Pope Pius XII and the Holocaust
By Robert P. Lockwood (March 2000)
Pope John Paul II recently issued a half-hearted apology for Catholics’ failure to
oppose the torture and killing of six million Jews during the horrible Holocaust, but at
the same time he tried to excuse Pius XII, the pope at the time, for his silence and
collaboration." – Dr. Al Snyder writing in The Times Examiner,
Greenville, North Carolina, March 16, 2000
The failure to utter a candid word about the Final Solution in progress proclaimed to
the world that the Vicar of Christ was not moved to pity and anger. From this point of
view he was the ideal Pope for Hitler’s unspeakable plan. He was Hitler’s pawn.
He was Hitler’s Pope." – John Cornwell, Hitler’s Pope (Viking
Press, 1999)
For nearly 20 years after World War II, Pope Pius XII (1939-1958) was honored by the
world for his actions in saving countless Jewish lives in the face of the Nazi Holocaust.
His death on October 9, 1958 brought a moment of silence from Leonard Bernstein while he
conducted at New York’s Carnegie Hall.1 Golda Meir, future Israeli Prime Minister and
then Israeli representative to the United Nations, spoke on the floor of the General
Assembly: "During the ten years of Nazi terror, when our people went through the
horrors of martyrdom, the Pope raised his voice to condemn the persecutors and commiserate
with the victims."2 In his book Hitler, the War and the Pope (Genesis Press,
August 2000), author Ronald Rychlak provides a sampling of some of the Jewish
organizations that praised Pope Pius XII at the time of his death for saving Jewish lives
during the horror of the Nazi Holocaust: the World Jewish Congress, the Anti-Defamation
League, the Synagogue Council of America, the Rabbinical Council of America, the American
Jewish Congress, the New York Board of Rabbis, the American Jewish Committee, the Central
Conference of American Rabbis, the American Jewish Committee, the Central Conference of
American Rabbis, the National Conference of Christians and Jews and the National Council
of Jewish Women.
Yet, over 40 years after the death of Pius XII, he is condemned for his "shameful
silence"3 in the face of the Holocaust. He is commonly accused of not only silence,
but actual complicity in the Holocaust, as charged by Dr. Snyder above, and called
"Hitler’s Pope" in a best-selling book released by a major American
publisher. When critics are reminded of the universal praise he received from Jewish
organizations in life and death, such praise is dismissed as merely "political"
statements, as if those Jews who had lived through the Holocaust would insult the memory
of the millions killed for some ephemeral political gain.
Reading commentaries and news reports in the new Millennium, it may seem that the
Church under Pius XII was as responsible for the Holocaust as the Nazis who carried it
out. In reporting and editorials on the Holocaust, it is routinely presented as historical
fact that Pius XII and the Church were, at best, stonily silent, or, at worst, aided and
abetted the Nazi killing machine. Many Catholics in America simply accept these
contemporary charges, and are silent at the mere mention of Pius XII.
The historical reality of the pontificate of Pius XII has nearly been lost in the face
of the strident campaign against him. Nearly lost as well has been the reality of how
contemporaries – friends and enemies – viewed his papacy and actions during
World War II and the depth and breadth of Catholic action in response to the Holocaust.
Anti-Catholicism thrives on invented history that becomes part of the accepted cultural
corpus. The corruption and nadir of the faith prior to the Reformation, the "black
legend" of the Spanish in the New World, papal promotion of the slave trade, the
purely sectarian nature of the Inquisition, the Church as anti-science as evidenced in the
Galileo affair, unendingly scandalous papal lives: our understanding of so much of history
has been colored by a campaign meant to influence the outcome of theological and political
disputes between Protestants and Catholics in the 19th century. America was highly
influenced by the post-Reformation British propaganda meant to create a myth of an evil
Catholicism out to destroy free and Protestant England. Legends of the evil-doing of the
pope and his minions established in Western thinking an assumption of anti-Catholicism as
not only normative for right-thinking people, but correct and historically valid.4
Conventional wisdom is more often the creation of propaganda than fact.
The purpose here is not to supply a definitive biographical treatment of Pope Pius XII,
nor review the complicated political environment of Europe from World War I through the
pontiff’s death. Additionally, the impact on the life of the Church of the pontiff
who was the "father of Vatican II" awaits a more detailed biography. Here we
will confine ourselves to an understanding of the roots of the accusations against Pius,
and review his career and wartime pontificate in light of the horror of the Holocaust.
The Creation of Conventional Wisdom
It is becoming more evident where the conventional wisdom lies in regard to Pope Pius
XII. When Pope John Paul II issued his historic apology for mistakes and errors in
Christian history, he was savaged by pundits and news reports for his "silence"
in regard to the "silence" of Pope Pius XII.5 Lance Morrow in Time
magazine, referred to the Church’s "terrible inaction and silence in the face of
the Holocaust" and described any defense of Pius or the Church as "moral
pettifogging."6 He made such statements without the need for substantiation because
the charges against Pius XII are simply accepted as "fact" and any disagreement
becomes on a par with those who deny the reality of the Holocaust itself.
Routine accusations against the Church in World War II dominated coverage of the
pope’s Lenten Millennial pilgrimage to the Holy Land. The television show "60
Minutes" just prior to the papal trip ran a detailed propaganda piece accusing Pius
XII not only of silence during the Holocaust, but virtual complicity that stemmed from
personal anti-Semitism and the desire to expand papal power. Contemporary Catholics are
witnessing the creation of a myth in regard to Pius XII, a propaganda campaign as
relentless as any created by 19th century anti-Catholic apologists.
The view of Pius XII as Nazi collaborator did not begin as a case study of historical
revisionism. It did not even begin within historical studies themselves or from available
historical documentation, including transcripts of the Nuremberg trials, or government
records made public. The myth of Pius XII began in earnest in 1963 in a drama created for
the stage by Rolf Hochhuth, an otherwise obscure German playwright born in 1931. Hochhuth
was part of a post-World War II trend in theatre called "Documentary Theatre" or
"Theatre of Fact." The trend grew out of an American form of theatre popularized
during the Depression. The point was to adapt social issues to theatrical presentation by
utilizing factual reports or documentation. The "facts" would be more important
than artistic presentation. Documentation and transcripts would provide the script for the
play. It was seen in more recent times with Vietnam war morality plays based on the
Pentagon Papers, or presentations whose dialogue is directly culled from the White House
tapes of Richard Nixon.
In post-war Germany, Hochhuth and others employed the "Theatre of Fact" as a
means to explore and expose Nazi history. Peter Weiss’s "The
Investigation," for example, used excerpts from testimony provided from officials of
the Auschwitz death camp. Hochhuth, however, created a more traditional theatrical
presentation, though it was presented in the style of "Theatre of Fact." Turgid
in length, in 1963’s Der Stellvertreter (The Representative or The
Deputy) Hochhuth charged through a fictional presentation that Pius XII maintained an
icy, cynical and uncaring silence during the Holocaust. More interested in Vatican
investments than human lives, Pius was presented as a cigarette-smoking dandy with Nazi
leanings. (Hochhuth also authored a play charging the complicity of Winston Churchill in a
murder. No one paid much attention to that effort.)
The Deputy, even to Pius’ most strenuous detractors, is readily dismissed.
John Cornwell in Hitler’s Pope describes Der Stellvertreter as
"historical fiction based on scant documentation…(T)he characterization of
Pacelli (Pius XII) as a money-grubbing hypocrite is so wide of the mark as to be
ludicrous. Importantly, however, Hochhuth’s play offends the most basic criteria of
documentary: that such stories and portrayals are valid only if they are demonstrably
true."7
Yet The Deputy, despite its evident flaws, prejudices and lack of historicity,
laid the foundation for the charges against Pius XII, five years after his death. There
was fertile ground. Pius XII was unpopular with certain schools of post World War II
historians for the anti-Stalinist, anti-Communist agenda of his later pontificate. This
was a period where leftist sentiments in the West were still tied to a flirtation with
Stalinism, though Soviet Premier Nikita Kruschev’s opening up to the world of the
true Stalin legacy would slowly erode such views. In the heady atmosphere of leftist
academic circles, particularly in Italy in the late 1950s and throughout the 1960s, the
general charge against Pius was that while he was not pro-Nazi during the war, he hated
Bolshevism more than he hated Hitler. For the most part, this was based on the pope’s
opposition to the Allied demand for unconditional German surrender. He believed such a
condition would only continue the horror of the war and increase the killing. That stand
was later interpreted as a desire on the pontiff’s part to maintain a strong Germany
as a bulwark against communism. The pope was also blamed for helping to create the
anti-Soviet atmosphere that resulted in the "Cold War" in the late 1940s and
1950s. Hochhuth’s charge of papal "silence" fit the theory that Pius
refused to publicly criticize Germany in order that the country could serve effectively as
an ongoing block to Soviet expansion.
The theory, of course, was as much fiction as Hochhuth’s play. There was no
documentary evidence to even suggest such a papal strategy. But it became popular,
particularly among historians with Marxist sympathies in the 1960s. Even this theory,
however, did not extend to an accusation that the Pope "collaborated" in the
Holocaust, nor to any charge that the Church did anything other than save hundreds of
thousands of Jewish lives. The evidence was simply too clear on that saving work for
refutation. However, it did provide a mercenary rationale of "politics over
people" in response to the Holocaust and applied such barbarous reasoning to the
pope.
The Deputy, therefore, took on far greater importance than it deserved. Leftists
used it as a means to discredit an anti-Communist papacy. Instead of Pius being seen as a
careful and concerned pontiff working with every means available to rescue European Jews
in the face of complete Nazi entrapment, an image was created of a political schemer who
would sacrifice lives to stop the spread of Communism. The Deputy was merely the
mouthpiece for an ideological interpretation of history that helped create the myth of a
"silent" Pius XII doing nothing in the face of Nazi slaughter.
There was also strong resonance within the Jewish community at the time The Deputy
appeared. The Jewish world had experienced a virtual re-living of the Holocaust in the
trial of Adolf Eichmann. A key figure in the Nazi Final Solution, Eichmann had been
captured in Argentina in 1960, tried in Israel in 1961 and executed in 1962. For many
young Jews, Eichmann’s trial was the first definitive exposure to the horror that the
Nazis had implemented. At the same time, Israel was threatened on all sides by the unified
Arab states. War would erupt in a very short time. The Deputy resonated with an
Israel that was surrounded by enemies and would be fighting for its ultimate survival.
Despite the fact, therefore, of a two-decades-old acknowledgment of papal support and
assistance to the Jews during the War, Hochhuth’s unfounded charges took on all the
aspects of revelation. In a column after Pope John Paul II’s apology, Uri Dormi of
Jerusalem fittingly described this impact: "The Deputy appeared in Hebrew and
broke the news about another silence, that of Pope Pius XII about the Holocaust. The
wartime Pope, who on Christmas Eve 1941 was praised in a New York Times editorial
as ‘the only ruler left on the continent of Europe who dares to raise his voice at
all,’ was exposed by the young, daring dramatist."8
It seems ludicrous that a pope praised for his actions in 1941 – and by all
leading Jewish organizations throughout his life – could be discredited based on
nothing more than a theatrical invention. Yet, that is what took place and has taken place
since. A combination of political and social events early in the 1960s, biased historical
revisionism, and an exercise in theatrical rhetoric, created the myth of the uncaring
pontiff in contradiction to the clear historical record. The myth thrived because people
want to believe it rather than because it was believable.
Today, that myth serves its own ideological purposes. Like many of the anti-Catholic
canards rooted in the culture, the myth of Pius XII is raised to attack a host of Catholic
positions on issues, whether it be gay rights, a pro-abortion agenda, or even aid to
parochial school parents. In Cornwell’s book, it is utilized to take sides in
intramural Catholic disagreements, an obscene exploitation of the Holocaust.
The myth of papal complicity in the Holocaust is certainly damaging and libelous to the
memory of Pius XII. But it has also had a terribly negative impact on Catholic-Jewish
relations. Beginning with the papacies of Pius XI and Pius XII, proceeding through the
Vatican Council and Paul VI, great strides had been made in Catholic-Jewish relations. The
papacy of John Paul II has seen one historic event after another, celebrating the
Church’s understanding that all Christians are "spiritual Semites." Yet the
myth of the silence of Pius XII has overshadowed all these historic developments. It has
helped to entrench a persistent anti-Catholicism within elements of the Jewish community,
while creating in certain Catholic circles a deep resentment that can only be harmful for
all. While nothing can fully destroy the enormous strides taken by Pope John Paul II,
leaving this myth unanswered and accepted can only do great damage to what should be a
deep and close relationship between Catholics and Jews, generated in part by the heroism
of Pope Pius XII in saving Jewish lives during the Holocaust.
Eugenio Pacelli
Eugenio Pacelli was born in Rome on March 2, 1876 to a family of 19th century Vatican
lawyers. His grandfather began l’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper
still published today. His father was an important financial consultant to the Vatican.
Pacelli was ordained to the priesthood on Easter Sunday, 1899. He received his doctorate
in Canon Law three years later, after his appointment to what would become the Vatican
secretariat of state. He spent the next 15 years of his career serving a project to
organize the Code of Canon Law. At the same time, he became involved with the workings of
the papal diplomatic corp. By World War I he would work with the Vatican Secretary of
State on maintaining contact with Church leadership on both sides in the first world war,
coordinating relief work, and assisting prisoners. 9
In 1917 Pacelli was consecrated a bishop and assigned to Munich as papal representative
to Bavaria. Two years later, a short-lived communist uprising in Munich would find Pacelli
facing down a gun-barrel when revolutionaries invaded the nunciature. Pacelli did not back
down and, when order was re-established later, refused to press charges against his
assailants. As papal representative, Pacelli would witness the chaos that was post-war
Germany. Serving in Munich, Pacelli was responsible for attempting to forge
"concordats" between the Holy See and various German states and he carried out
such agreements with Baden, Prussia and Bavaria. Concordats were treaties of agreement
that spelled out the rights of the Church within a given state or country. Pacelli’s
goal with such concordats – under the direction of Pope Pius XI – was to assure
non-interference in the life of the Church from state authorities, and to secure
traditional support for Church services in matters such as education and marital law.
Hitler’s ascent began in a post-war Germany torn apart by economic, social and
political strife. Based on a program involving nationalism, racial pride, socialism and
anti-Semitism, Hitler took a small Bavarian racist political party in the early 1920s and
rose to power in the early 1930s. In regard to Hitler or the Nazis in Bavaria, Pacelli
would have little to do with what appeared at the time to be one of any number of fringe
political parties. When Hitler was jailed in 1923 after an unsuccessful coup in Munich
(the so-called "Beer Hall Putsch") his career seemed finished. Recalling those
early days, Pacelli noted that he – and the rest of the foreign diplomatic corps
– paid scant attention to the Munich ruffian. He explained, "In those days, you
see, I wasn’t infallible."10
In 1925, Pacelli moved from Munich to Berlin. By now, however, Pacelli had grown more
concerned about the Nazi threat and he reported to Rome that Hitler was a violent man who
"will walk over corpses" to achieve his goals. In 1928, the Holy office issued a
strong condemnation of the anti-Semitism foundational to the Nazis: "(T)he Holy See
is obligated to protect the Jewish people against unjust vexations and…particularly
condemns unreservedly hatred against the people once chosen by God; the hatred that
commonly goes by the name anti-Semitism."
Pacelli successfully concluded a concordat with the Prussian State in 1929. That year,
he returned to Rome to serve as Secretary of State under Pope Pius XI and was named a
cardinal. As Secretary of State in the 1930s, Pacelli would be responsible for dealing
with both the Fascist government of Italy and Adolf Hitler in Germany.
Though the Vatican had negotiated a concordat with Italy in 1929, ending the
decades-long break between Italy and the Church, the relationship between Pope Pius XI and
Benito Mussolini’s fascist government was anything but cordial. The Church was
vociferous in its criticism of Fascist ideology both before and after the concordat. But
little attention was paid to such criticism, particularly in the Western countries where
Mussolini was viewed as somewhat a hero, both for his stabilization of the Italian economy
and his tweaking of the papal nose. Anti-fascist statements by Catholic leadership were
viewed as counter-revolutionary, and when Mussolini concluded the concordat, he was
criticized outside Italy for his compromise with the Church. In 1931, Pius XI responded to
ongoing attacks on the Church by Mussolini’s goons with "Non Abbiamo
Bisogno," ("We have no Need") an encyclical written in Italian, smuggled
out of Italy by Msgr. Francis J. Spellman of New York to be printed and released in Paris.
In the encyclical, Pius XI condemned the pagan worship of the state that was central to
Fascist ideology.11 Again, the encyclical received scant attention outside of Italy.
Despite vocal opposition from the Catholic Church in Germany where National
Socialism’s racist views were routinely condemned as contrary to Catholic principles
and Catholics were ordered not to support the party, by 1933 Hitler had become German
chancellor. Immediately, persecution of the German Jewish population began. Pacelli was
dismayed with the Nazi assumption of power and by August of 1933 he expressed to the
British representative to the Holy See his disgust with "their persecution of the
Jews, their proceedings against political opponents, the reign of terror to which the
whole nation was subjected." When it was stated that Germany now had a strong leader
to deal with the communists, Cardinal Pacelli responded that the Nazis were infinitely
worse.12
At the same time, however, the Vatican was forced to deal with the reality of
Hitler’s rise to power. In June 1933 Hitler had signed a peace agreement with the
western powers, including France and Great Britain, called the Four-Power Pact. At the
same time Hitler expressed a willingness to negotiate a statewide concordat with Rome. The
concordat – highly favorable to the Church – was concluded a month later. In a
country where Protestantism dominated, the Catholic Church was finally placed on a legal
equal footing with the Protestant churches. The accusation is often made that the
concordat negotiated by Cardinal Pacelli gave legitimacy to the Nazi regime. Forgotten is
the fact that it was preceded both by the Four-Power Pact and a similar agreement
concluded between Hitler and the Protestant churches. The Church had no choice but to
conclude such a concordat, or face draconian restrictions on the lives of the faithful in
Germany. Cardinal Pacelli denied that the concordat meant Church recognition of the
regime. Concordats were made with countries, not particular regimes. Pius XI would explain
that it was concluded only to spare persecution that would take place immediately if there
was no such agreement. The concordat would also give the Holy See the opportunity to
formally protest Nazi action in the years prior to the war and after hostilities began. It
provided a legal basis for arguing that baptized Jews in Germany were Christian and should
be exempt from legal disabilities. Though the Concordat was routinely violated before the
ink was dry, its existence allowed for Vatican protest, and it did save Jewish lives.
In the early years of the Holocaust, prior to the outbreak of war, the Nazi program
against the Jews (who numbered about 500,000 in Germany, about one percent of the
population) involved economic persecution and boycotts. Jews were denied public jobs and,
in 1935, were stripped of their rights as citizens. Violence and murder soon followed,
culminating in the horror of Kristallnacht in November, 1938, and the first major
deportations to concentration camps.13 About half the Jewish population fled Germany
during the period between 1933 and 1938, though many would not escape death at Nazi hands
as they settled in countries that would eventually be occupied by German forces in the
war.
The Holy See had begun to lodge protests against Nazi action almost immediately after
the concordat was signed. The first formal Catholic protest under the concordat concerned
the anti-Jewish boycotts. Numerous protests would follow over treatment of both the Jews
and the direct persecution of the Church in Nazi Germany. The German foreign minister
would report that his desk was stuffed with protests from Rome, protests rarely passed on
to Nazi leadership.
In March 1937, Pope Pius XI issued the encyclical Divini Redemptoris, a scathing
attack on atheistic communism. The encyclical was immediately followed by Mit
Brennender Sorge ("With Burning Concern"), written by Cardinal Pacelli. Mit
Brennender Sorge was written in German and secretly distributed to parish priests
throughout the country. The encyclical condemned the racist principles of Nazism and the
slavish worship of the state. The German government described it as a "call to battle
against the Reich." The Nazi press condemned the "Jew-God and His deputy in
Rome" while the government threatened to cancel the concordat. In a Europe still
committed to appeasing Hitler, the Church was the only voice speaking out strongly against
the Nazis.
Also in 1937, Cardinal Pacelli spoke at Notre Dame Cathedral in France and attacked
Nazi leadership and the pagan cult of race they espoused. In 1938 when Hitler took over
Austria and the Anschluss was welcomed by the Archbishop of Vienna, Cardinal Pacelli
brought the archbishop to Rome and demanded a retraction of his statement. Even as the
health of Pius XI waned, he stepped up his attacks on Italian Fascism and Nazism. Cardinal
Pacelli wrote to archbishops throughout the world in early January 1939 "instructing
them to petition their governments to open their borders to Jews fleeing persecution in
Germany. The following day Pacelli wrote to American cardinals, asking them to assist
exiled Jewish professors and scientists."14
On February 10, 1939 Pius XI died. In response, the Nazi press called him the
"Chief Rabbi of the Western World."15
In the years between Pacelli’s birth up to the death of Pius XI, there is no
record of anti-Semitism on his part.16 With the birth of Nazism, the Church early became a
voice strongly in opposition to its racist theories, its worship of the state, and its
attacks on the Jews. Pacelli was strongly involved at the highest levels in the papacy of
Pius XI that led a vociferous campaign against Fascism in Italy and Nazism in Germany. The
Church had become directly involved in the defense of Jews in Germany and had begun to
offer its services to refugees fleeing persecution.
The Nazis knew Cardinal Pacelli as an ally of Pius XI and a foe. "On February 16,
1939, the German Ambassador to the Holy See…addressed the Sacred College of Cardinals
in what was expected to be a customary expression of sympathy over the death of Pius XI.
Rather than merely offering condolences, however, the ambassador made…a clear request
for a Pope more sympathetic to Hitler’s expansionist plans. The British Legation to
the Holy See reported back to London that (the speech)… ‘was a veiled warning
against the election of Cardinal Pacelli.’"17 The cardinals ignored the advice.
On March 2, 1939 Pacelli was elected and took the name Pius XII. Much of the world cheered
while the Nazis were unimpressed. Jewish groups hailed the election, citing Pacelli’s
long public record on Nazism and his strong hand in writing Mit Brennender Sorge.
The Papacy of Pope Pius XII
In the first months of his papacy, Pius XII would focus his efforts on preventing what
seemed an inevitable outbreak of war. Pius XII attempted to arrange a summit in May of the
major European powers, but his proposal was turned down. Papal attempts to move Italy and
France to negotiations failed. The British and French had assured Poland of assistance if
attacked by Germany. Nazi leadership appeared convinced that the two powers would not
interfere. On August 21, 1939, the German government announced a non-aggression pact with
the Soviet Union. The world was shocked while the Vatican was not surprised. France and
Britain wanted the pope to make a strong pro-Polish statement, but, fearing the impact on
the millions of German Catholics, he chose to maintain a neutral stance and on August 24th
gave a solemn radio talk begging for peace and negotiation. He initiated various
approaches to the Polish, British, French, German and Italian governments to attempt to
ward off the inevitable invasion of Poland. It was to no avail as there was a general
unwillingness to negotiate with a Germany that had proven to be insatiable. On September
1, 1939, Hitler’s troops smashed into Poland from the west while the Soviet Union
would quickly begin a land-grab in the east. On September 3, France and Great Britain
declared war on Germany.18
Within a month the Polish army was defeated and the true Holocaust began. Polish
leadership was killed, along with many Catholic priests. Large segments of the Polish
population were resettled and thousands of Poles, including Jews, were herded into
concentration camps. While most of Europe would experience the Nazi horror, Poland would
live it the longest and suffer the greatest. Poland would also be the site for the Nazi
death camps. Jews from all over Europe would be transported to these camps in Poland, and
six million would die. Of the total Polish population, three million would die in the
death camps, another two million would serve as slave labor in Germany.
In the early months of the war, the Pope began to establish committees to help both
Catholic and Jewish war refugees and began the Vatican Information Bureau to track down
missing civilian population and prisoners. On October 20, 1939, Pope Pius XII issued his
first encyclical, Summi Pontificatus. In this encyclical he lashed out at the
dictators of Europe – "an ever-increasing host of Christ’s enemies"
– and reminded the world of St. Paul’s vision that was neither Gentile nor Jew.
The Gestapo labeled the encyclical a direct attack, while the French had copies printed
and dropped by air over western Germany. The New York Times summarized the
encyclical as a call for the restoration of Poland and an uncompromising attack on racism
and dictators.19
One of the more surprising developments that came to light only later was papal
involvement as a middleman between anti-Hitler elements of the German military and the
British government. Over the course of several months, Pope Pius XII relayed messages
between the anti-Hitler conspirators and the British government. The pope also received
information on German military plans that were forwarded on to the Allies, including
advance notice of the invasion of France, Luxembourg, Holland and Belgium. While the
conspiracy against Hitler did not succeed, it was a startling act of papal intervention.20
Through its sources, the Vatican was growing aware of the Nazi slaughter taking place
in Poland. In January, 1940, Vatican Radio was instructed by the pope to broadcast –
in German – a detailed report on attacks on the Church and civilians in Poland. A
week later, Vatican Radio broadcast to an unbelieving world in English that "Jews and
Poles are being herded into separate ghettos" where starvation, disease and exposure
would kill tens of thousands. Shortly thereafter, the German Foreign Minister, Joachim von
Ribbentrop, demanded a papal audience. On March 11, the pope met with the foreign minister
who assured him that a German victory was inevitable in 1940.21 The pope responded with a
detailed list of Nazi atrocities in Poland and to German Jews. The New York Times
described the meeting with the headline "Pope is Emphatic about Just Peace:
Jews’ Rights Defended."22
On May 10, 1940, the German invasion of France, Holland, Luxembourg and Belgium began.
The pope sent telegrams to the three neutral states condemning the unwarranted invasion.
The Italian government protested what it saw as a direct attack on its German ally and
copies of l’Osservatore Romano containing the texts of the telegrams were
seized. Soon after, Mussolini would enter the war.
Within a month, France was defeated. In reaction to the Vatican press and radio
broadcasts concerning Poland, Germany announced that priests and religious would not be
able to leave Poland. Persecution was stepped up. Pius XII issued instructions to the
Catholic bishops of Europe to help all suffering at the hands of the Nazis and to remind
their people than any form of racism is contrary to Church teachings.23
Pius XII faced an occupied Europe. His focus in the last half of 1940 was on the
dreadful situation in Poland, but the Nazi puppet Vichy government in France, and the
occupied Benelux nations, were of growing concern. Pius understood the Vichy
government’s status in relation to the Nazis and was in opposition virtually from its
inception. By the summer of 1941 Vichy would be deporting Jews over strong Vatican
protests. In his Christmas message of 1940, the pope once again condemned the war and
pleaded for aid to the suffering.
In the early months of 1941, the Vatican worked to assure that Spain would not enter
the war. It served to mediate a potentially dangerous dispute with the United States and
was instrumental in keeping Spain neutral. When Vichy France began to deport Jews Spain
would become a haven. It is estimated that Franco’s Spain – though vilified for
its fascist leanings and alliance with Hitler during its own revolution – provided
safe refuge for possibly a quarter of a million Jews. Hitler would complain about Franco
and his "Jesuit swine" foreign minister.
In late March 1941, Vatican Radio launched a series of attacks on Nazi Germany,
denouncing its principles of racial hatred. A series of misstatements and misuse of
Vatican Radio reports, however, raised a concern that the Holy See could be seen as the
"enemy" of Germany. Pius XII resisted any perception of the violation of the
Holy See’s neutrality in the conflict, though German leadership had decided long ago
that the pope was an undeclared enemy. In any case, Vatican Radio was instructed, in the
words of Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Luigi Maglione to "let the facts speak
for themselves" and not to enhance or editorialize. The British – who reused
edited texts from the Vatican broadcasts for propaganda purposes – protested when
such "silencing" was discovered. While the Vatican responded that its broadcasts
were being twisted for propaganda purposes, the extent of continued persecution led
Vatican Radio to sustained criticism of Nazi tactics, particularly in its persecution of
the Jews.24
After Hitler ordered the invasion of the Soviet Union in June, the question quickly
arose over aiding communists in the war against the Nazis. The 1937 encyclical of Pius XI
appeared to ban any such cooperation. The issue became particularly important in the
United States where aid was routinely supplied to the Allies and was to be extended to the
Soviet Union. A number of bishops raised the issue and, very quickly, Pius XII settled the
affair noting that aid to the "people" of the Soviet Union was not aid to
communism. Despite later propaganda, it was clear that even an anti-religious Stalinist
Soviet Union was viewed by the pontiff as far less an enemy than the German Third Reich.25
In his Christmas message of 1941, Pius XII issued another forceful call for peace and
condemned the atrocities of the war, particularly involving civilian populations. Germany
heard it as another attack on Nazism. The New York Times wrote a long editorial,
calling Pius "the only ruler left on the Continent of Europe who dares to raise his
voice at all." Noting that "the Pope put himself squarely against
Hitlerism…he left no doubt that the Nazi aims are also irreconcilable with his own
conception of a Christmas peace."26
The Final Solution
In January 1942, the most horrifying stage in the Final Solution began at the Wannsee
Conference in Germany. On January 20th, Gestapo officials under Hitler’s expressed
direction formalized plans for the "Final Solution" of the Jewish population of
Europe. Just two days later, Vatican Radio launched an attack on conditions in Poland
under the Nazis. The Polish bishops, however, began to quietly urge the Vatican to avoid
such public pronouncements.27 The pope was notified that the Gestapo said that Vatican
Radio had called for Polish resistance and for "the Polish people to rally around its
priests and teachers. Thereupon, numerous priests and teachers were arrested and executed,
or were tortured to death in the most terrible manner, or were even shipped to the far
east."28
After the Wannsee conference, the Nazis began to step up the deportation of Jews in
occupied territories. Since the beginning of Nazi atrocities against the Jews, the Vatican
had pursued attempts to help Jews emigrate from German-controlled areas. It now became
clear that the goal must be to prevent deportation. Reports had begun to reach the Vatican
that there was a gruesome end to such deportations. Those deported virtually vanished.
Relatives received no news of their family.
In early March 1942, a major deportation was begun in Slovakia. The Vatican, through
the local nuncio, desperately protested but to no avail. Reports from the nuncio within
Germany told of the horrible situation of the remaining Jews, whether they be Catholics
through Baptism or not. Protests by the nuncio were dismissed, the Nazis unwilling to even
address where those deported had been sent, let alone their faith. As Father Blet
described the Vatican’s frustration, in Germany "any step was fruitless and even
dangerous."
In France, as the deportations began, Church authorities with the support of Pius XII
protested throughout the summer of 1942. Vatican Radio and l’Osservatore Romano
reported on powerful statements such as that of Archbishop Jules Saliege in Toulouse who
complains that "frightful things are taking place. The Jews are our brothers. They
belong to mankind. No Christian can dare to forget that!" In July, the bishops and
cardinals of France signed a formal protest to the government over the deportations.
Angered at Church intervention, Vichy authorities dismissed the Church’s protest and
the arrests and deportations continued.
In Holland, the bishops spoke out forcefully against the deportation of the Jews with
disastrous results. The Catholic archbishop of Utrecht released a forceful letter to all
the Catholic churches protesting the deportations of the Jews. The Gestapo responded by
revoking the exception that had been given to Jews who had been baptized and a round up
was ordered. Caught in the web was Edith Stein, a Jewish convert who had become a nun.
She, her sister, and 600 Catholic Jews were transported to Auschwitz, where she died.29
The deportations of all Jews were expanded and by the end of the war virtually the entire
Jewish population of Holland had been wiped out.
The disaster in Holland and the ineffectiveness of the French intervention did not
deter Pius XII from continuing to work in whatever way possible to assist the persecuted
Jews. They did, however, confirm the view that dramatic public statements in specific
situations should be avoided. Such statements were easy to make, Pius believed, but could
cause untold suffering. For the most part, Pius would rely on Church authorities on the
scene to determine the best action and follow their course. This included the web of
nuncios reporting directly to Rome from capitals throughout Europe who would become the
primary source of papal action and activity. It would be these nuncios under papal
direction that would save untold Jewish lives in the years ahead. Additionally, there was
the practical realization that it was virtually impossible to deal with the Nazi
authorities. Greater success was possible in working in occupied countries with their own
governments in place. One could at least approach the Vichy government, for example. One
could do nothing in Germany.
In September 1942, Pius XII was approached by the Allies to join in a statement
condemning the Nazi atrocities. This was to be an official statement of the Allied
governments and it was impossible for Pius XII, representing a neutral state, to join the
effort. However, in his annual Christmas message of 1942, Pius XII would speak out once
again forcefully. Without specifically mentioning Hitler, Pius condemned totalitarian
regimes and mourned the victims of the war: "the hundreds of thousands who, through
no fault of their own, and solely because of their nation or race, have been condemned to
death or progressive extinction." He called on Catholics to shelter any and all
refugees. The statement was loudly praised in the Allied world. In Germany, it was seen as
the final repudiation by Pius XII of the "new order" imposed by the Nazis.
"(H)e is virtually accusing the German people of injustice toward the Jews, and makes
himself the mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminal."30
Beginning in 1943, evidence mounted of the mass extinction of the Jews under Nazi
control, particularly of the use of gas chambers in concentration camps. Though the allied
governments refused to acknowledge such a reality, a desperation is evidenced in the
Vatican and throughout the nunciatures. With Germany beginning to experience defeat on the
battlefield, pressure was stepped up on the puppet regimes to facilitate the Final
Solution by increased deportations. On February 19, Vatican Radio condemned deportations
and promised "the curse of God" on those who did such things.31
In Poland, the Church had virtually been destroyed by mid 1943. The Vatican prepared a
detailed report of its plight and sent it on in protest to the German authorities, who
refused to even acknowledge its receipt. In June, Pius XII publicly lamented the
"tragic fate" of the Polish people. There was no longer structure to contact or
an organization through which the Church could work. By the "second half of 1943
communications became more and more uncertain between the Poles in Poland and the Holy
See, which was progressively losing all contact with the bishops…Contact with eastern
Poland, which was already almost completely under the control of the Red Army, was even
more difficult."32
"(I)n Germany…papal interventions were simply useless…They were
predestined to failure in the face of the inflexible decisions made by the
national-socialist state. But between the two Axis powers…there were also regions
that in various degrees had fallen under control of the Reich and within which the Holy
See nonetheless felt it could exercise an influence and counteract the designs of the
Berlin government. This was true for the…Axis satellites, namely Slovakia, Croatia,
Romania and Hungary."33
In Slovakia, the Holy See faced the unique difficulty of its president, Joseph Tiso,
being a Catholic priest. In September 1941 the Vatican was informed that laws against the
Jews were to be passed. The nuncio was instructed to protest immediately, reminding Tiso
that such legislation was "directly opposed to Catholic principles." The protest
was ignored and in early 1942, the nuncio informed the Vatican that deportations, in which
the Germans promised to "treat the Jews humanely," would be forthcoming.
Cardinal Maglione protested to the Slovakian representative while the nuncio was to
protest to Tiso. Tiso promised to spare as many as possible. The bishops of Slovakia
released an officially edited pastoral letter with one important sentence retained:
"The Jews are also people and consequently should be treated in a humane
fashion."
While the intervention helped to save baptized Jews and those married to non-Jews,
thousands were deported in 1942. In 1943, when rumors of a new deportation surfaced, the
Vatican again sharply protested. The government responded that rumors of internment camps
and executions were "Jewish propaganda." The Vatican refused to let up and the
deportation orders were lifted. As the summer of 1944 ended, there was an uprising in
Slovakia that was crushed by German troops. The Jews were under great threat and the
nuncio once again appealed to Tiso. Tiso blocked some deportations at first, then relented
to German pressure. Pope Pius XII drafted a personal appeal to Tiso to be handed on by the
nuncio. It accomplished nothing.34
In Croatia, the position of the 40,000 Jews was more precarious. The attempt was made
through Cardinal Maglione to bring the Jewish population to Italy. Those Croatian Jews in
territories occupied by Italian troops were protected. In the summer of 1942, the papal
envoy to Croatia protested to the president about the treatment of the Jews. In a strange
meeting, the president stated that Jews had been transferred to Germany where the
government had recently "destroyed" two million. The horrified nuncio reported
this to the Holy See. Shortly thereafter, he could report that he had some limited success
in obtaining exceptions to additional deportations of Jews, including many that had not
been baptized. In 1943, the situation appeared to have improved until Croat authorities
lashed out at Vatican intervention when the nuncio protested a new Jewish round up. While
the Vatican was able to save a small number of Jews, most were subsequently deported.35
Throughout June 1943 Vatican Radio called for an end to attacks on Jews, particularly
in the Axis satellites. At the demand of the Holy See the papal nuncio to Germany, Cesare
Orsenigo, was finally granted an audience with Hitler. His instructions were to plead for
better treatment for the Jews in Germany and the occupied territories. He reported to the
Vatican: "A few days ago I was…received by Hitler; as soon as I touched upon the
Jewish question, our discussion lost all sense of serenity. Hitler turned his back on me,
went to the window and started to drum on the glass with his fingers…while I
continued to spell out our complaints. All of a sudden, Hitler turned around, grabbed a
glass off a nearby table and hurled it to the floor with an angry gesture…"36
In Romania, the Vatican had the benefit of a concordat, though the Catholic population
was small. By 1941, anti-Semitic legislation was already in place when the government
announced a law forbidding Jews to change their religion. At the request of Cardinal
Maglione, the nuncio protested and the restriction was lifted. For obvious reasons, the
number of Jews requesting baptism rose rapidly and in the Spring of 1942 the government
protested. The nuncio responded that Pius XII could not refuse any request for admission
to the Church.
The nuncio intervened often to prevent as much as possible attacks on the non-baptized
Jews and developed a close relationship with the leadership of the Romanian Jews. Romanian
Jews never faced deportation to Poland. Under the direction of Cardinal Maglione "to
mitigate those measures so opposed to the teaching of Christian morality," the nuncio
in 1943 protested a deportation of Jews, many of them orphaned children, to the coast. He
also continued to protest any government attempt to limit or interfere with Jews who
requested instruction and baptism. By 1944, the fear was real that with a deteriorating
military situation, the Jews within internal Romanian camps would fall under German
control, including thousands of Jewish orphans. Through the Holy See’s intervention,
a number were transported safely to Istanbul.
While anti-Jewish legislation was a part of Hungarian life as early as 1939, "mass
deportations of Jews did not take place till the Reich had taken complete control of the
country in 1944."37 The nuncios to both Hungary and Romania were warned by the
Secretary of State that the German presence meant increased pressure for complete
deportation of the two million Jews combined in each country. In Hungary, the nuncio
bitterly complained of the planned deportation to Auschwitz to the prime minister,
charging such persecution as contrary to natural law. The minister refused any
consideration, including exemption for baptized Jews. At the instruction of the Vatican
the nuncio forcefully repeated the request, demanding humane treatment of the Jews and
exemption for those Jews who had been baptized. The deportations continued and the nuncio
recommended a direct and public intervention from the Holy See. On June 12, 1944, Pope
Pius XII addressed an open telegram to Admiral Horthy, regent of Hungary, requesting an
end to the deportations and the sufferings "endured by a large number of unfortunate
people due to their nationality or race." Horthy discontinued the deportations and it
estimated that 170,000 Hungarian Jews were saved.
Horthy, however, was losing control in Hungary. Soon, limited deportations began again
and the nuncio mobilized a large diplomatic protest. Horthy responded that he would
continue to resist German demands for deportations. Shortly thereafter, Horthy announced
an armistice with the Soviet Union. He was immediately arrested and the Nazis assumed
command. Rumors spread that 300,000 Jews were to be deported. The Pope again issued a
public plea, joined with that of the Hungarian bishops, to support and give all possible
assistance to the Jews, baptized or not. In November 1944, the nuncio continued to
publicly protest and joined with five neutral powers to present a formal letter of protest
over the treatment of the Jews. The nuncio’s office supplied over 13,000 letters of
protection, which held off the deportation of many Jews. With the Red Army at the very
gates of Budapest, anti-Jewish deportations continued and the nuncio continued to protest.
"(T)he Jewish leaders recognized the pope’s efforts on behalf of their
persecuted communities, and that despite repeated failures and limited results, the Holy
See’s actions were not completely in vain. Still more remarkable in a way is that,
despite the fact that so many repeated interventions ended with only tenuous results in
comparison with the efforts expended, the Vatican in the midst of the uncertainty and the
darkness within which it had to take action, continued its lifesaving work to the
end."38
In Italy, the situation for the Jews was far better than on most of the continent.
While anti-Semitic laws were enacted prior to the war, the Holy See successfully fought
for many exemptions. Mussolini’s government was for the most part not strongly
committed to anti-Semitic persecution, and the Italian people themselves even less so.
During the early stages of the war, many Jews fleeing the Nazis would come to Italy,
though this immigration would end over time. The Italian government would for the most
part refuse to deport those Jews under its authority.
In June 1943, the Allied invasion of Italy began and by July, Mussolini’s
government had fallen. A new regime took his place and in September would sign an
armistice and in October declare war on Germany. The Germans, however, remained and put up
strong resistance. That summer, 60,000 German troops entered Rome. "This is when the
Church undertook a relief effort which has been called ‘probably the greatest
Christian program in the history of Catholicism.’ Pius sent a letter by hand to the
bishops instructing them to open all convents and monasteries throughout so that they
could become safe refuges for Jewish people. All available church buildings –
including those in Vatican City – were put to use. One hundred and fifty such
sanctuaries were opened in Rome alone. Castel Gondolfo, the Pope’s normal summer
home, was used to shelter about 500 Jews, and several children were born in his personal
apartment…Almost 5,000 Jews, a third of the Jewish population of Rome, were hidden in
buildings that belonged to the Catholic Church."39 Throughout Italy, Jews were
hidden, disguised (some were dressed as clerics and taught Gregorian chant) and provided
with false documents to escape to Spain or Switzerland.
On Saturday, October 16, 1943, the Gestapo in Rome began a round up of those Jews not
in hiding. Within a short time, 1,259 Jews were captured. Upon being informed, Pope Pius
XII immediately filed a protest with the German ambassador, Ernst von Weizsäcker. The
ambassador had little interest in encouraging Nazi persecution. He assured Cardinal
Maglione that a number of the Jews had already been released and the arrests would cease.
The ambassador warned Pius XII through the cardinal not to make a public demonstration as
this would only serve to inflame the Nazi authorities and threaten the lives of the Jews
in hiding throughout Rome. Weizsacker would purposely downplay to German authorities the
pope’s complaints and often pocket protests to avoid increased persecution.
It is estimated that 40,000 Jewish lives were saved in Italy through the intervention
of Pius XII.
Pius XII and the Holocaust
The major accusation made against Pius XII in regard to the Holocaust is that the pope
refused to speak out publicly and if he had done so, lives would have been saved. Both
points are flawed. Pope Pius XII did speak out long before any statements were made, even
by Allied governments. There was no "papal silence" and that is a canard created
by an anti-Catholic dramatist two decades later. At the same time, however, Pius XII did
not believe that words were the most appropriate means to save lives. He believed in
action and work behind the scenes and at the scene through the papal nuncios. Issuing
thunderbolts from the safety of the Vatican aimed at the Nazis would have done nothing to
end the "Final Solution" and could have severely limited, if not ended
altogether, the Church’s capacity to save lives, particularly in the Axis satellite
states.
CBS correspondent Edward Bradley in the "60 Minutes" report on Pius XII
argued that Pope Pius XII should have stood in front of the train that deported a thousand
captured Roman Jews, arguing that a saint would have done just that. Ambassador Weizsacker
had his own response from the very time it took place: "A ‘flaming protest’
by the Pope would not only have been unsuccessful in halting the machinery of destruction
but might have caused a great deal of additional damage – to the thousands of Jews
hidden in the Vatican and the monasteries…and – last but not least – to the
Catholics in all of Germany-occupied Europe."40 The pope himself, possibly
foretelling today’s accusations, once noted after the war, "No doubt a protest
would have gained me the respect of the civilized world, but it would have submitted the
poor Jews to an even worse fate."
History is what history was. Would incessant public statements from the lips of Pius
XII have accomplished a greater good? Cornwell argues that such statements could have led
to a "Catholic uprising" that could have halted Hitler. That is highly doubtful
conjecture. What the Church was able to accomplish in World War II under the direction of
Pius XII was what no other agency, government or entity at the time was able to
accomplish: saving Jewish lives. Pulitzer Prize winning historian John Toland, no friend
of Pius XII, summed it up: "The Church, under the Pope’s guidance…saved the
lives of more Jews than all other churches, religious institutions and rescue
organizations combined…The British and the Americans, despite lofty pronouncements,
had not only avoided taking any meaningful action but gave sanctuary to few persecuted
Jews." 41
"Lofty pronouncements" saved no lives during the horror of the Holocaust.
Action did so. Pinchas Lapide, Israeli consul in Italy, estimated that the actions of Pius
II saved over 800,000 Jewish lives during World War II. If that were an exaggeration by
half, it would record more Jewish lives saved than by any other entity at the time.
A note on sources
This Catholic League documentation relied heavily on important direct research
accomplished by others, including the magazine Inside the Vatican whose editors put
together a strong special issue in October 1999 on the topic of Pius XII and the
Holocaust. Sister Margherita Marchione has written Yours Is a Precious Witness and Pius
XII: Architect for Peace (available from Paulist Press). Both are remarkable studies
on Church efforts to save Jewish lives and the pontificate of Pope Pius XII. Also
available from Paulist Press is Pius XII and the Second World War, a translation by
Lawrence J. Johnson of Father Pierre Blet’s extraordinary study of the Vatican
archival record of the war years. Finally, Hitler, the War and the Pope (Genesis
Press, August 2000) by Ronald Rychlak is the definitive popular history of the papacy of
Pope Pius XII in the shadow of Nazism. Without recourse to rhetoric, Rychlak gives a
well-documented and clear-headed defense of Pius XII. His book also provides a detailed
response to John Cornwell’s Hitler’s Pope. Rychlak’s work puts the
claim of the "silence" of Pope Pius XII in the face of the Holocaust to rest.
SUMMARY POINTS
*For nearly 20 years after World War II, Pope Pius XII (1939-1958) was honored by the
world for his actions in saving countless Jewish lives in the face of the Nazi Holocaust.
*A sampling of some of the Jewish organizations that praised Pope Pius XII at the time
of his death for saving Jewish lives during the horror of the Nazi Holocaust: the World
Jewish Congress, the Anti-Defamation League, the Synagogue Council of America, the
Rabbinical Council of America, the American Jewish Congress, the New York Board of Rabbis,
the American Jewish Committee, the Central Conference of American Rabbis, the American
Jewish Committee, the Central Conference of American Rabbis, the National Conference of
Christians and Jews and the National Council of Jewish Women.
*When critics are reminded of the universal praise he received from Jewish
organizations in life and death, they are dismissed as merely "political"
statements, as if those Jews who had lived through the Holocaust would insult the memory
of the millions killed for some ephemeral political gain.
*Contemporary Catholics are witnessing the creation of a myth in regard to Pius XII, a
propaganda campaign as relentless as any created by 19th century anti-Catholic apologists.
*The myth of Pius XII began in earnest in 1963 in a drama created for the stage by Rolf
Hochhuth, an otherwise obscure German playwright born in 1931. In The Deputy
Hochhuth charged through a fictional presentation that Pius XII maintained an icy, cynical
and uncaring silence during the Holocaust. More interested in Vatican investments than
human lives, Pius was presented as a cigarette-smoking dandy with Nazi leanings.
*Even John Cornwell in Hitler’s Pope describes The Deputy as
"historical fiction based on scant documentation…(T)he characterization of
Pacelli (Pius XII) as a money-grubbing hypocrite is so wide of the mark as to be
ludicrous. Importantly, however, Hochhuth’s play offends the most basic criteria of
documentary: that such stories and portrayals are valid only if they are demonstrably
true."
*The Deputy was used as a means to discredit an anti-Communist papacy. Instead
of Pius being seen as a careful and concerned pontiff working with every means available
to rescue European Jews in the face of complete Nazi entrapment, an image was created of a
political schemer who would sacrifice lives to stop the spread of Communism.
*When The Deputy appeared the Jewish world had experienced a virtual re-living
of the Holocaust in the trial of Adolf Eichmann. For many young Jews, Eichmann’s
trial was the first definitive exposure to the horror that the Nazis had implemented. In
the United States Jewish community, as well as in Israel, Hochhuth’s charges of a
papal "silence" and indifference during the Holocaust were readily accepted.
Despite the fact of a two-decades-old acknowledgment of papal support and assistance to
the Jews during the War, Hochhuth’s unfounded charges took on all the aspects of
revelation.
*While nothing can fully destroy the enormous strides taken by Pope John Paul II,
leaving this myth unanswered and accepted can only do great damage to what should be a
deep and close relationship between Catholics and Jews.
*Eugenio Pacelli reported to Rome from Germany that Hitler was a violent man who
"will walk over corpses" to achieve his goals. In 1928, the Holy office issued a
strong condemnation of the anti-Semitism foundational to the Nazis: "(T)he Holy See
is obligated to protect the Jewish people against unjust vexations and…particularly
condemns unreservedly hatred against the people once chosen by God; the hatred that
commonly goes by the name anti-Semitism."
*Pacelli was dismayed with the Nazi assumption of power and by August of 1933 he
expressed to the British representative to the Holy See his disgust with "their
persecution of the Jews, their proceedings against political opponents, the reign of
terror to which the whole nation was subjected." When it was stated that Germany now
had a strong leader to deal with the communists, Cardinal Pacelli responded that the Nazis
were infinitely worse.
*The Holy See had begun to lodge protests against Nazi action almost immediately after
the concordat was signed with Germany. Its first protest concerned the government-directed
anti-Jewish boycotts. Numerous protests would follow over treatment of both the Jews and
the direct persecution of the Church in Nazi Germany. The German foreign minister would
report that his desk was stuffed with protests from Rome, protests rarely passed on to
Nazi leadership.
*In 1937, Pope Pius XI issued the encyclical Mit Brennender Sorge ("With
Burning Concern"). Drafted by Cardinal Pacelli, Mit Brennender Sorge was
written in German and secretly distributed to parish priests throughout the country. The
encyclical condemned the racist principles of Nazism and the slavish worship of the state.
The German government described it as a "call to battle against the Reich." *The
Nazi press condemned the "Jew-God and His deputy in Rome" while the government
threatened to cancel the concordat. In a Europe still committed to appeasing Hitler, the
Church was the only voice speaking out strongly against the Nazis.
*Cardinal Pacelli wrote to archbishops throughout the world in early January 1939
instructing them to petition their governments to open their borders to Jews fleeing
persecution in Germany. The following day Pacelli wrote to American cardinals, asking them
to assist exiled Jewish professors and scientists.
*On October 20, 1939, Pope Pius XII issued his first encyclical, Summi Pontificatus.
In this encyclical he lashed out at the dictators of Europe – "an
ever-increasing host of Christ’s enemies" – and reminded the world of St.
Paul’s vision of neither Gentile nor Jew. The Gestapo labeled the encyclical a direct
attack, while the French had copies printed and dropped by air over western Germany. The
New York Times summarized the encyclical as a call for the restoration of Poland and
an uncompromising attack on racism and dictators.
*In January, 1940, Vatican Radio was instructed by the pope to broadcast – in
German – a detailed report on attacks on the Church and civilians in Poland. A week
later, Vatican Radio broadcast to an unbelieving world in English that "Jews and
Poles are being herded into separate ghettos" where starvation, disease and exposure
would kill tens of thousands.
*In 1940, Pius XII issued instructions to the Catholic bishops of Europe to help all
suffering at the hands of the Nazis and to remind their people than any form of racism is
contrary to Church teachings.
*In the early months of 1941, the Vatican worked to assure that Spain would not enter
the war. It served to mediate a potentially dangerous dispute with the United States and
was instrumental in keeping Spain neutral. When Vichy France began to deport Jews Spain
would become a haven. It is estimated that Franco’s Spain – though vilified for
its fascist leanings and alliance with Hitler during its own revolution – provided
safe refuge for possibly a quarter of a million Jews.
*After Hitler invaded the Soviet Union, questions were raised concerning aid to the
Communist nation, particularly in the United States. A number of bishops raised the issue
and, very quickly, Pius XII settled the affair noting that aid to the "people"
of the Soviet Union was not aid to communism. Despite later propaganda, it was clear that
even an anti-religious Stalinist Soviet Union was viewed by the pontiff as less an enemy
than the German Third Reich.
*In his Christmas message of 1941, Pius XII issued another forceful call for peace and
condemned the atrocities of the war, particularly on the civilian populations. *Germany
fumed over another attack on Nazism. The New York Times wrote a long editorial,
calling Pius "the only ruler left on the Continent of Europe who dares to raise his
voice at all." Noting that "the Pope put himself squarely against
Hitlerism…he left no doubt that the Nazi aims are also irreconcilable with his own
conception of a Christmas peace."
*Since the beginning of Nazi atrocities against the Jews, the Vatican had pursued
attempts to help Jews emigrate from German-controlled areas. In 1942, it became clear that
the goal must be to prevent deportation. Reports had begun to reach the Vatican that there
was a gruesome end to such deportations. Those deported virtually vanished.
*In France, as the deportations began, Church authorities with the support of Pius XII
protested throughout the summer of 1942. Vatican Radio and l’Osservatore Romano
reported on powerful statements such as that of Archbishop Jules Saliege in Toulouse who
complains that "frightful things are taking place. The Jews are our brothers. They
belong to mankind. No Christian can dare to forget that!" In July, the bishops and
cardinals of France signed a formal protest to the government over the deportations.
*In Holland, the bishops spoke out forcefully against the deportation of the Jews with
disastrous results. The Gestapo responded by revoking the exception that had been given to
Jews who had been baptized and a round up was ordered. Caught in the web was Edith Stein,
a Jewish convert who had become a nun. She, her sister, and 600 Catholic Jews were
transported to Auschwitz, where she died. The deportations of all Jews were expanded and
by the end of the war virtually the entire Jewish population of Holland had been wiped
out.
*After Holland, Pope Pius XII was convinced that dramatic public statements in specific
situations should be avoided. Such statements were easy to make, Pius believed, but could
cause untold suffering. For the most part, Pius would rely on Church authorities on the
scene to determine the best action and follow their course. This included the web of
nuncios reporting directly to Rome from capitals throughout Europe who would become the
primary source of papal action and activity. It would be those nuncios working with the
Vatican that would save hundreds of thousands of Jewish lives.
*In his annual Christmas message of 1942, Pius XII condemned totalitarian regimes and
mourned the victims of the war: "the hundreds of thousands who, through no fault of
their own, and solely because of their nation or race, have been condemned to death or
progressive extinction." He called on Catholics to shelter any and all refugees. The
statement was loudly praised in the Allied world. In Germany, it was seen as the final
repudiation by Pius XII of the "new order" imposed by the Nazis. "(H)e is
virtually accusing the German people of injustice toward the Jews, and makes himself the
mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminal."
*On February 19, 1943 Vatican Radio condemned deportations and promised "the curse
of God" on those who did such things.
*In Germany papal interventions were simply useless. They were predestined to failure
in the face of the inflexible decisions made by the national-socialist state. But between
the two Axis powers, there were also regions that in various degrees had fallen under
control of the Reich and within which the Holy See nonetheless felt it could exercise an
influence and counteract the designs of the Berlin government. This was true for the Axis
satellites, namely Slovakia, Croatia, Romania and Hungary.
*As the summer of 1944 ended, there was an uprising in Slovakia that was crushed by
German troops. The Jews were under great threat and the nuncio appealed to Tiso. Tiso
blocked some deportations at first, then relented to German pressure. Pope Pius XII
drafted a personal appeal to Tiso to be handed on by the nuncio. It accomplished nothing.
*On June 12, 1944, Pope Pius XII addressed an open telegram to Admiral Horthy, regent
of Hungary, requesting an end to the deportations and the sufferings "endured by a
large number of unfortunate people due to their nationality or race." Horthy
discontinued the deportations and it estimated that 170,000 Hungarian Jews were saved.
*The Jewish leaders recognized the pope’s efforts on behalf of their persecuted
communities, and that despite repeated failures and limited results, the Holy See’s
actions were not completely in vain. Still more remarkable in a way is that, despite the
fact that so many repeated interventions ended with only tenuous results in comparison
with the efforts expended, the Vatican in the midst of the uncertainty and the darkness
within which it had to take action, continued its lifesaving work to the end.
*In the summer of 1943, 60,000 German troops entered Rome. This is when the Church
undertook a relief effort which has been called "probably the greatest Christian
program in the history of Catholicism." Pius XII sent a letter by hand to the bishops
instructing them to open all convents and monasteries throughout so that they could become
safe refuges for Jewish people. All available church buildings – including those in
Vatican City – were put to use. One hundred and fifty such sanctuaries were opened in
Rome alone. Castel Gondolfo, the Pope’s normal summer home, was used to shelter about
500 Jews, and several children were born in his personal apartment. Almost 5,000 Jews, a
third of the Jewish population of Rome, were hidden in buildings that belonged to the
Catholic Church.
*It is estimated that 40,000 Jewish lives were saved by the action of Pius XII in
Italy.
*Pope Pius XII spoke out long before any statements were made, even by Allied
governments. There was no "papal silence" and that is a canard created by an
anti-Catholic dramatist two decades later. At the same time, however, Pius XII did not
believe that words were the most appropriate means to save lives. He believed in action
and work behind the scenes and at the scene through the papal nuncios.
*What the Church was able to accomplish in World War II under the direction of Pius XII
was what no other agency, government or entity at the time was able to accomplish: saving
Jewish lives. Pulitzer Prize winning historian John Toland, no friend of Pius XII, summed
it up: "The Church, under the Pope’s guidance…saved the lives of more Jews
than all other churches, religious institutions and rescue organizations combined…The
British and the Americans, despite lofty pronouncements, had not only avoided taking any
meaningful action but gave sanctuary to few persecuted Jews."
FOOTNOTES
1Yours Is a Precious Witness, Margherita Marchione (Paulist Press, 1997), p.57.
2Cited in numerous references, including "The Selling of a Myth," Ronald
Rychlak, Inside the Vatican, October, 1999.
3New York Times, March 14, 2000, p. 28.
4See Faith and Treason, Antonia Fraser (Doubleday, 1996).
5New York Times, March 14, 2000.
6"Is It Enough to be Sorry?" Lance Morrow, Time magazine, March 27,
2000.
7Cornwell, p. 375.
8"Another Pope Visits Jerusalem" Uri Dromi, The Miami Herald, March
20, 2000.
9There is not presently available in English a scholarly biography of Pope Pius XII.
Biographical resources for this paper were taken from Catholic Almanac 2000 (Our
Sunday Visitor), The Catholic Encyclopedia (Catholic University of America, 1967),
and Hitler, the War and the Pope, Ronald Rychlak (Genesis Press, August 2000).
10Cited in Pius XII: Greatness Dishonored, Michael O’Carroll (Laetare
Press, 1980) p. 33.
11Rychlak
12Ibid.
13Adolf Hitler, John Toland (Ballantine Books, 1984) pp. 363-376.
14Rychlak
15Ibid.
16In Hitler’s Pope Cornwell quotes from a report within the Vatican
archives by Pacelli in his early years at Munich. The letter from Pacelli reports on a
meeting his associate had with the violent revolutionaries that had assumed power briefly
in Munich in 1919. The letter notes that the revolutionaries were Jews. Cornwell contends
that the reference to their Jewishness is representative of "stereotypical
anti-Semitic contempt." Such an interpretation is Cornwell’s alone. The report
reads as an objective – if excited – description of what in fact took place and
the personalities involved. For a public life of 82 years, no evidence has ever been found
of anti-Semitic expression or beliefs in Pius XII. Even Hochhuth at his most vindictive
never claimed that Pius was personally anti-Semitic.
17Rychlak
18See William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich (Simon and
Schuster, 1959 and later editions), pp. 513-597.
19New York Times, January 23, 1940.
20See Toland, pp. 427-428.
21Pius XII and the Second World War, by Pierre Blet, SJ (Paulist Press, 1999).
Father Blet’s work is a detailed study of the archives of the Vatican during World
War II and a vital source for a proper understanding of the diplomatic activity of the
Holy See during the war.
22New York Times, March 14, 1940.
23Cited in Inside the Vatican, October, 1999.
24Blet, pp. 97-104.
25Ibid. pp. 119-127.
26New York Times, December 25, 1941.
27Rychlak
28Ibid.
29She was canonized a martyr/saint by Pope John Paul II in 1998.
30Rychlak
31Inside the Vatican, October 1999.
32Blet, p. 91.
33Ibid. p. 168.
34Ibid. pp. 168-178.
35Ibid. pp. 178-181.
36Rychlak
37Blet, p. 189
38Ibid. p. 200.
39Rychlak
40Cited in Rychlak.
41Toland, p. 549.
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