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Eight
years ago this month, the New Yorker magazine published a
spectacularly long article entitled "The Silence." Written by
the resigned priest James Carroll (now a columnist at the
Boston Globe), it argued that the doctrine of papal
infallibility and the Church's insistence "upon the primacy of
Jesus as a means to salvation" were both false and had caused
untold harm throughout history. In a misunderstanding of papal
infallibility remarkable in one who had studied Catholic
theology, Carroll contended that the doctrine prevented the
Church from acknowledging its own guilt, causing John Paul II to
remain "silent" in the face of overwhelming institutional sin.
"The doctrine of infallibility," Carroll concluded, "is like a
virus that paralyzes the body of the Church."
"The Silence," caused a mini-sensation, becoming a focal point
for anti-Catholics everywhere, and a conversation piece among
the chattering classes. What made the article notable were not
its attacks against the pope, its slashing attacks against papal
infallibility, nor even its manifold errors about theology and
Church history. What caused the greatest impact was Carroll's
attempt to blame Pope Pius XII—and, to a large extent, the
Catholic Church itself—for the Holocaust.
Carroll's charges were hardly novel. As early as 1943, Soviet
propagandists concocted tales about Pius XII's alleged
collaboration with Hitler's Germany, attempting to drive a wedge
between the faithful and the Church. After the war, these
Communist myths were picked up by the German playwright Rolf
Hochhuth—ironically, a former member of the Hitler Youth—whose
play The Deputy (1963) attempted to transfer German guilt
to an Italian pope. Hochhuth caricatured Pius XII as a cowardly
and avaricious man who could have prevented the Holocaust with a
few dramatic words, but—because of his own weak character and
financial interests—chose to remain "silent." Carrol's New
Yorker article resumed Hochhuth's indictment of Pius XII,
and extended it.
Although many people dismissed the New Yorker piece—even
Commonweal magazine, often critical of the Vatican,
called the essay "factually flawed...logically
garbled...theologically incoherent"—Carroll's attacks against
the papacy encouraged anti-papal polemicists, both within and
without the Church, to publish their own salvos. Within a few
years, a cottage industry of attacks on Pius XII and the
Catholic Church emerged: John Cornwell's Hitler's Pope
(1999); Gary Wills's Papal Sin (2000); Susan Zuccotti's
Under His Very Windows (2000); Michael Phayer's The
Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930-1965 (2000); David
Kertzer's The Popes Against the Jews (2001); Carroll's
own Constantine's Sword (2001); and Daniel Jonah
Goldhagen's A Moral Reckoning (2002).
On the talk-show circuits and in the academic journals, these
books—despite their manifold errors—were greeted with an almost
rapturous reception. One man, however, remained unconvinced:
Rabbi and historian David Dalin. Disturbed and angered by what
he considered the hijacking and exploitation of the Holocaust
for partisan purposes, Dalin decided to respond. With degrees in
both history and theology, and as a long-time participant in the
Jewish-Catholic dialogue, he had both the knowledge and the
authority to rebut the anti-papal polemicists, and write
accurately about the Catholic Church and the Holocaust. The
result was a series of essays and reviews, the most important
being his first one, "Pius XII and the Jews," a 5,000-word
analysis of the entire controversy in the Weekly Standard
of February 26, 2001.
Translated into several languages, Dalin's article became one of
the most widely reprinted essays on Pius XII. What struck so
many people about Dalin's work was not just his point-by-point
refutation of Pius' detractors, but his dramatic conclusion:
"Pius XII was, genuinely and profoundly, a Righteous Gentile."
To be sure, Dalin's essay did not please everyone, particularly
those who had made a small fortune off of the Deputy Myth, or
whose ideological disagreements with the Church were energized
and sustained by that myth. The attack became all the more
ferocious. In an essay published in the journal First Things,
Joseph Bottum argued that although Pius's supporters had
demolished the accusations against the wartime pontiff, they had
lost the larger war over Pius's cultural reputation—or at least,
not yet won it—because the opponents of Pius XII still wielded
the most influence. Bottum's conclusion, however, may have been
a bit premature.
In reality Pius's supporters were growing in influence, not just
in America, but throughout the world. Discussing this matter
among ourselves, we decided to put together an anthology which
would do what had not yet been done: answer the recent critics
of Pius XII all at once, within a single cover, in a
comprehensive, measured fashion. The result is The Pius War:
Responses to the Critics of Pius XII, edited by
Bottum and Dalin, and published by Lexington Books.
The first hundred pages of the book collect the best essays and
reviews—selected from literally hundreds of possibilities—of the
various attack books which have appeared during the past decade.
The criteria for selections were eloquence, force of persuasion,
depth of knowledge and, above all, historical accuracy—as the
contributions would be worthless unless they could prove their
case.
Hence, two distinguished Church historians—Dr. Rainer Decker of
Germany, and Fr. John Jay Hughes—respond, respectively, to
Cornwell's Hitler's Pope, and Michael Phayer's The
Catholic Church and the Holocaust—explaining what really
happened during the Nazi roundup of Rome's Jews (which was at
the heart of Hochhuth's malicious play). Professor Ronald
Rychlak, the foremost Pius scholar in America, deconstructs
Susan Zuccotti's claim that Pius XII did "little or nothing" to
assist persecuted Jews; Robert Louis Wilken, an eminent
historian of Christianity at the University of Virginia,
delivers a body blow to James Carroll's Constantine's Sword;
teacher and publisher Justus George Lawler takes issue with Gary
Wills' scatter-shot attacks and deeply flawed history; papal
scholar Russell Hittinger responds to David Kertzer's The
Popes Against the Jews; archival expert John Conway
critiques historians who speak darkly about the Vatican's
"secret" wartime archives—while never having studied the
voluminous Vatican archives already released in eleven volumes;
Michael Novak responds to Daniel Goldhagen's aspersions against
Pius and the Church; and Kevin M. Doyle contributes the
unexpected gem of the book, an analysis of the so-called "hidden
encyclical," against anti-Semitism, intended by Pius XI and
allegedly suppressed by Pius XII. Doyle shows that, far from
remaining "hidden," the encyclical was transformed and published
just six weeks after the beginning of the Second World War under
a different name, Summi Pontificatus, condemning racism
in all forms. Add to this Dalin's famous essay, and an
introduction and concluding essay by Bottum.
Following these essays is my own contribution: an 80,000-word,
180-page annotated bibliography which attempts to canvass every
aspect of this controversy—with a focus on demonstrating how
Pius XII, far from remaining "silent," condemned anti-Semitism,
racism, and genocide before, during and after the Holocaust.
Constituting some two-thirds of the book, my bibliography has
been very generously called "a tour de force of scholarship and
highly readable to boot" (National Review, February 14).
My purpose was to provide a kind of historical road map, an
intellectual compass, for both laymen and scholars alike, who
want to know more about this subject—and want to know which
authors can be trusted, which cannot—and why.
As important as we believe The Pius War is for recovering
historical truth, it does not downplay or whitewash the sins of
the "sons and daughters" of the Catholic Church, to quote John
Paul II. Many of the essayists speak frankly about anti-Judaism
and anti-Semitism, and the bibliography has a long section on
Jewish-Catholic relations, covering every aspect of this
turbulent relationship, light and dark alike.
Already we can see signs of change. A movie of Hochhuth's
Deputy called “Amen” was released in 2002 only to become an
international flop, garnering highly negative reviews. Hochhuth
himself was recently caught praising the notorious revisionist
historian—and accused Holocaust-denier—David Irving, thereby
discrediting himself even further. John Cornwell recently stated
that he now finds it "impossible to judge" Pius XII, in light of
"the debates and evidence" that followed publication of his
now-discredited Hitler's Pope. Even Susan Zuccotti,
writing in the esteemed Holocaust and Genocide Studies
(Fall 2004), while still maintaining her excessively skeptical
attitude toward Pius XII's involvement in rescue efforts,
acknowledges evidence she previously overlooked, and now
believes there is "much room for compromise and reconciliation"
between participants in this debate. So, progress has been made,
and continues to be made, as new archives are opened, new books
are written, new perspectives are formed.
William Doino Jr. is a Catholic author and commentator. A
contributing editor to Inside the Vatican, he has been published
in such journals as National Review, Modern Age, and Crisis, and
is now researching and writing a book on the Vatican’s role
during the Second World War.
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