian Richard 2006 Islam Christianity and Tradition A Comparative Exploration Edinburgh University Press p 113 ISBN 978 0 748 63025 7 West Joins in Tributes to Pope Pius The Canberra Times Oct 10 1958 a b Gorsky Jonathan Pius XII and the Holocaust PDF Yad vashem a b Pius XI Encyclopaedia Britannica 16 March 2007 Soucy Robert 6 November 2009 Fascism Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c d e Gilbert Martin 18 August 2006 Hitler s Pope The American Spectator Coppa Frank J 29 June 2006 Pius XII World War II and the Holocaust Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c Coppa Frank J 29 June 2006 Pius XII Early Life and Career Encyclopaedia Britannica Phayer 2000 p 5 citing Herczl Moshe Y 1993 Joel Lerner ed Christianity and the Holocaust of Hungarian Jewry NYU Press p 94 ISBN 978 0 8147 3520 6 Phayer 2008 p 116 a b c d Rychlak Ronald J Doino William Jr 16 September 2010 Pius XII and the Distorting Ellipsis First Things a b Wilensky Gabriel September 2010 Pope Pius XII s Conception of Jews and the Deportation of the Jews of Hungary Six Million Crucifixions Wills 2000 pp 37 38 Kertzer 2002 pp 278 279 O Shea Paul 18 July 2011 William Doino Jews and Pius XII More of the same Blogspot co uk Taylor Fred 1982 The Goebbels diaries 1939 1941 H Hamilton ISBN 978 0 241 10893 2 a b The Vatican Files Franklin D Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum FDR letter to Pius XII Franklin D Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum 14 February 1940 Dalin 2005 p 70 a b Gutman 1990 p 1136 Lesser Jeffrey 1995 Welcoming the Undesirables Brazil and the Jewish Question University of California Press pp 151 168 ISBN 978 0 520 91434 6 a b Pius XII 1939 a b Pius XII 1939 para 106 Cornwell 1999 pp 233 244 a b Coppa Frank J 2008 Between Morality and Diplomacy The Vatican s Silence during the Holocaust Journal of Church and State 50 3 541 568 doi 10 1093 jcs 50 3 541 Lewy 1964 p 245 Cornwell 1999 p 234 Lewy 1964 p 245 citing Order of Gestapo Munich 7 November 1939 NA Washington T 175 roll 250 frame 2741860 Lewy 1964 p 306 Falconi 1970 pp 17 18 Friedlander 2007 p 74 Zuccotti 2000 pp 63 64 Chadwick 1988 p 85 a b c d e Rhonheimer Martin November 2003 The Holocaust What Was Not Said First Things Phayer 2008 p 6 Falconi Carlo 1968 The Popes in the twentieth century from Pius X to John XXIII Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 259 Phayer 2000 p 3 Bussmann Walter 1969 Pius XII an die deutschen Bischofe Pius XII to the German bishops Hochland in German Vol 61 pp 61 65 Passelecq amp Suchecky 1998 pp 113 137 a b Hill Roland 8 November 1997 The lost encyclical The Tablet p 10 Archived from the original on 16 September 2016 Passelecq amp Suchecky 1998 p 121 Nostra Aetate Transforming the Catholic Jewish Relationship Anti Defamation League 20 October 2005 Archived from the original on 17 September 2016 Hoffmann 1996 pp 161 294 Hoffmann 1996 p 160 Shirer 1960 p 716 Hebblethwaite Peter 1993 Paul VI The First Modern Pope Paulist Press p 143 ISBN 978 0 8091 0461 1 Shirer 1960 p 750 Fest Joachim C 1997 Plotting Hitler s Death The German Resistance to Hitler 1933 1945 Phoenix p 131 ISBN 978 0 7538 0040 9 a b Ewers Justin 14 November 2008 Catholic Jewish Controversy Slows Path to Sainthood for Pope Pius XII U S News amp World Report Discorso di Sua Santita Pio XII al Sacro Collegio alla Vigilia del Santo Natale Address of His Holiness Pius XII to the Sacred College on the Eve of Christmas Speeches and Radio Messages of Pope Pius XII Fourth year of pontificate March 2 1942 March 1 1943 in Italian Libreria Editrice Vaticana 24 December 1942 pp 319 323 Knopp Guido 2000 Hitler s Holocaust Sutton p 250 ISBN 978 0 7509 2700 0 Trevor Fleck Never Again An examination of Catholic Jewish relations in light of the Holocaust permanent dead link JUPS Senior Thesis Georgetown University 1 April 2006 Accessed 30 November 2012 Phayer 2000 pp 27 28 Diplomatic Correspondence US Envoy Myron C Taylor to Cardinal Maglione FDR Presidential Library amp Museum 26 September 1942 Diplomatic Correspondence US Undersecretary of State Summner Wells to Vatican Envoy Myron C Taylor FDR Presidential Library amp Museum 21 October 1942 Hilberg Raul 2003 The Destruction of the European Jews Vol I 3rd ed Yale University Press p 315 ISBN 978 0 300 09557 9 a b Lopez Angelo 18 November 2008 Pope Pius XI Pope Pius XII and Two Different Responses to Hitler s Anti Jewish Laws Everyday Citizen Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Ciano Galeazzo 2004 Diarios 1937 1943 Grupo Planeta GBS ISBN 978 84 8432 504 8 Letter of Pius XII of 30 April 1943 to the Bischop of Berlin Graf von Preysing published in Documentation catholique of 2 February 1964 Phayer 2008 pp 253 254 McInerny 2001 Haberman Clyde 21 July 1991 Magazine Says Hitler Planned to Abduct Pope The New York Times O Brien Nancy Frazier 1 June 2007 New book details Hitler plot to kidnap pope foiled by Nazi general Catholic News Service Archived from the original on 6 June 2007 Kurzman Dan 1 June 2007 Hitler s Plan to Kidnap the Pope Catholic League Archived from the original on 11 October 2007 a b Squires Nick Caldwell Simon 22 April 2009 Vatican planned to move to Portugal if Nazis captured wartime Pope The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 February 2010 Pope would have quit if captured by Nazis Christian Today 22 April 2009 Chadwick 1988 p 275 Alvarez David Graham Robert A SJ 5 November 2013 Nothing Sacred Nazi Espionage Against the Vatican 1939 1945 1997 p 87 ISBN 978 1 135 21721 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lichten 1963 p 120 Sanchez Jose M 2002 Pius XII and the Holocaust Understanding the Controversy Catholic University of America Press p 142 ISBN 978 0813210810 Gallo Patrick J 2006 To Halt the Dreadful Crime In Gallo Patrick J ed Pius XII the Holocaust and the Revisionists Essays Jefferson N C McFarland amp Company ISBN 9780786480661 Sir Martin Gilbert The Righteous New York Henry Holt 2003 p 365 Rychlak 2000 p 212 D Hippolito Joseph 20 August 2004 Pope John XXIII and the Jews The International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation Phayer 2000 Lang Berel Fall 2001 Not Enough vs Plenty Which did Pius XII do Judaism A Quarterly Journal of Jewish Life and Thought 50 4 448 452 Graham Robert A The Vatican amp the Holocaust 860 000 Lives Saved The Truth About Pius XII and the Jews Jewish Virtual Library Eichmann s diary reveals Catholic Church s assistance to Jews EWTN Zenit 1 March 2000 Zuccotti 2000 p 307 Lewy 1964 p 301 a b Kurth James Summer 2002 The Defamation of Pope Pius XII PDF Modern Age Intercollegiate Studies Institute 44 3 283 287 Baglioni Pina August 2006 The Holy Father orders 30 Days Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 3 July 2009 Davies Bess Twiston 19 August 2006 Faith news Comment Times Online The Times Retrieved 2 November 2006 dead link Roth and Ritner 2002 p 44 full citation needed Roth and Ritner 2002 p 236 full citation needed News Release 28 August 1944 Truman Library 29 August 1944 Archived from the original on 8 June 2011 Retrieved 17 April 2013 Phayer 2000 p 37 a b Perl 1989 p 200 a b c Phayer 2000 p 5 Marrus Michael Robert Paxton Robert O 1981 Vichy France and the Jews Stanford University Press p 202 ISBN 978 0 8047 2499 9 Delpech F 1982 Les Eglises et la Persecution raciale In Xavier de Montclos ed Eglises et chretiens dans la IIe Guerre mondiale La France actes du colloque national tenu a Lyon du 27 au 30 janvier 1978 sous la direction de Xavier de Montclos et al in French Presses universitaires de Lyon p 267 ISBN 978 2 7297 0121 5 Dalin 2005 p 74 Perl 1989 p 206 a b Gutman 1990 p 1138 Dalin 2005 pp 87 89 Gilbert 1987 p 701 Perl 1989 p 176 Dalin 2005 p 73 Dalin 2005 p 76 Vidmar John 2005 The Catholic Church Through the Ages A History Paulist Press ISBN 978 1 61643 215 7 Morley John F 1980 Vatican Diplomacy and the Jews During the Holocaust 1939 1943 KTAV Publishing House p 75 ISBN 978 0 87068 701 3 Lapide 1967 p 139 Blet Pierre Graham Robert A Martini Angelo Schneider Burkhart eds 7 April 1943 Actes et documents du Saint Siege relatifs a la Seconde Guerre mondiale Report Zuccotti 2000 p 1 Falconi 1970 pp 39 40 75 Phayer 2000 p xv a b Pentin Edward 23 November 2012 Sparks fly at Pius XII debate in London The Catholic Herald Burleigh 2006 p 283 a b Magister Sandro 20 June 2005 The Black Legend of Pius XII Was Invented by a Catholic Mounier Chiesa Press Burleigh 2006 p 255 a b Wills 2000 p 66 a b Phayer 2000 p 54 Johnson 1976 p 492 Rychlak 2000 p 270 Lewy 1964 p 304 Kent Peter C October 1988 A Tale of Two Popes Pius XI Pius XII and the Rome Berlin Axis Journal of Contemporary History 23 4 589 608 doi 10 1177 002200948802300405 JSTOR 260836 S2CID 159812206 Coppa Frank J 1999 Controversial Concordats The Vatican s Relations with Napoleon Mussolini and Hitler CUA Press p 175 ISBN 978 0 8132 0920 3 Hilberg Raul 2003 The Destruction of the European Jews Vol III 3rd ed Yale University Press pp 1204 1205 ISBN 978 0 300 09592 0 Polish Victims Holocaust Encyclopedia United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 2 July 2016 Craughwell Thomas J Summer 1998 The Gentile Holocaust Catholic Culture Piotrowski Tadeusz 1998 Poland s Holocaust Ethnic Strife Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic 1918 1947 McFarland p 20 ISBN 978 0 7864 2913 4 Gumpel Peter December 1999 Cornwell s Cheap Shot at Pius XII Crisis Magazine Vol 17 no 11 pp 19 25 World Press Unmasks Fallacies in Book Defaming Pius XII EWTN 3 October 1999 Lapide 1967 cited in Dalin 2005 p 11 Gilbert 1987 p 623 Lapide 1967 p 269 Dalin David Rabbi 26 February 2001 A Righteous Gentile Pope Pius XII and the Jews Catholic League a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Pio XII ed il Trio Lescano 5 135 223 179 Retrieved 7 September 2020 McInerny 2001 p 155 McInerny 2001 p 152 Madigan Kevin 14 March 2001 Judging Pius XII What the Pope Didn t Do The Christian Century Archived from the original on 17 September 2016 Retrieved 8 September 2016 Phayer 2000 p 200 Phayer 2000 p 201 Lewy 1964 pp xi xiv Lapide 1967 p 241 Lewy 1964 pp xi xiii Lewy 1964 pp 353 354 fn 47 Lewy 1964 p 276 for another example of falsification of history Cornwell 1999 p 375 Falconi 1967 p 257 describes the depiction of Pius as crude and inaccurate Cornwell 1999 pp 375 376 Cornwell 1999 p 376 Falconi 1967 p 257 Cornwell 1999 pp 377 388 a b c d Bottum Joseph April 2004 The End of the Pius Wars First Things Lichten 1963 p 31 Marchione Margherita 2000 Pope Pius XII Architect for Peace Paulist Press pp 16 17 ISBN 978 0 8091 3912 5 Falconi 1967 pp 256 257 261 Sale Giovanni 2006 Il Novecento tra genocidi paure e speranze Editoriale Jaca Book p 214 ISBN 978 88 16 40753 4 Phayer 2000 p 8 a b Pacepa Ion Mihai 25 January 2007 Moscow s Assault on the Vatican National Review Online a b Lapomarda Vincent A 2005 The Jesuits and the Third Reich second ed E Mellen Press pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0 7734 6265 6 Phayer 2000 p xii xiii Woodward Kenneth L 27 September 1999 The Case Against Pius XII Newsweek a b Sanchez 2002 p 34 a b Coppa Frank J 29 June 2006 Pius XII Publications Encyclopaedia Britannica For God s sake The Economist 9 December 2004 Cornwell John 2004 The Pontiff in Winter Triumph and Conflict in the Reign of John Paul II Doubleday p 193 ISBN 978 0 385 51484 2 Cornwell John March 2009 Book Review Hitler s Priests Catholic Clergy and National Socialism by Kevin P Spicer Church History Studies in Christianity and Culture 78 1 235 237 doi 10 1017 S0009640709000390 S2CID 162501513 Burleigh 2006 p 282 Dalin 2005 a b Sadowski Dennis 18 February 2010 Scholars ask pope to slow Pius XII s canonization National Catholic Reporter Catholic News Service Bottum Joseph Dalin David eds 2004 The Pius War Responses to the Critics of Pius XII Lexington Books p 7 ISBN 978 0 7391 5888 3 Goldhagen 2002 pp 77 89 p 481 fn 94 pp 250 251 Goldhagen 2002 p 158 Carroll James 2002 Constantine s Sword The Church and the Jews Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 0 618 21908 0 Wills 2000 p 67 Jewish Christian Relations 2000 Jewish Christian Relations 2000 p 2 a b Fogarty Gerard P 9 December 2000 The Vatican and the Holocaust Presentation to the Dominican House of Studies Washington D C Jewish Christian Relations 2000 p 4 Jewish Christian Relations 2000 pp 4 8 Jewish Christian Relations 2000 p 4 Question 1 Jewish Christian Relations 2000 pp 8 10 Jewish Christian Relations 2000 p 8 Question 28 Jewish Christian Relations 2000 pp 10 11 Jewish Christian Relations 2000 p 10 Question 42 Radler Melissa 24 July 2001 Vatican Blocks Panel s Access to Holocaust Archives The Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 8 October 2016 Pensieri die Pio XII con una nota del Card Pietro Palazzini Vicenza 1984 full citation needed Jerusalem Post article dead link a b c d Ng David 2 July 2012 Israeli Holocaust museum changes exhibit featuring Pope Pius XII Los Angeles Times a b Noveck Myra 1 July 2012 Israel s Holocaust Museum Softens Its Criticism of Pope Pius XII The New York Times Israeli memorial amends Pius text The Irish Times Reuters 2 July 2012 Segev Tom 1 July 2012 Pius role in the Holocaust deserves more scrutiny Haaretz Randall Gene 26 March 2000 Pope Ends Pilgrimage to the Holy Land CNN a b Bokenkotter 2004 p 484 We Remember A Reflection on the Shoah Jewish Virtual Library 12 March 1998 Pope Pius XII Pope Benedict XVI 19 September 2008 Address of His Holiness Benedict XVI at the Conclusion of the Symposium Organized by the Pave the Way Foundation Libreria Editrice Vaticana Vatican recalls life and teachings of Pius XII 50 years after his death Catholic News Agency 17 June 2008 Donadio Rachel 9 October 2008 Italy Pope Defends Pius s Efforts During World War II The New York Times Synod Controversy Ejpress Krupp Gary 1 May 2009 Stop persecuting Pius WWII pontiff is branded Hitler s Pope but he did much to save the Jews New York Daily News a b Vitello Paul 7 March 2010 Wartime Pope Has a Huge Fan A Jewish Knight The New York Times Bibliography EditBokenkotter Thomas S 2004 A Concise History of the Catholic Church Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 50584 0 Burleigh Michael 2006 Sacred causes religion and politics from the European dictators to Al Qaeda HarperPress ISBN 9780060580957 Chadwick Owen 1988 Britain and the Vatican During the Second World War Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 36825 4 Cornwell John 1999 Hitler s Pope The Secret History of Pius XII Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 029627 3 Dalin David G 2005 The Myth of Hitler s Pope Pope Pius XII And His Secret War Against Nazi Germany Regnery ISBN 978 1 59698 185 0 Falconi Carlo 1967 The Popes in the Twentieth Century from Pius X to John XXIII Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Falconi Carlo 1970 The Silence of Pius XII Little Brown ISBN 0 571 09147 4 Friedlander Saul 2007 The Years of Extermination Nazi Germany and the Jews 1939 1945 Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 81877 9 Gilbert Martin 1987 The Holocaust A History of the Jews of Europe During the Second World War Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 0 8050 0348 2 Goldhagen Daniel Jonah 2002 A Moral Reckoning The Role of the Church in the Holocaust and Its Unfulfilled Duty of Repair Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 42444 0 Gutman Israel 1990 Encyclopedia of the Holocaust Macmillan ISBN 978 0 02 896090 6 Hoffmann Peter 1996 History of the German Resistance 1933 1945 McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 1531 4 Johnson Paul 1976 A History of Christianity Atheneum ISBN 978 0 689 70591 5 Kertzer David I 2002 Unholy War The Vatican s Role in the Rise of Modern Anti semitism Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 78042 8 Lapide Pinchas 1967 Three Popes and the Jews Hawthorn Books Lewy Guenter 1964 The Catholic Church And Nazi Germany McGraw Hill ISBN 9780297169215 Lichten Joseph L 1963 A question of judgment Pius XII and the Jews National Catholic Welfare Conference McInerny Ralph 2001 The Defamation of Pius XII St Augustine s Press ISBN 978 1 890318 66 6 Morley John F 1980 Vatican Diplomacy and the Jews During the Holocaust 1939 1943 New York KTAV ISBN 978 0 87068 701 3 Passelecq Georges Suchecky Bernard 1998 The Hidden Encyclical of Pius XI Harcourt Brace ISBN 978 0 15 600631 6 Perl William R 1989 The Holocaust Conspiracy An International Policy of Genocide SP Books ISBN 978 0 944007 24 2 Phayer Michael 2000 The Catholic Church and the Holocaust 1930 1965 Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253214713 Phayer Michael 2008 Pius XII the Holocaust and the Cold War Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253349309 Pius XII 20 October 1939 Summi Pontificatus Libreria Editrice Vaticana Rychlak Ronald J 2000 Hitler the War and the Pope Our Sunday Visitor ISBN 978 1 58571 006 5 Also see Amazon Online Reader Sanchez Jose M 2002 Pius XII and the Holocaust Understanding the Controversy CUA Press ISBN 978 0 8132 1080 3 Shirer William L 1960 Rise And Fall Of The Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany London Secker amp Warburg ISBN 9780671728687 Wills Garry 2000 Papal Sin Structures of Deceit Crown Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 385 50477 5 Zuccotti Susan 2000 Under His Very Windows The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08487 0 The Vatican and the Holocaust A Preliminary Report Report International Catholic Jewish Historical Commission 31 October 2000 Further reading EditConway John S January 1965 The Silence of Pope Pius XII The Review of Politics 27 1 105 131 doi 10 1017 s0034670500006665 JSTOR 1405429 S2CID 145551847 Coppa Frank J Pope Pius XII From the Diplomacy of Impartiality to the Silence of the Holocaust Journal of Church and State 55 2 2013 286 306 online Deak Istvan 2001 Essays on Hitler s Europe University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 6630 8 Friedlander Saul 1966 Pius XII and the Third Reich A Documentation Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 374 92930 0 Friedlander Saul 2009 Nazi Germany and the Jews The Years of Persecution 1933 1939 HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 197985 9 Gallo Patrick J ed 2006 Pius XII the Holocaust and the Revisionists Essays McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 8066 1 Heift Andreas 1999 Der Vatikan im Zweiten Weltkrieg Vom Schweigen und Bekennen in German GRIN Verlag ISBN 978 3 638 74901 5 Pham John Peter 2004 Heirs of the Fisherman Behind the Scenes of Papal Death and Succession Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 534635 0 Reitlinger Gerald 2016 1953 The Final Solution The Attempt to Exterminate the Jews of Europe 1939 1945 CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 978 1 5304 7812 5 Scheinmann M M 1954 Der Vatikan in Zweiten Weltreig in German Berlin a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Scholder Klaus 1987 The Churches and the Third Reich SCM Press ISBN 978 0 334 01919 0 Zolli Eugenio 2008 1954 Before the Dawn Autobiographical Reflections Ignatius Press ISBN 978 1 58617 287 9 Also see Amazon Online ReaderExternal links EditGroup Gives New Proof of Pius XII s Help for Jews Hitler s Pope A Judgment Historically Unsustainable by Tarcisio Bertone Understanding the Vatican During the Nazi Period by Michael Marrus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pope Pius XII and the Holocaust amp oldid 1171287502, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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