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Goldhagen
v. Pius XII
First Things: A Journal of Religion and Public Life
Ronald J. Rychlak
Copyright
(c) 2002 First Things 124 (June/July 2002): 37-54.
Tendentious attacks on Pope Pius XII
(Eugenio Pacelli) are nothing new. Indeed, they have become commonplace. Yet
Daniel Goldhagen’s recent 27,000–word essay for the New Republic,
“What Would Jesus Have Done? Pope Pius XII, the Catholic Church, and the
Holocaust” (January 21, 2002), calls for special attention. Based upon his
forthcoming book, A Moral Reckoning (Knopf), Goldhagen’s essay is
noteworthy both for the breathtaking scope of its claims and the air of
righteous indignation that infuses it. Not content to argue that Pope Pius did
less to save the Jews than he should have, as many other scholars have done,
Goldhagen goes much further—to attack Pacelli as an anti–Semite and the
Church as a whole as an institution thoroughly, and perhaps inextricably,
permeated by anti–Semitism. In fact, he even argues that “the main
responsibility for producing this all–time leading Western hatred lies with
Christianity. More specifically, with the Catholic Church.” Such charges
demand a thorough response.
In his most recent book, Hitler’s
Willing Executioners, Goldhagen asserted that blame for the Holocaust should
be placed on ordinary Germans and their unique brand of anti–Semitism. When
contemporary historians from both sides of the Atlantic challenged him on this
point, he eventually conceded that he had underestimated how factors other than
anti–Semitism helped lead to the Third Reich’s crimes. “I skirted over
some of this history a little too quickly,” he said. He has skirted again.
Goldhagen’s article is based on no
original historical research. It is entirely dependent on secondary sources that
are written in English. This contributes to what can only be judged an
inexcusable number of errors, small and large. Several of the dates he provides
relating to the establishment of European ghettos are wrong (one by more than
fifty years). He is also wrong (by three decades) about the beginning of the
process for Pius XII’s beatification, and he is wrong about the date that the
so–called “Hidden Encyclical” was made public. He is wrong in calling the
concordat with the Holy See “Nazi Germany’s first international treaty.”
He is wrong to say that the Belgian Catholic Church was silent; it was one of
the first national churches to speak out against Nazi racial theories. He is way
off base to suggest that German Cardinals Michael von Faulhaber and Clement
August von Galen were insensitive to or silent about Jewish suffering. Goldhagen
says that Pius XII “clearly failed to support” the protest of the French
bishops, when, in fact, he actually had it rebroadcast on Vatican Radio for six
consecutive days. He charges that Pius XII never reproached or punished
Franciscan friar Miroslav Filopovic–Majstorovic for his evil actions in
Croatia, when, actually, the so–called “Brother Satan” was tried, laicized,
and expelled from the Franciscan order before the war even ended (in fact,
before most of his serious wrongdoing). Goldhagen also misidentifies the role of
Vatican official Peter Gumpel (who is the relator or judge, not the postulator
or promoter, of Pius XII’s cause for sainthood), and he is wrong to say that
Gumpel was designated by the Vatican to represent it at a meeting with the
recently disbanded Catholic–Jewish study group. He seems unaware that Catholic
scholars on that committee disassociated themselves from statements issued by
their Jewish counterparts following its collapse. He identifies the
much–admired king of Denmark during the war as Christian II; it was Christian
X. He refers to Pope Pius XI as having been Cardinal Secretary of State; it was
actually his successor Pope Pius XII.
A few embarrassments like this might
be accounted for by positing carelessness. However, Goldhagen’s graver
errors—each and every one of which cuts against Catholics and the
Pope—reveal something much more troubling at work in his essay.
The
1942 Christmas Statement
Goldhagen’s efforts to trivialize
and diminish Pope Pius XII’s famous 1942 Christmas statement and its clear
denunciation of Nazi ideology are representative of the one–sided, biased
approach that permeates his work. In the 1942 statement, Pius said that the
world was “plunged into the gloom of tragic error” and that “the Church
would be untrue to herself, she would have ceased to be a mother, if she were
deaf to the cries of suffering children which reach her ears from every class of
the human family.” He spoke of the need for mankind to make “a solemn vow
never to rest until valiant souls of every people and every nation of the earth
arise in their legions, resolved to bring society and to devote themselves to
the services of the human person and of a divinely ennobled human society.” He
said that mankind owed this vow to all victims of the war, including “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” (emphasis added).
In making this statement and others
during the war, Pius used the word stirpe, which according to Zanichelli’s
Italian and English Dictionary can mean stock, birth, family, race, or
descent, but which had been used for centuries as an explicit reference to Jews.
British records (British Public Records Office, FO 371/34363 59337 [January 5,
1943]) reflect the opinion that “the Pope’s condemnation of the treatment of
the Jews and the Poles is quite unmistakable, and the message is perhaps more
forceful in tone than any of his recent statements.” The Dutch bishops issued
a pastoral letter in defense of Jewish people on February 21, 1943, making
express reference to the Pope’s statement.
Moreover, a well–known Christmas
Day editorial in the New York Times praised Pius XII for his moral
leadership in opposing the Nazis:
No
Christmas sermon reaches a larger congregation than the message Pope Pius XII
addresses to a war–torn world at this season. This Christmas more than ever he
is a lonely voice crying out of the silence of a continent. . . .
When
a leader bound impartially to nations on both sides condemns as heresy the new
form of national state which subordinates everything to itself; when he declares
that whoever wants peace must protect against “arbitrary attacks” the
“juridical safety of individuals”; when he assails violent occupation of
territory, the exile and persecution of human beings for no reason other than
race or political opinion; when he says that people must fight for a just and
decent peace, a “total peace”—the “impartial judgment” is like a
verdict in a high court of justice.
A similar editorial from the Times
of London said:
A
study of the words which Pope Pius XII has addressed since his accession in
encyclicals and allocutions to the Catholics of various nations leaves no room
for doubt. He condemns the worship of force and its concrete manifestation in
the suppression of national liberties and in the persecution of the Jewish race.
Obviously, in contrast to what
Goldhagen would have us believe, everyone knew to whom the Pope was referring,
including the Axis powers.
According to an official Nazi report
by Heinrich Himmler’s Superior Security Office (the Reichssicher heits
hauptamt) to Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop’s office:
In
a manner never known before, the Pope has repudiated the National Socialist New
European Order. . . . It is true, the Pope does not refer to the National
Socialists in Germany by name, but his speech is one long attack on everything
we stand for. . . . God, he says, regards all people and races as worthy of the
same consideration. Here he is clearly speaking on behalf of the Jews. . . . [H]e
is virtually accusing the German people of injustice toward the Jews, and makes
himself the mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals.
An American report noted that the
Germans were “conspicuous by their absence” at a Midnight Mass conducted by
the Pope for diplomats on Christmas Eve following the papal statement. German
Ambassador Diego von Bergen, on the instruction of Ribbentrop, warned the Pope
that the Nazis would seek retaliation if the Vatican abandoned its neutral
position. When he reported back to his superiors, the German ambassador stated:
“Pacelli is no more sensible to threats than we are.”
Vatican
Radio
Goldhagen asks rhetorically: “Why,
as a moral and practical matter, did [Pius XII] speak out publicly on behalf of
the suffering of Poles, but not of Jews? No good answer.” He then quotes a
Vatican Radio broadcast of January 1940, trying to make the point that the
Vatican was concerned only about Polish Catholics and could not spare a good
word for Jews. In doing this, he badly misrepresents the truth.
As an initial matter, the quote cited
by Goldhagen does not limit itself to Christian Poles. It merely refers to
“Poles.” Of course, writings of that time sometimes distinguished
“Poles” and “Jews,” using the former designation to refer to Polish
Christians, but this was far from always the case. Moreover, Goldhagen implies
that Jews were never mentioned on Vatican Radio. This is simply false.
Goldhagen seems to have taken his
Vatican Radio quote from Pierre Blet’s Pius XII and the Second World War.
That book presents itself as a synopsis. Had Goldhagen actually researched the
Vatican Radio transcripts from January 1940 (the month upon which he focuses) he
would have found that Jews were indeed expressly and clearly identified. A key
passage states:
A
system of interior deportation and zoning is being organized, in the depth of
one of Europe’s severest winters, on principles and by methods that can be
described only as brutal; and stark hunger stares 70 percent of Poland’s
population in the face, as its reserves of foodstuffs and tools are shipped to
Germany to replenish the granaries of the metropolis. Jews and Poles are being
herded into separate “ghettos,” hermetically sealed and pitifully inadequate
for the economic subsistence of the millions destined to live there.
Even Michael Phayer (another critic
of the Pope) quotes this explicit defense of Jews in his book The Catholic
Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965 (which is listed as one of the books
that Goldhagen reviewed for his essay). On October 15, 1940, Vatican Radio
denounced “the immoral principles of Nazism,” and on March 30, 1941
explicitly condemned “the wickedness of Hitler.” These broadcasts were among
the first to break the news of the Nazi persecutions, but they were not the only
such stories on Vatican Radio. They continued throughout the war.
The Catholic faithful heard these
broadcasts and reacted accordingly. French priest–rescuer (and later Cardinal)
Henri de Lubac paid tribute to the Pope’s radio station in his book Christian
Resistance to Anti–Semitism, describing the profound impact it had upon
the French resistance. Similarly, Father Michel Riquet, S.J., an ex–inmate of
Dachau who was recognized for saving Jewish lives, stated: “Pius XII spoke;
Pius XII condemned; Pius XII acted. . . . Throughout those years of horror, when
we listened to Radio Vatican and to the Pope’s messages, we felt in communion
with the Pope in helping persecuted Jews and in fighting against Nazi
violence.”
The
Hidden Encyclical and Summi Pontificatus
Early in his essay, Goldhagen
discusses the so–called “hidden encyclical.” The story here is that in
June 1938, more than a year before the outbreak of World War II, when Eugenio
Pacelli was Vatican Secretary of State, Pope Pius XI commissioned a draft papal
statement attacking racism and anti–Semitism. Unfortunately he died before it
was completed. According to Goldhagen, Pius XI drafted it, Pius XII buried it,
and it remained hidden until it was published in France in 1995.
This story, if true, would help to
support Goldhagen’s depiction of Pius XII as a villain. But it isn’t true.
For starters, there never was an encyclical or even a draft encyclical. Pope
Pius XI asked for a paper from Fr. John LaFarge, S.J. The thought was that this
might one day be used as the basis for an encyclical. LaFarge was not an expert
theologian or historian, so he sought help from two other priests, one from
France and the other from Germany. This resulted in three different papers, one
written in French, one in English, and one in German.
The source upon which Goldhagen
relies, Georges Passelecq and Bernard Suchecky’s The Hidden Encyclical of
Pius XI, deals with the French and the English papers, but not the German
one. That book also makes clear that—contrary to what Goldhagen reports—Pius
XI was not the author of any of the documents. In fact, as that book further
makes clear, there is no evidence that either he or Pius XII even saw
these documents. A copy was sent to Pius XI, but by that time he was already
gravely ill. When it was found after his death, there were no notations
suggesting that he ever reviewed it. The book also explains that the paper
disappeared immediately after Pius XI’s death, and the men who were working on
the project believed (indeed were certain) that Pius XII had not seen it.
He therefore could not have buried it. Finally, this matter was made public in
1972 by the National Catholic Reporter and again in 1973 by L’Osservatore
Romano, not in 1995 when Passelecq and Suchecky’s book came out.
The primary author of the German
draft, Professor Gustav Gundlach, S.J., helped Pius XII with his first
encyclical, Summi Pontificatus, which was released on October 20, 1939,
just after the outbreak of war. Not surprisingly, Summi Pontificatus
(which expressly mentions Jews and urges solidarity with all who profess
a belief in God) contains language that is similar to the paper on which
Gundlach had worked. In fact, Fr. LaFarge wrote in America magazine that
it was obvious that Summi Pontificatus applied to the Jews of Europe. He
was concerned only that Americans might not realize that it also applied to
racial injustice in the United States.
Because Goldhagen limited his
research to a single and incomplete source, it is not surprising to find that
his comments only magnify the errors about the “hidden encyclical.” (A much
better book on the subject, edited by Anton Rauscher, recently appeared in
Germany.) What is very surprising is that Goldhagen neglects even to mention Summi
Pontificatus.
In January 2002, documents from the
personal archive of General William J. (“Wild Bill”) Donovan, who served as
special assistant to the U.S. chief of counsel during the International Military
Tribunal at Nuremberg, were made public and posted on the Internet by the Rutgers
Journal of Law & Religion. In a confidential report documenting Nazi
persecution of the Church, prepared for the Nuremberg prosecution, the situation
surrounding Summi Pontificatus is discussed as providing grounds for a
separate count against the Nazis. The report notes that priests who read that
document were reported to the authorities and that Nazi officials stopped its
reproduction and distribution.
“This Encyclical,” wrote Heinrich
Mueller, head of the Gestapo in Berlin, “is directed exclusively against
Germany, both in ideology and in regard to the German–Polish dispute; how
dangerous it is for our foreign relations as well as our domestic affairs is
beyond dispute.” Reinhard Heydrich, leader of the SS Security Office in
Warsaw, wrote, “This declaration of the Pope makes an unequivocal accusation
against Germany.” The New York Times headline declared: “Pope
Condemns Dictators, Treaty Violators, Racism; Urges Restoring of Poland.”
Allied forces later dropped 88,000 copies of it behind enemy lines for
propaganda purposes.
The
Concordat
In 1933, the Holy See and the German
government signed an agreement that assured the Church’s ability to hold
services and function in general in the coming years. Goldhagen misleadingly
reports that “Pacelli hastened to negotiate for the Church a treaty of
cooperation, the concordat, with Hitler’s Germany.” He also incorrectly adds
that this was “Nazi Germany’s first international treaty.”
Goldhagen was probably fooled by
James Carroll’s Constantine’s Sword. Carroll artfully states that the
concordat was Nazi Germany’s first bilateral treaty. In fact,
the Four Powers Pact between Germany, France, Italy, and England preceded the
concordat’s signing. Moreover, Hitler’s representatives were fully
accredited and recognized by the League of Nations and took part in the
disarmament discussions in Geneva, which also came before the signing of the
concordat. The Soviet Union on May 5, 1933 (more than two months before the
concordat was signed) renewed a trade and friendship agreement with Germany, and
on that same day the British Parliament voted to accept an Anglo–German trade
agreement. In other words, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, the Soviet
Union, and the whole League of Nations accredited the new German government
before the concordat was signed. Carroll may have been technically correct, if
misleading. Goldhagen is just plain wrong.
Goldhagen is also wrong to assert
that a “secret annex” gave the Church’s approval to German rearmament. The
concordat merely states that if Germany were to revive its army, Catholic
soldiers would have access to chaplains. That is a matter of protecting the
sacraments, not approving rearmament. For Goldhagen to transform it into
something nefarious is explicable only as part of his determined effort to
defame Catholics and the Pope.
The aforementioned recently released
confidential report from the Nuremberg prosecution confirms that the concordat
was a “Nazi proposition.” The Nazis accepted terms that the Church had
previously proposed to Weimar, but which Weimar had rejected. The Nazis told the
Vatican that the choice was to accept those terms (which assured that the Church
would be able to function) or face severe persecution. In fact, to prove that
they were serious, the Nazis severely persecuted German Catholics in the weeks
leading up to the concordat. In a private conversation with the British chargé
d’affaires to the Vatican, Pacelli said that the choice was “an agreement on
their lines, or the virtual elimination of the Catholic Church in the Reich.”
The concordat, of course, came during
the pontificate of Pope Pius XI. Like David Kertzer (The Popes Against the
Jews), Goldhagen argues that Pius XI was an anti–Semite. This is a rare
allegation. Pius XI is usually presented as the good, outspoken Pope, in
contrast to the “silent” Pius XII. Not only did Pius XI condemn racism in
major statements issued in 1928, 1930, and 1937, but on September 6, 1938, in a
statement which—though barred from the Fascist press—quickly made its way
around the world, he said:
Mark
well that in the Catholic Mass, Abraham is our Patriarch and forefather.
Anti–Semitism is incompatible with the lofty thought which that fact
expresses. It is a movement with which we Christians can have nothing to do. No,
no, I say to you it is impossible for a Christian to take part in
anti–Semitism. It is inadmissible. Through Christ and in Christ we are the
spiritual progeny of Abraham. Spiritually, we are all Semites.
In January 1939, the National
Jewish Monthly reported that “the only bright spot in Italy has been the
Vatican, where fine humanitarian statements by the Pope [Pius XI] have been
issuing regularly.” When he died the following month, the Nazi press
denigrated him as “Chief Rabbi of the Western World.”
Despite the ludicrous claim that Pius
XI was an anti–Semite, Goldhagen twists the facts around so that he can
“blame” Pius XII for drafting the concordat (which, of course, ultimately
was the responsibility of the sitting Pope, not Secretary of State Pacelli). He
also “blames” Pius XII for drafting the 1937 anti–Nazi encyclical Mit
brennender Sorge.
Mit
brennender Sorge
Of all Goldhagen’s outrages, none
is less comprehensible than his depiction of the great encyclical Mit
brennender Sorge—the Vatican’s powerful denunciation of German fascism
and racism—as an anti–Semitic screed. Mit brennender Sorge, issued by
Pope Pius XI when Pacelli was his Secretary of State, is one of the strongest
condemnations of any national regime that the Holy See has ever published. It
condemned not only the persecution of the Church in Germany, but also the
neo–paganism of Nazi racial theories. The encyclical stated in part that:
Whoever
exalts race, or the people, or the State, or a particular form of State, or the
depositories of power, or any other fundamental value of the human
community—however necessary and honorable be their function in worldly
things—whoever raises these notions above their standard value and divinizes
them to an idolatrous level, distorts and perverts an order of the world planned
and created by God; he is far from the true faith in God and from the concept of
life which that faith upholds.
It took direct aim at Hitler and
Nazism, saying:
None
but superficial minds could stumble into concepts of a national God, of a
national religion; or attempt to lock within the frontiers of a single people,
within the narrow limits of a single race, God, the Creator of the universe,
King and Legislator of all nations before whose immensity they are “as a drop
of a bucket” (Isaiah 11:15).
The encyclical also praised leaders
in the Church who had stood firm and provided a good example. It concluded that
“enemies of the Church, who think that their time has come, will see that
their joy was premature.”
Unlike most encyclicals, which are
written in Latin, Mit brennender Sorge was written in German. It was
dated and signed by Pope Pius XI on Passion Sunday, March 14, 1937, but it was
smuggled into Germany, distributed to all parishes, and read from the pulpits on
Palm Sunday, March 21, 1937.
The only reason Mit brennender
Sorge was read to anyone was because the Nazis were caught off guard. It was
not published in German newspapers. An internal German memorandum dated March
23, 1937 called the encyclical “almost a call to do battle against the Reich
government.” The prosecution report for the Nuremberg trials explained the
measures that the Nazis took in retaliation: all available copies were
confiscated, twelve printing offices were closed, those convicted of
distributing the encyclical were arrested, and the Church–affiliated
publications that ran the encyclical were banned. Later on, the mere mention of
the encyc lical was made a crime in Nazi Germany.
The day following the release of Mit
brennender Sorge, the Völkischer Beobachter carried a strong
counterattack on the “Jew–God and His deputy in Rome.” Das Schwarze
Korps called it “the most incredible of Pius XI’s pastoral letters;
every sentence in it was an insult to the new Germany.” The German ambassador
to the Holy See was instructed not to take part in the solemn Easter ceremonies,
and German missions throughout Europe were told that the German government
“had to consider the Pope’s encyclical as a call to battle . . . as it calls
upon Catholic citizens to rebel against the authority of the Reich.”
The persecution of Jews,
unfortunately, did not lessen; it got worse following the release of Mit
brennender Sorge. This reaction is but one of many examples of Nazi
retaliation—against Jews and Christians—that Goldhagen denies ever happened.
His attempt to convert this strong papal statement into an anti–Semitic,
pro–Nazi screed is simply incredible.
Mystici
Corporis Christi
Goldhagen also misrepresents Pope
Pius XII’s 1943 encyclical, Mystici Corporis Christi. Since this was
primarily a letter on theology, it contained no express references to Hitler or
the Nazis. Still, it was an obvious attack on the theoretical basis of National
Socialism. As Israeli diplomat Pinchas E. Lapide wrote in Three Popes and the
Jews: “Pius chose mystical theology as a cloak for a message which no
cleric or educated Christian could possibly misunderstand.”
In Mystici Corporis Christi,
Pius wrote: “The Church of God . . . is despised and hated maliciously by
those who shut their eyes to the light of Christian wisdom and miserably return
to the teachings, customs, and practices of ancient paganism.” He wrote of the
“passing things of earth,” and the “massive ruins” of war. He offered
prayers that world leaders be granted the love of wisdom and expressed no doubt
that “a most severe judgment” would await those leaders who did not follow
God’s will.
Pius appealed to “Catholics the
world over” to “look to the Vicar of Jesus Christ as the loving Father of
them all, who . . . takes upon himself with all his strength the defense of
truth, justice, and charity.” He explained, “Our paternal love embraces all
peoples, whatever their nationality or race.” “Christ, by his blood, made
the Jews and Gentiles one, ‘breaking down the middle wall of partition . . .
in his flesh’ by which the two peoples were divided” (emphasis added).
He noted that Jews were among the first people to adore Jesus. Pius then made an
appeal for all to “follow our peaceful King who taught us to love not only
those who are of a different nation or race, but even our enemies.” Mystici
Corporis Christi also strongly condemned the forced conversions (to
Catholicism) that were then occurring in Fascist Croatia, which Goldhagen
wrongly claims enjoyed Vatican support.
Vatican Radio used the encyclical as
the basis for a broadcast that stated: “He who makes a distinction between
Jews and other men is unfaithful to God and in conflict with God’s
commands.”
The
1919 Letter
At the center of Goldhagen’s
anti–Catholic thesis is the piece of evidence that John Cornwell centrally
relied upon in his deeply flawed book, Hitler’s Pope: The Secret History of
Pius XII. It is a letter, written in 1919 by Eugenio Pacelli, the future
Pope Pius XII, when he was papal nuncio in Munich. That year, Bolshevik
revolutionaries temporarily took power in Bavaria. Many foreign dignitaries left
Munich, but Pacelli stayed at his post and became a target of Bolshevik
hostility. On one occasion, a car sprayed Pacelli’s residence with
machine–gun fire. Another time, a small group of Bolsheviks broke into the
nunciature, threatened Pacelli at gunpoint, and tried to rob him. Yet another
time, an angry mob descended on Pacelli’s car, screaming insults and
threatening to turn the car over.
When the Bolsheviks seized power,
there was valid reason for concern. Their leaders occupied the royal palace and
began operating what might best be described as a rogue government. Of
particular concern to all diplomats in Munich was that the Bolsheviks violated
the sovereign immunity of foreign missions and representatives. Two legations
were invaded, and a car was requisitioned from another. The Austro–Hungarian
Consul General was arrested without cause and held for several hours.
Alarmed by this behavior and
concerned for the safety of people under his charge, Nuncio Pacelli sent his
assistant, Monsignor Lorenzo Schioppa, to meet with the leaders of the new
government. Schioppa, accompanied by a representative from the Prussian
legation, met with the head of the Republic of the Councils of Munich, Eugen
Leviné. Their purpose was to force Leviné (incorrectly identified as Levien in
the later report), “to declare unequivocally if and how the actual Communist
Government intends to recognize and oversee the immunities of the Diplomatic
Representatives.”
The meeting did not go well. The only
“commitment” that the representatives could get from Leviné was that the
Republic of Councils would recognize the extraterritoriality of the foreign
legations “if, and as long as the representatives of these Powers . . . do
nothing against the Republic of the Councils.” Schioppa was warned that if the
Nuncio did anything against the new government, he would be “kicked out.”
Leviné made it clear that “they had no need of the Nunciature.”
Pacelli wrote a letter back to
Rome, reporting on this meeting. John Cornwell translated a few sentences from
that letter and set them forth as “proof” that Pacelli was an anti–Semite.
The key passage, as translated by Cornwell (and accepted uncritically by
Goldhagen), described the palace as follows:
.
. . a gang of young women, of dubious appearance, Jews like all the rest of
them, hanging around in all the offices with lecherous demeanor and suggestive
smiles. The boss of this female rabble was Levien’s mistress, a young Russian
woman, a Jew and a divorcée, who was in charge. . . . This Levien is a young
man, of about thirty or thirty–five, also Russian and a Jew. Pale, dirty, with
drugged eyes, hoarse voice, vulgar, repulsive, with a face that is both
intelligent and sly.
To Cornwell and Goldhagen, these
words (taken from Schioppa’s report to his superior, Pacelli) prove that
Pacelli was an anti–Semite.
In truth, however, this translation
is grossly distorted. It uses pejorative words, instead of neutral ones that are
more faithful to the original Italian. For instance, the most damning phrase in
the translation, “Jews like all the rest of them,” turns out to be a
distorted, inaccurate translation of the Italian phrase i primi. The
literal translation would be “the first ones” or “the ones just
mentioned.” (Therefore Goldhagen’s statement that “the Communist
revolutionaries, Pacelli averred, were ‘all’ Jews” is wrong. The word
“all” appears only in the Cornwell/Goldhagen mistranslation.) Similarly, the
Italian word schiera is translated by Cornwell as “gang” instead of
“group,” which would be more appropriate. Additionally, the Italian gruppo
femminile should be translated as “female group,” not “female
rabble.” Finally, the Italian occhi scialbi should be translated as
pale (asky, livid) eyes, not “drugged eyes.”
This letter was published in its
original Italian in 1992. Church historian John Conway—an Anglican and a
distinguished scholar—reviewed the book in which it was included for the Catholic
Historical Review. Neither he, nor anyone else at that time, suggested that
the letter was anti–Semitic. When the entire letter is read in an accurate
translation, it is not anti–Semitic. The tone of anti–Semitism is introduced
only by Cornwell’s dubious translation.
Many Bolsheviks were cultural Jews,
of course, though alienated from the Jewish faith and very often from their own
families. Pacelli (and Schioppa) were perfectly well aware of this. They
perceived the threat to the Church as a threat from Bolshevism, not Judaism or
Jews as such. It should also be noted that the message was written fourteen
years before Hitler came to power and the Jewish persecution began. At this
time, the people being described were not victims, but leaders of a
revolutionary and oppressive regional government.
Rather than using unfair translations
and fabricating an argument, Goldhagen could have looked to direct, relevant
evidence from that same period. During World War I, the American Jewish
Committee of New York petitioned the Vatican for a statement on the
“ill–treatment” suffered by Jewish people in Poland. The response came on
February 9, 1916 from the office of the Secretary of State, where Eugenio
Pacelli was—by absolutely every account—working hand–in–hand with
Cardinal Secretary of State Gasparri. It said:
The
Supreme Pontiff . . . as Head of the Catholic Church, which, faithful to its
divine doctrine and to its most glorious traditions, considers all men as
brothers and teaches them to love one another, he never ceases to inculcate
among individuals, as well as among peoples, the observance of the principles of
natural law and to condemn everything which violates them. This law must be
observed and respected in the case of the children of Israel, as well as of all
others, because it would not be conformable to justice or to religion itself to
derogate from it solely on account of religious confessions. The Supreme Pontiff
at this moment feels in his fatherly heart . . . the necessity for all men of
remembering that they are brothers and that their salvation lies in the return
to the law of love which is the law of the gospel.
This response was published in the
New York Times on April 17, 1916 under the headline: “Papal Bull Urges
Equality for Jews.” It also appeared in Civiltà Cattolica on April 28
of that year, and in the London Tablet on April 29. Goldhagen, of
course, fails even to mention it.
Papal
Efforts in Italy
Among the secondary sources on which
Goldhagen relies is Susan Zuccotti’s controversial book Under His Very
Windows. Zuccotti found that Catholic clergy and lay persons defied the
Nazis and the Fascists by providing food, clothing, and shelter to Jews and
other refugees throughout Italy. As a result of these efforts, while
approximately 80 percent of European Jews perished during World War II, 85
percent of Italian Jews survived Nazi occupation. Despite this, Zuccotti gives
no credit to Pope Pius XII, allegedly because she could not find written
evidence of a directive from him to the Catholics in Italy. Goldhagen expands
this to say that “there is no evidence of the Pope’s guiding hand.” The
identical argument is used by Holocaust deniers to absolve Hitler of
responsibility for the death of six million Jews. They too point out that there
is no “written evidence” of Hitler’s guiding hand, much less of a direct
order.
While Zuccotti is anything but
friendly toward Pius XII, and though she overlooks much evidence in his favor,
she actually identifies very substantial evidence of the “Pope’s guiding
hand.” For instance, she discusses a bishop who made a presentation during the
war while he held in his hands a letter from Pius directing Catholics to protect
Jews. (Zuccotti discounts this report only because other witnesses did not see
the actual text of the letter.) She writes about the nuns who said the Pope
ordered their convents opened to Jewish refugees. Zuccotti discusses a letter
from A. L. Eastman, of the World Jewish Congress, thanking the Pope for helping
free imprisoned Jews. She quotes the papal nuncio in Vichy, praising Pope Pius
XII for condemning the persecution of Jews and others. She notes gratitude from
Jewish people to the Pope following the war. She mentions thanks given to the
Pope from Jewish chaplains. At other points along the way she brings up other
evidence, including more letters of thanks from Jewish people and testimony from
the future Pope Paul VI regarding his efforts on behalf of Jewish victims as
having been made at the direction of Pope Pius XII.
It is true that Zuccotti refuses to
believe that there was much papal involvement in rescue efforts, but that is her
extremely grudging interpretation of the evidence. Yet she admits that Catholic
rescuers “invariably believed that they were acting according to the
Pope’s will.” Her principal argument is that there is no written
evidence. Certainly there is a wealth of other types of “evidence of the
Pope’s guiding hand.” Goldhagen’s claim that Zuccotti has “devastated
Pius XII’s reputation” goes far beyond anything that the historical facts
justify.
Using Zuccotti’s argument,
Goldhagen wildly charges that Pius “did not lift a finger to forfend the
deportations of the Jews of Rome.” In addition to voluminous other evidence to
the contrary, there is proof showing this to be false in Adolf Eichmann’s
memoirs, which were released after the Zuccotti book was written. The memoirs
confirm that following the notorious roundup on October 16, 1943, the Vatican
“vigorously protested the arrest of Jews, requesting the interruption of such
action.”
At Eichmann’s 1961 trial, Israeli
Attorney General Gideon Hausner said in his opening statement that “the Pope
himself intervened personally in support of the Jews of Rome.” Documents
introduced in that trial also confirm Vatican efforts to halt the arrests. In
rejecting Eichmann’s appeals, the Israeli Supreme Court expressly noted the
Pope’s protest regarding the deportation of Hungarian Jews. Jewish historian
Michael Tagliacozzo (himself a survivor of the Roman raid) explained:
The
documents clearly prove that, in the early hours of the morning, Pius XII was
informed of what was happening and he immediately had German Ambassador von
Weizsäcker called and ordered State Secretary Luigi Maglione to energetically
protest the Jews’ arrest, asking that similar actions be stopped. . . . In
addition, by his initiative he had a letter of protest sent through Bishop Alois
Hudal [delivered by Fr. Pfeiffer] to the military commander in Rome, General
Rainer Stahel, requesting that the persecution of Jews cease immediately. As a
result of these protests, the operation providing for two days of arrests and
deportations was interrupted at 2 p.m. the same day.
Instead of the 8,000 Jews Hitler
requested, only 1,259 were arrested. After examination of identity documents
(the type routinely provided to Jews by Church officials), over 200 of them were
released. From then on, the Germans did not conduct another major roundup in
Rome. Such evidence overwhelms Goldhagen’s argument regarding an alleged lack
of papal involvement.
The
Soviet–German War
Like many other papal critics,
Goldhagen claims that the Pope favored the Germans in their war against the
Soviet Union. The historical record does not support this charge. It is true
that in the early and mid–1930s, Hitler and Mussolini were seen by many world
leaders (including some officials of the Holy See) as the best defense against
the spread of communism. This was, after all, the time of Stalin’s show trials
and other measures of mass terror. And it was long before the worst Nazi
atrocities. Moreover, it is now clear that Church leaders were right to fear
communism. After the Allied victory, the Soviets expanded their sphere of
influence (and their persecution of the Church) throughout most of Eastern
Europe, including half of Germany. They murdered millions of people.
Despite his concern over the spread
of communism, however, Pius was neither blind to other threats nor unable to
recognize virtue in the Soviet people. As early as 1926, at the direction of
Pope Pius XI, then–Nuncio Eugenio Pacelli attempted to secure a concordat with
the Soviet Union. In 1942, Pius told Fr. Paolo Dezza. S.J. (made a cardinal in
1991): “The Communist danger does exist, but at this time the Nazi danger is
more serious. They want to destroy the Church and crush it like a toad.” When
the Axis sought to have him bless the German “crusade” into the godless
Soviet Union, he refused. In April 1943, Hungarian Prime Minister Nicholas de
Kallay met with Pius XII. He recorded:
His
Holiness brought up the matter of conditions in Germany. He depicted the
conditions prevailing in Germany, which fill him with great sadness, in dramatic
words. He finds incomprehensible all that which Germany does with regard to the
Church, the Jews, and the people in occupied territories. . . .
He is
quite aware of the terrible dangers of Bolshevism, but he feels that, in spite
of the Soviet regime, the soul of the large masses of the Russian people has
remained more Christian than the soul of the German people.
In fact, by cooperating with Franklin
Roosevelt’s request to support extension of the lend–lease program to the
USSR, Pius actually gave economic and military aid to the Soviets. (Later, his
repeated appeals on behalf of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg again revealed his
ability to look beyond the “Communist” issue.)
The recently disbanded
Catholic–Jewish study group found that the evidence does not support
the conclusion that Pius favored the Germans over the Soviets. It is no longer
surprising that Goldhagen fails to mention this. However, it does seem shocking
that Goldhagen quotes the notorious pro–Nazi Bishop Franz–Justus Rarkowski
without mentioning that: 1) he was virtually forced upon the Church by
the Nazis (under the threat of having no military ordinary or military
chaplains); 2) the Church banned Rarkowski from participation in the German
episcopacy; 3) Vatican Radio under Pius XII explicitly denounced Rarkowski; and
4) Vatican Radio declared that: “Hitler’s war is not a just war and God’s
blessing cannot be upon it.”
The
German Catholic Clergy
Goldhagen is particularly critical of
the Catholic clergy in Germany. He makes the sweeping and indefensible claim
that “the great majority” of Catholic military chaplains “weighed in on
the side of the perpetrators, condoning and blessing their crimes. . . . This
virtually unknown and unmentioned chapter of the Catholic clergy’s role in the
Holocaust has barely been investigated.” In fact, this subject has been extensively
analyzed and interpreted by contemporary German historians, but their findings
do not support Goldhagen’s conclusion.
Catholic clergy were among the first
people in Germany to recognize the threat posed by the Nazis. In 1930, the
bishops of Berlin and Westphalia condemned the Nazis in pastoral letters. In the
spring of 1931, the Bavarian bishops also condemned National Socialism and
described it as heretical and incompatible with Catholic teaching. Similar
statements were made by bishops in Cologne, Paderborn, and the upper Rhine.
The report from the Nuremberg
prosecutor’s office outlines dozens of cases where Catholic priests were
persecuted due to their opposition to the Nazis. It also shows that the Nazis
took steps to silence the Church:
On
28 October 1935 the Propaganda Ministry imposed censorship before publication on
all Church periodicals, and on 30 November 1935 this was extended to all
writings and picture material multigraphed for distribution. After 1937, the
German Catholic bishops gave up all attempts to print their pastorals, and had
them merely read from the pulpit.
Of course, sometimes it was
impossible even to read statements from the pulpit. The Bavarian bishops’
pastoral letter of September 4, 1938 was confiscated and forbidden, as was the
pastoral letter of the Bishops Conference of Fulda, dated August 19, 1938.
Goldhagen charges the German clergy
with collaboration in turning over genealogical records to the Nazis. What he
does not mention is that much of this information was already available to the
Nazis by virtue of the German census. To the extent that information was
uniquely in the hands of the clergy, and was demanded by the Nazis (under severe
threats, one might add), the collaboration of the German Catholic clergy was far
from wholesale. As early as 1946, Monsignor J. Neuhäusler, who himself was
imprisoned in Dachau, published a massive series of primary documents
demonstrating extensive Church resistance to Nazi anti–Semitism, including
refusal to hand over genealogical records. The pastoral letters of the German
bishops (which were misrepresented in Guenter Lewy’s The Catholic Church
and Nazi Germany, on which Goldhagen seems to rely) have now been published
in full. They vindicate Albert Einstein’s famous statement in 1940 that the
only organization in Nazi Germany that spoke out against evil was the Church.
Goldhagen’s campaign of character
assassination against Catholic people goes well beyond Popes Pius XI and Pius
XII, but his targets among the German clergy are very poorly chosen.
Declassified documents from the OSS show that American intelligence during the
war knew well that two of the German Catholic leaders Goldhagen focuses upon
(Cardinal Faulhaber of Munich and Bishop von Galen of Münster) were
particularly strong in their opposition to the Nazis. (The formerly secret
documents are collected in American Intelligence and the German Resistance to
Hitler, edited by Jürgen Heideking and Christof Mauch.)
In the 1930s, Cardinal Faulhaber
wrote Secretary of State Pacelli, describing the persecution of the Jews as
“unjust and painful.” In 1935, at an open meeting, Nazis called for him to
be killed. In February 1936, the police confiscated and destroyed one of his
sermons (this happened twice again the following year). On October 25, 1936,
members of the Hitler Youth hurled insults at him as he was entering his car. In
August 1938, the Nazis searched his office. In late November 1938, after he had
given a speech, a uniformed detachment arrived in front of his residence and
threw stones at the windows. They shouted “Take the traitor to Dachau” and
shattered window frames and shutters. In May 1939, demonstrations against
Faulhaber took place throughout Bavaria, and posters were hung saying: “Away
with Faulhaber, the friend of the Jews and the agent of Moscow.” After the war
began, Faulhaber cited Pius XII’s encyclical Summi Pontificatus in an
address condemning Nazis, resulting in a headline reading “Cardinal Faulhaber
Indicts Hitlerism” in the London Tablet.
After the war, Rabbi Stephen S. Wise,
one of the leading American voices for the Jewish cause, called Faulhaber “a
true Christian prelate” who “had lifted his fearless voice” in defense of
the Jews. In fact, Wise felt that Faulhaber had been a much better friend to the
Jews of Europe than had Pastor Martin Niemoeller.
Bishop Galen also took a leading role
in opposing Nazi racial laws. On February 9, 1936, he made a public anti–Nazi
speech at Xanten Cathedral. In response, the Nazis charged that Galen was trying
to shelter “the corrupters of our race.” Galen also helped Pius XI draft the
anti–Nazi encyclical Mit brennender Sorge. Later, Pius XII sent Galen a
letter praising his “open and courageous pronouncements” and telling him
that letters he had mailed to the Holy See laid the groundwork for the 1942
Christmas message. Upon his death, the regional association of the Jewish
communities wrote to the Capitular Vicar in Münster, saying: “Cardinal von
Galen was one of the few upright and conscientious men who fought against
racialism in a most difficult time. We shall always honor the memory of the
deceased Bishop.”
Goldhagen notes Galen’s protests
against the euthanasia program, but he argues that the Nazis did not retaliate
against him and asks why the German bishops and the Vatican did not “rally
behind Bishop Galen.” In fact, on December 2, 1940—well before Galen’s
famous sermons against euthanasia—Pius XII published an official Vatican
statement in the Catholic press that unequivocally condemned the killing of
“life unworthy of life.” This decree went into every diocese in Germany, and
was favorably and publicly commented on by the German bishops. On March 9, 1941,
in a public sermon, Cardinal Konrad von Preysing (whom Goldhagen wrongly
portrays as a critic of Pius XII) made reference to Pius XII, “whom we all
know—I should say from personal experience—as a man of global horizons and
broadmindedness [who] has reaffirmed the doctrine of the Church, according to
which there is no justification and no excuse for the killing of the sick or of
the abnormal on any economic or eugenic grounds.” Other German bishops
followed suit, culminating in (not beginning with) Galen’s famous sermons of
July and August of 1941.
To compound his errors, Goldhagen
charges that Galen’s protests were successful in ending the euthanasia program
and that the Nazis did not retaliate. In fact, the euthanasia campaign was not
ended, but continued under greater secrecy until the end of the war. Moreover,
as one of Galen’s successors, Richard Lettmann, the Bishop of Münster,
explained: “After having preached these sermons the Bishop was prepared to be
arrested by the Gestapo. . . . The Bishop was deeply dejected when in his place
twenty–four secular priests and thirteen members of the regular clergy were
deported into concentration camps, of whom ten lost their lives.” The
Nuremberg prosecution report also shows that Galen was at times forbidden to
speak to the public or to give blessings. In fact, as a result of his
outspokenness, Galen’s diocese suffered a far higher death rate than most
others. None of these crucial facts are mentioned by Goldhagen.
Cardinal Adolph Bertram of Breslau,
also singled out by Goldhagen, first expressed his opposition to National
Socialism in 1930, when he refused a religious funeral for a well–known Nazi
official. In a widely publicized statement, he criticized as a grave error the
one–sided glorification of the Nordic race and the contempt for divine
revelation that was increasingly taught throughout Germany. He warned against
the ambiguity of the concept of “positive Christianity,” a highly
nationalistic religion that the Nazis were encouraging. Such a religion, he
said, “for us Catholics cannot have a satisfactory meaning since everyone
interprets it in the way he pleases.” In response to Bertram, the Nazi press
cited some of Pope Leo XIII’s pronouncements about the relations of practicing
Catholics to political parties to bolster the argument that Catholics could be
National Socialists. Secretary of State Pacelli then ordered a lengthy article
to be published in the Vatican newspaper correcting the Nazis’ distortions of
Leo’s pronouncements, and saying that a Christian should not belong to any
political party which works against Christian ideals.
Goldhagen also makes the allegation
that Bertram scheduled a Requiem Mass upon Hitler’s death. In point of fact,
this is what we know: Bertram was elderly and ill when the war ended. When he
died (just weeks later), his papers included a handwritten order scheduling a
Requiem Mass for all Germans who died in the war, including Hitler (who was
originally reported to have died while fighting), and for the protection of the
Catholic Church in Germany. This order was never sent, and the Mass was never
held. Bertam’s personal secretary later reported being unaware of this paper
or any such proposed order. In fact, the order itself was crossed through with
two broad strokes. In other words, the evidence suggests that someone
(perhaps Bertram, but perhaps not) considered scheduling a Requiem Mass but that
Bertram canceled it. Goldhagen here seems to have been misled by Klaus
Scholder’s A Requiem for Hitler: And Other New Perspectives on the German
Church Struggle. The cover of that book shows part of the order, but omits
the portion showing that it was crossed through. Once again, Goldhagen’s
sloppy reliance on secondary sources has led him to make a serious mistake.
On a related note, Goldhagen asserts
that the Polish ambassador pleaded with Pius in vain for the Jews, and that by
1944 Pius XII was so “sick” of hearing about the Jews that he got angry with
the ambassador. Goldhagen gives no documentation for this charge. This is hardly
surprising, since it is untrue. Pius XII was upset about reports the ambassador
was receiving from people outside of occupied Poland who, relying on
erroneous information, complained that the Pope was doing too much for Jews,
but not enough for Poles. The Polish ambassador to the Holy See during the War
was Kazimierz Papée, whose 1954 Pius XII i Polska (Pius XII and
Poland) discussed Pius XII’s wartime policies and said that he agreed
with them. That record is comprehensively analyzed—and supported—in Papée’s
book, of which Goldhagen makes no mention.
The
French Bishops
Goldhagen says that Pius XII
“clearly failed to support” the protest of the French bishops. This is yet
another falsehood. At the direction of the Pope, the protests were broadcast and
discussed for several days on Vatican Radio. Statements such as “he who makes
a distinction between Jews and other men is unfaithful to God and is in conflict
with God’s commands” were broadcast into France, in French, on Vatican
Radio. Pierre Cardinal Gerlier, a French Catholic bishop who condemned Nazi
atrocities and deportation of the Jews, explicitly stated that he was obeying
Pius XII’s instructions when he made these statements (Australian Jewish
News, April 16, 1943).
When the deportations began from
France, Pius issued a formal protest to Head of State Marshal Henri Pétain,
instructed his nuncio to issue another protest, and recommended that religious
communities provide refuge to Jewish people. In fact, the American press
reported that the Pope protested to the Vichy government three times during
August 1942. The result of the protests, unfortunately, was that they angered
Vichy leader Pierre Laval, and he reaffirmed his decision to cooperate in the
deportation of all non–French Jews to Germany. (This is yet another example of
the retaliation that Goldhagen says did not take place.) On August 6, 1942, a New
York Times headline proclaimed: “Pope Is Said to Plead for Jews Listed for
Removal from France.” Three weeks later, a headline in the same paper told the
story: “Vichy Seizes Jews; Pope Pius Ignored.”
The Canadian Jewish Chronicle
ran the following headline on September 4, 1942: “Laval Spurns Pope—25,000
Jews in France Arrested for Deportation.” In an editorial dated August 28,
1942, the California Jewish Voice called Pius “a spiritual ally”
because he “linked his name with the multitude who are horrified by the Axis
inhumanity.” In a lead editorial, the London Jewish Chronicle said that
the Vatican was due a “word of sincere and earnest appreciation” from Jews
for its intervention in Berlin and Vichy. Stephen S. Wise wrote in 1942:
It
appears to be more than rumor that his Holiness Pope Pius XII urgently appealed
through the papal nuncio to the Vichy government to put an end to deportations
from France, and the appeal of the Pope is said to have been reinforced by
petition and protest from the Cardinal Archbishops of Paris and Lyons. . . . If
such papal intervention be factual, then Pius XII follows the high example set
by his saintly predecessor, whose word in reprobation of anti–Semitism,
“spiritually we are all Semites,” will never fade out of the memory of the
people which does not forget but forgives.
In August 1942, Archbishop Jules Gérard
Saliège, from Toulouse, sent a pastoral letter to be read in all churches in
his diocese. It said: “There is a Christian morality that confers rights and
imposes duties. . . . The Jews are our brothers. They belong to mankind. No
Christian can dare forget that!” The Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore
Romano praised Saliège as a hero of Christian courage, and when the war
ended Pope Pius XII named him a cardinal.
Goldhagen quotes the recent statement
of some French bishops (not the French bishops as he mistakenly reports)
in which they confessed to the failings of French Catholics during the war. But
that statement was critical only of those areas and dioceses in France that fell
prey to anti–Semitism. As with the 1995 statement from German bishops, there
was no criticism of Pope Pius XII or the Holy See.
Papal
Efforts in Hungary
Even Goldhagen has to admit that Pius
XII intervened in Hungary, but he attempts to diminish the importance of the
Pope’s actions by suggesting that his famous open telegram protesting Jewish
deportations was isolated and late. Again, the facts are against Goldhagen—or,
more to the point, he has set himself against the facts. Jenö Levai, the great
authority on Hungarian Jewry, who had direct access to primary archival
evidence, documented the Church’s rescue efforts in his appropriately titled Hungarian
Jewry and the Papacy: Pius XII Was Not Silent.
Almost from the first day following
the March 1944 invasion of Hungary, Papal Nuncio Angelo Rotta worked to help
improve the treatment of the Jews. He issued baptismal certificates and
passports that enabled thousands of Jews and converted Jews to leave Hungary.
The Holy See also informed other nations about the conditions in Hungary, and
this brought international pressure on the Hungarian government. Rotta made
several oral protests regarding anti–Jewish decrees, and on behalf of Pope
Pius XII he was the first foreign envoy to submit a formal written protest.
Shortly thereafter, Rotta received a letter of encouragement from Pius in which
the Pope termed the treatment of Jews as “unworthy of Hungary, the country of
the Holy Virgin and of St. Stephen.” From then on, Rotta regularly protested
against the treatment of the Jews and the inhuman character of the anti–Jewish
legislation.
On June 25, Pius himself sent the
well–known open telegram to the Regent of Hungary, Admiral Miklas Horthy.
Goldhagen acknowledges this telegram, but it is worth quoting:
Supplications
have been addressed to us from different sources that we should exert all our
influence to shorten and mitigate the sufferings that have for so long been
peacefully endured on account of their national or racial origin by a great
number of unfortunate people belonging to this noble and chivalrous nation. In
accordance with our service of love, which embraces every human being, our
fatherly heart could not remain insensible to these urgent demands. For this
reason we apply to your Serene Highness appealing to your noble feelings in the
full trust that your Serene Highness will do everything in your power to save
many unfortunate people from further pain and suffering.
Pius XII also sent a telegram to
Hungarian Cardinal Justinian Serédi asking for support from the Hungarian
bishops. Serédi responded by issuing a statement of his own. It said:
We
would forfeit our moral leadership and fail in our duty if we did not demand
that our countrymen should not be handled unjustly on account of their origin or
religion. We, therefore, beseech the authorities that they, in full knowledge of
their responsibility before God and history, will revoke these harmful measures.
This strong statement, issued
pursuant to a request from the Pope, was read publicly in the Catholic churches
until Nazi authorities confiscated all copies.
On June 28, Archbishop Francis
Spellman of New York broadcast a strong appeal to Hungarian Catholics deploring
the anti–Jewish measures, which, he said, “shocked all men and women who
cherish a sense of justice and human sympathy.” These measures were, he said,
“in direct contradiction of the doctrines of the Catholic faith professed by
the vast majority of the Hungarian people.” He called it incredible “that a
nation which has been so consistently true to the impulses of human kindness and
the teachings of the Catholic Church should now yield to a false, pagan code of
tyranny.” Time magazine reported: “This week listeners at Europe’s
thirty–six million radio sets might have heard New York’s Archbishop Francis
Joseph Spellman preaching civil disobedience. The Archbishop’s . . . broadcast
. . . eloquently urged Hungary’s nine million Catholics to disobey their
government’s new anti–Semitic decrees.” The Allies dropped printed copies
of it over Hungary. Spellman later confirmed that he had made the statement at
the express request of Pope Pius XII.
Admiral Horthy complained to the
Germans that he was being bombarded with telegrams from the Vatican and others
and that the nuncio was calling on him several times each day. In the face of
these protests, Horthy withdrew Hungarian support from the deportation process,
making it impossible for the Germans to continue. Horthy’s reply cable to the
Pope said: “It is with comprehension and profound gratitude that I receive
your cable and request you to be convinced that I shall do all within my power
to make prevail the demands of Christian humanitarian principles.” Horthy
agreed to work against the deportations, and he even signed a peace agreement
with the Allies. For once it appeared that Pius XII’s pleas on behalf of the
victims might actually have had a positive effect. The Germans, however, would
not be dissuaded by mere words.
The Germans arrested Horthy in
October, put Hungary under the control of Hungarian Nazis, and the deportations
resumed. The Pope and his representatives then made many more protests to German
authorities, issued a report documenting the Vatican’s work with the Jews of
Hungary, and encouraged Catholics to help the victims. In October, Pius joined
in an effort to raise money to support Hungarian refugees, urging the faithful
to redouble their efforts on behalf of all victims of the war, regardless of
their race. Almost every Catholic church in Hungary provided refuge to
persecuted Jews during the autumn and winter of 1944.
On November 10, 1944, Nuncio Rotta
protested to the German foreign ministry, saying that “from a humanitarian
perspective but also to protect Christian morality, the Holy See protests the
inhumane attitude adopted toward the Jews.” When Nazi officials suggested that
Jews were merely being sent to Germany to work, not for any evil purpose, Rotta
sarcastically responded:
When
old men of over seventy and even over eighty, old women, children, and sick
persons are taken away, one wonders for what work these human beings can be
used? . . . When we think that Hungarian workers, who go to Germany for reasons
of work, are forbidden to take their families, we are really surprised to see
that this great favor is granted only to Jews.
The nunciature in Budapest had been
bombed and half destroyed, communications with the Vatican were extremely
difficult, and the lives of those Catholic officials still in the city were in
constant danger. Nuncio Rotta sent a message to Rome asking what to do. The
reply from Pope Pius was: “If it is still possible to do some charity,
remain!”
The Germans were finally forced out
of Budapest two days before Christmas, 1944. Despite the terrible losses that
had taken place during their occupation, most of the Jews in Budapest were saved
from the gas chamber.
The World Jewish Congress, at its
December 1944 war emergency conference in Atlantic City, sent a telegram of
thanks to the Holy See for the protection it gave “under difficult conditions
to the persecuted Jews in German–dominated Hungary.” Similarly, the American
Jewish Committee sent an expression of deep thanks to Pius and Cardinal Luigi
Maglione for having helped stop the deportations from Hungary. On May 25, 1945,
Nuncio Andreas Cassulo informed the Vatican:
[Chief]
Rabbi Safran has expressed to me several times . . . his gratitude for what has
been done for him and for the Jewish community. Now he has begged me to convey
to the Holy Father his feelings of thankfulness for the generous aid granted to
prisoners in concentration camps on the occasion of the Christmas festivities.
At the same time, he told me he had written to Jerusalem, to the Chief Rabbi
[Herzog], and also elsewhere, in America, to point out what the nunciature has
done for them in the time of the present difficulties.
Chief Rabbi Safran also told other
Jewish leaders about the Catholic Church’s efforts to protect Jewish people.
Apparently, however, no one told Goldhagen.
Slovakia
and Croatia
In attempting to implicate Pius XII
in the atrocities carried out in the Nazi satellite states of Slovakia and
Croatia, Goldhagen again makes many inexcusable errors. He mentions the work of
Livia Rothkirchen, a respected authority on the annihilation of Slovak Jewry,
but he fails to mention that in documenting and appropriately condemning the
savageries committed by anti–Semitic Slavs, Rothkirchen emphasizes that they
were done in spite of, not because of, Pope Pius XII. In fact, she concludes her
major work on the subject with the statement that the several letters of protest
delivered by the Vatican during the years 1941–1944 “prove sufficiently that
the Vatican objected to the deportation of Jews from Slovakia.”
Goldhagen suggests that Vatican
action in Slovakia came only after it was clear that the Allies would win the
war. In fact, the Nuremberg race laws were introduced in that country on
September 9, 1941. Two days later the Vatican’s chargé d’affaires in
Bratislava (the capital of Slovakia), went to see President Jozef Tiso to stress
“the injustice of these ordinances which also violate the rights of the
Church.” Shortly thereafter, Slovakia’s representative to the Vatican
received a written protest from the Holy See that these laws were “in open
contrast to Catholic principles.”
When Jews were deported from Slovakia
in 1942, the Vatican Secretary of State immediately filed a protest. On March
21, 1942, a pastoral letter was read by episcopal order in all Slovak churches.
The letter spoke of the “lamentable fate of thousands of innocent fellow
citizens, due to no guilt of their own, as a result of their descent or
nationality.” Under direct orders from Pius XII, the Slovak Minister to the
Holy See was summoned and requested to take immediate action with his
government. The Vatican also instructed the chargé d’affaires in Bratislava
once again to contact President Tiso and seek relief.
Between 1941 and 1944, the Vatican
sent four official letters and made numerous oral pleas and protests regarding
the deportation of Jews from Slovakia. A letter sent from Pius himself, dated
April 7, 1943, could not have been more clear:
The
Holy See has always entertained the firm hope that the Slovak government,
interpreting also the sentiments of its own people, Catholics almost entirely,
would never proceed with the forcible removal of persons belonging to the Jewish
race. It is therefore with great pain that the Holy See has learned of the
continued transfers of such a nature from the territory of the Republic. This
pain is aggravated further now that it appears from various reports that the
Slovak government intends to proceed with the total removal of the Jewish
residents of Slovakia, not even sparing women and children. The Holy See would
fail in its Divine Mandate if it did not deplore these measures, which gravely
damage man in his natural right, merely for the reason that these people belong
to a certain race.
The following day, a message went out
from the Holy See instructing its representative in Bulgaria to take steps in
support of Jewish residents who were facing deportation. Shortly thereafter, the
secretary of the Jewish Agency for Palestine met with Archbishop Angelo Roncalli
(later Pope John XXIII) “to thank the Holy See for the happy outcome of the
steps taken on behalf of the Israelites in Slovakia.” Goldhagen’s suggestion
that this was some sort of self–serving effort to protect the image of the
Church is unworthy of a writer who claims scholarly credentials.
Goldhagen’s treatment of Croatia is
similarly egregious. The slaughters committed against Serbs and Jews are well
documented, and the collaboration of some members of the Catholic clergy
is rightly condemned. But postwar Communist propaganda, now acknowledged by all
reputable scholars to have been fabricated, is the original source of the
allegations against Pope Pius XII and most of the higher–ranking Catholic
clergy in Croatia. The Holy See actually filed several protests and papal
interventions.
In October 1942, a message went out
from the Vatican to its representatives in Zagreb regarding the “painful
situation that spills out against the Jews in Croatia” and instructing them to
petition the government for “a more benevolent treatment of those
unfortunates.” The Cardinal Secretary of State’s notes reflect that Vatican
petitions were successful in getting a suspension of “dispatches of Jews from
Croatia” by January 1943, but Germany was applying pressure for “an attitude
more firm against the Jews.” Another instruction from the Holy See to its
representatives in Zagreb directing them to work on behalf of the Jews went out
on March 6, 1943.
Croatian Archbishop Alojzij Stepinac,
after having received direction from Rome, condemned the brutal actions of the
government. A speech he gave on October 24, 1942 is typical of many that he made
refuting Nazi theory:
All
men and all races are children of God; all without distinction. Those who are
Gypsies, black, European, or Aryan all have the same rights. . . . For this
reason, the Catholic Church had always condemned, and continues to condemn, all
injustice and all violence committed in the name of theories of class, race, or
nationality. It is not permissible to persecute Gypsies or Jews because they are
thought to be an inferior race.
The Associated Press reported that
“by 1942 Stepinac had become a harsh critic” of the Nazi puppet regime,
condemning its “genocidal policies, which killed tens of thousands of Serbs,
Jews, Gypsies, and Croats.” He thereby earned the enmity of the Croatian
dictator, Ante Pavelic. (When Pavelic traveled to Rome, he was greatly angered
because he was denied the diplomatic audience he had wanted.)
On October 13, 1946, when the postwar
Communist authorities tried to concoct a case against Archbishop Stepinac,
American Jewish leader Louis Braier stated:
This
great man of the Church has been accused of being a Nazi collaborator. We, the
Jews, deny it. He is one of the few men who rose in Europe against the Nazi
tyranny precisely at the moment when it was most dangerous. He spoke openly and
fearlessly against the racial laws. After His Holiness, Pius XII, he was the
greatest defender of the persecuted Jews in Europe.
Despite the defense, as well as
protests from Pope Pius XII, Stepinac was convicted and sentenced to sixteen
years of hard labor. Due to protests and indignation throughout the democratic
world, and Jewish testimony as to the good work he had done, he was moved to
house arrest in 1951. Almost immediately, Pope Pius XII raised him to the
cardinalate.
One of the first acts of parliament
in the newly independent state of Croatia in 1992 was to issue a declaration
condemning “the political trial and sentence passed on Cardinal Alojzij
Stepinac in 1946.” Stepinac was condemned, declared the parliament, “because
he had acted against the violence and crimes of the Communist authorities, just
as he had acted during the whirlwind of atrocities committed in World War II, to
protect the persecuted, regardless of . . . national origin or religious
denomination.”
Ignoring all the facts, Goldhagen
ends his grossly inaccurate portrait of Croatia by making another outrageous
error: “Forty thousand . . . perished under the unusually cruel reign of
‘Brother Satan,’ the Franciscan friar Miroslav Filopovic–Majstorovic. Pius
XII neither reproached nor punished him . . . during or after the war.”
Actually, the so–called “Brother
Satan” was tried, defrocked, and expelled from the Franciscan order before the
war ended. In fact, his expulsion occurred in April 1943, before he ran the
extermination camp (April–October 1943). For Pius XII to have punished him
“after the war” would have been difficult indeed. Goldhagen must be unaware
that this renegade priest was executed by the Communists in 1945. Many other
Croatian priest–collaborators were also punished by the Church (though
Goldhagen overstates the number of such priests). All of this is well documented
in the archives of the Franciscans, the Croatian archives, and depositions
regarding Stepinac’s beatification.
Once again, Goldhagen has attempted
to indict Pius by telling the reader the very reverse of the truth. This is
explicable only as a premeditated defamation of the wartime Pope and of Catholic
people in general.
Holland
Like most papal critics, Goldhagen
fails to give important details about the deportation of Jews from Holland.
Dutch bishops had warned their followers about the dangers of Nazism as early as
1934, and in 1936 they ordered Catholics not to support Fascist organizations or
they would risk excommunication. They forbade Catholic policemen from hunting
down Jews, even if it meant losing their jobs. In the summer of 1942, as Jews
were being deported from Holland, the Nazis warned Christian leaders not to
interfere.
Despite the warning, on July 26, 1942
the Catholic Archbishop of Utrecht had a letter read in all of the Catholic
churches, condemning the treatment of the Jews:
Ours
is a time of great tribulations of which two are foremost: the sad destiny of
the Jews and the plight of those departed for forced labor. . . . All of us must
be aware of the terrible sufferings which both of them have to undergo, due to
no guilt of their own. . . . We have learned with deep pain of the new
dispositions which impose upon innocent Jewish men, women, and children the
deportation into foreign lands. . . . The incredible suffering which these
measures cause to more than ten thousand people is in absolute opposition to the
Divine Precepts of Justice and Charity. . . . Let us pray to God and for the
intercession of Mary . . . that He may lend His strength to the people of
Israel, so sorely tried in anguish and persecution.
The result of this statement was
tragic. It led directly to the deportation and death of many people, including
Edith Stein (canonized as St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross).
On July 30, 1942, a memorandum from
the SS declared: “Since the Catholic bishops—without being involved—have
interfered in these affairs, the entire population of Catholic Jews will now be
sent off this week yet. No intervention will be considered.” Up until this
time, a Dutch Jew holding a Catholic baptismal certificate was exempt from
deportation. As part of the Church’s rescue efforts, such certificates were
distributed freely during the war.
The official announcement from the
General–Kommissar stated: “If the Catholic clergy can thus ignore
negotiations, then we in turn are forced to consider the Catholic full–blooded
Jews as our worst opponents and to take measures to ship them off to the East as
quickly as possible.” Since Protestant leaders had refrained from making
statements that outraged the Germans, Jews holding Protestant baptismal
certificates were not deported at that time. Jewish converts to Catholicism
(including Edith Stein) and Jews with false baptismal certificates, however,
were deported.
The language from the Nazi officials
makes clear that the deportations were made in direct response to the Bishop’s
letter. Even if Jews with Protestant baptismal certificates were later deported,
this situation provides yet another clear example of the type of retaliation
that Goldhagen claims did not happen. Many similar situations that would have
influenced Pius XII’s thinking along these lines are set forth in my book, Hitler,
the War, and the Pope, and, contrary to Goldhagen’s assertion, there is
nothing “disingenuous” about the arguments contained therein. The simple
fact is that no one spoke out more explicitly than the Dutch bishops, and no
country had a higher percentage of Jews killed.
The
Example of Denmark and Other Evidence
Goldhagen writes: “Rychlak and the
Pope’s other defenders fail to discuss the famous and most relevant case for
assessing the efficacy of acting on behalf of Jews: the case of Denmark.” In
fact, I explicitly discussed the case on page 137 of my book:
On
April 9, 1940, German troops swept across the Danish border. Danes, including
King Christian X, Catholic bishops, priests, and students, demonstrated
solidarity with the Jews by wearing the yellow star in public. Privately, the
Danes hid and eventually smuggled almost the entire Jewish population of eight
thousand to safety. The Catholic Church played an important role in this rescue,
and Pius XII was noted for his contribution to the effort.
Footnotes direct the reader to three
different references for this information. It turns out that King Christian may
not have ever actually worn the yellow star. Some writers also say that he never
even threatened to do so. Legend has it that he did, however, and I certainly
did not conceal this information.
As Goldhagen himself concedes,
eventually the Germans deported about five hundred Jews from Denmark.
Fortunately, many others had escaped by that time. Those who were deported were
for the most part sent to a “show” camp at Theresienstadt, where about 90
percent of them survived. Of course, those Jews displaced others who had been
living at Theresienstadt. They were sent on to death camps, so the net effect
was not what Goldhagen would lead his readers to believe. The main thing for
Goldhagen, however, seems to be that he thinks Pius should have set aside all of
his other information and relied solely on the approach taken by the churches
(including the Catholic ones) in Denmark. That, of course, would have been
foolish.
The Pope knew of the retaliation
following Mit brennender Sorge. He had the example from Holland. He had
sent an express condemnation into Poland to be read, but the Archbishop of
Krakow, Adam Sapieha, burned it, saying that it would bring too many reprisals.
In fact, the Nuremberg report documents case after case of retaliation against
clergy (Catholic and Protestant) following statements or other agitation against
the Nazi regime.
Rather than endangering others with
grand public gestures, Pius ran a rescue operation. Churches, convents,
monasteries, seminaries, and the Vatican itself offered shelter, without any
distinction based on race, religion, or nationality. A wartime U.S. intelligence
document reported that the bombardment of the papal summer retreat Castel
Gandolfo “resulted in the injury of about one thousand people and the death of
about three hundred more. The highness of the figures is due to the fact that
the area was crammed with refugees.” No one but Pope Pius XII had authority to
open these buildings to outsiders, and the intelligence reports indicate that he
personally protested the bombing. In 1988, a beautifully decorated, enormous
wooden cross was on display there. It had been given to Pius XII at the end of
the war by the Jews who lived there during those terrifying days.
Rescuer John Patrick Carroll–Abbing
reported giving assistance to Jews pursuant to the Pope’s order that “no one
was to be refused” shelter. In fact, in an interview given shortly before his
death, Carroll–Abbing said: “I can personally testify to you that the Pope
gave me direct face–to–face verbal orders to rescue Jews.” Asked about the
charge that rescuers acted without papal involvement, he denied it and added:
But
it wasn’t just me. It was also the people I worked with: Fr. Pfeiffer and Fr.
Benoît and my assistant, Msgr. Vitucci and Cardinals Dezza and Palazzini, and
of course Cardinals Maglione and Montini and Tardini. We didn’t simply assume
things; we acted on the direct orders of the Holy Father.
Goldhagen concedes that Fr. Benoît
“shepherded hundreds of Jews to safety,” but he suggests that this was done
with virtually no support from Rome. In fact, Benoît spoke movingly of Pius XII
and his undertakings on behalf of Jews. Fernande Leboucher, who worked with Benoît
as perhaps his closest collaborator, estimated that some $4 million was
channeled from the Vatican to Benoît and his operation. Even Zuccotti reported
that the Vatican provided some money to help Benoît’s operation.
The last thing a rescue operation
wants is attention, particularly when it is likely to bring about reprisals.
Goldhagen focuses only on potential reprisals against Jewish people. Such
reprisals occurred; but the Pope was also concerned about Catholics. For one
thing, Catholic rescue efforts could be harmed, causing further suffering for
Jews. More importantly, as Pius said, martyrdom cannot be imposed on someone,
but must be voluntarily accepted. Catholic doctrine would not permit the Pope to
sacrifice some lives to save others, even if a utilitarian equation might
suggest that would be appropriate. (The Church did not, however, vary its
approach based upon the identity of the victim. Goldhagen’s speculations
notwithstanding, the Vatican under Pope Pius XII acted in the same way whether
the victims were Catholic priests or Jewish peasants.)
Marcus Melchior, the Chief Rabbi of
Denmark during the war, well understood this situation. He explained that Pius
had no chance of influencing Hitler, and added that if he had been more
confrontational, “Hitler would have probably massacred more than six million
Jews and perhaps ten times ten million Catholics, if he had the power to do
so.” Sir Francis D’Arcy Osborne, British Minister to the Holy See from 1936
to 1947, said:
Pius
XII was the most warmly humane, kindly, generous, sympathetic (and,
incidentally, saintly) character that it has been my privilege to meet in the
course of a long life. I know his sensitive nature was acutely and incessantly
alive to the tragic volume of human suffering caused by the war and, without the
slightest doubt, he would have been ready and glad to give his life to redeem
humanity from its consequences.
Similarly, the Chief Rabbi in Rome
during the German occupation, Israel Zolli, said that “no hero in all of
history was more militant, more fought against, none more heroic, than Pius
XII.”
Goldhagen naively suggests a
cookie–cutter approach to resisting the Nazis. The historical facts show that
sometimes a confrontational approach worked with the Nazis, but other times it
did not. Robert M. W. Kemp ner, the Deputy Chief U.S. Prosecutor at the
Nuremberg war trials, explained that a public protest against persecution of the
Jews could only lead to “partial success when it was made at a politically and
militarily opportune moment.” He added that Pius made such protests through
nuncios when and where possible. Confrontation would not, however, have been
advisable with Hitler. “Every propaganda move of the Catholic Church against
Hitler’s Reich,” he wrote, “would have been not only ‘provoking
suicide’ . . . but would have hastened the execution of still more Jews and
priests.”
Catholics
Who Converted from Judaism
Goldhagen often refers to the Holy
See’s efforts as being directed towards Catholics who converted from Judaism,
as opposed to Jews who were not Catholics. As his wording implies, to the
Catholic Church, and in contrast with Nazi philosophy, Jewishness is a matter of
religion, not race. Again, however, Goldhagen’s allegations run wildly afoul
of the facts.
Vatican officials had legal standing
to object to persecution of Catholics. Unfortunately, they did not have similar
standing when it came to non–Catholics—be they Protestants, Jews, or
unbelievers. As it turns out, the Nazis rarely responded positively when
protests were made on behalf of Catholics. (At Nuremberg, German Foreign
Minister Ribbentrop stated that there was a whole desk full of protests from the
Vatican. Most went unanswered; many were not even read.) A regime that would not
heed Church protests on behalf of its own members would certainly never have
listened to Vatican protests on behalf of non–Catholics. The best the Church
could do was to try to pass off non–Catholic victims as Catholics and try to
intervene to save them on that basis. That is what the Church did by, for
example, distributing tens of thousands of false baptismal certificates.
(Obviously, these were unnecessary for actual Jewish converts to Catholicism who
possessed authentic ones.)
Goldhagen also asserts that Pius did
not privately instruct cardinals, bishops, priests, and nuns to save Jews. How
does he know this? Catholic rescuers—including people such as Cardinal Pietro
Palazzini and Tibor Baranski who were later recognized by Israel as Righteous
Gentiles—testified that they received precisely such orders from the Pope.
Several other witnesses also testified that such instructions were sent out in
the form of letters. Still others, including Fr. Marie–Benoît, Carroll–Abbing,
Pope John XXIII, and Pope Paul VI, all testified that they received such
instructions from Pope Pius XII in face–to–face meetings, or through other
direct channels.
Goldhagen even tries to link the
Vatican and Pacelli with the notorious anti–Semite Julius Streicher.
Streicher’s venomous writings tell a different story. He railed against the
Pope’s support for Jewish people:
The
Jews have now found protection in the Catholic Church, which is trying to
convince non–Jewish humanity that distinct races do not exist. The Pope has
made his own the false conception of racial equality—and the Jews, with the
help of Marxists and Freemasons, are doing their best to promote it. But the
Pope’s attitude will surprise no one who is familiar with the shrewd schemes
of Vatican politics.
Pacelli’s opposition to
Streicher’s worldview was well–known. In Three Popes and the Jews,
Pinchas Lapide cites a public address by Pacelli in Rome which repeated Pope
Pius XI’s eloquent statement that “spiritually we are all Semites.”
Postwar
Statements
Following the arguments of Phayer and
Zuccotti, Goldhagen asserts that even after the liberation of Rome, Pius
remained “silent” about Jews and anti–Semitism. This is nonsense. Pius
made one of his most fervent pleas for tolerance in August 1944, after the
liberation of Rome. As reported by Dr. Joseph Lichten, the late director of the
International Affairs Department for the Anti–Defamation League of B’nai
B’rith, Pius said: “For centuries, they [Jews] have been most unjustly
treated and despised. It is time they were treated with justice and humanity.
God wills it and the Church wills it. St. Paul tells us that the Jews are our
brothers. Instead of being treated as strangers they should be welcomed as
friends.”
In a major address to the College of
Cardinals on June 2, 1945, after the surrender of Germany, Pius XII spoke of the
background and impact of the anti–Nazi encyclical Mit brennender Sorge:
In
these critical years, joining the alert vigilance of a pastor with the
long–suffering patience of a father, our great predecessor, Pius XI, fulfilled
his mission as Supreme Pontiff with intrepid courage. But when, after he had
tried all means of persuasion in vain . . . he proclaimed to the world on
Passion Sunday 1937, in his encyclical Mit brennender Sorge, what
National Socialism really was: the arrogant apostasy from Jesus Christ, the
denial of his doctrine and of his work of redemption, the cult of violence, the
idolatry of race and blood, the overthrow of human liberty and dignity.
On August 3, 1946, in a statement
that Goldhagen mentions only to belittle (he also ignores or dismisses papal
condemnations of anti–Semitism in 1916, 1928, 1930, 1942, and 1943), Pius
declared: “There can be no doubt that peace can come about only in truth and
justice. This presupposes respect for the rights of others and for certain
vested positions and traditions, especially in the religious sphere, as well as
the scrupulous fulfillment of the duties and obligations to which all
inhabitants are subject.” He continued:
That
is why, having received again during these last days numerous appeals and claims
from various parts of the world and from various motives, it is unnecessary to
tell you that we condemn all recourse to force and to violence, from wherever it
may come, as also we have condemned on several occasions in the past the
persecutions which a fanatical anti–Semitism unleashed against the Jewish
people.
Pius condemned racism until the end
of his life. In 1957, he received a delegation from the American Jewish
Committee. The Committee’s representatives described the Pope as a “great
friend” in the battle against racism and anti–Semitism in the United States.
The Pope, in turn, praised the Committee’s work, and issued a statement
condemning anti–Semitism. There is simply no legitimate excuse for Goldhagen
to have ignored all of these statements.
Fr.
Peter Gumpel
Goldhagen’s lowest blow is saved
for the end of his article and directed at Fr. Peter Gumpel, S.J. An official of
the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, Gumpel is the relator or
independent, investigating judge for the cause of Pius XII’s sainthood. In
what is arguably the most shameful sentence in his entire polemic, Goldhagen
writes: “Perhaps the Church protects Fr. Gumpel in his post because only an
anti–Semite and a historical falsifier can be counted on to present Pius XII
in the glowing manner required for canonization.”
Gumpel is a warm man, though he can
seem rather formal to those who do not know him. He is a German Jesuit, in his
late 70s, with English as his fifth or sixth language. (He is fluent in English,
German, Dutch, French, Italian, and nearly fluent in Spanish. He also reads
Danish, Portuguese, Latin, classical Greek, and Hebrew.) He was born in 1923 to
a distinguished German family.
He was still a boy when Hitler came
to power. His family stood in opposition to the Nazis, and this led to the Nazis
killing his grandfather as well as other relatives. Gumpel himself was twice
sent into exile. The first time he went to France. Later he went to Holland.
There, he became active in the underground, putting his life at risk to help
escort Jews across the Belgian border.
One night, a teenaged Gumpel received
a phone call saying that the Nazis had captured his mother and that she would be
killed. Fortunately, a German officer who had been a friend of Gumpel’s
grandfather intervened and saved his mother’s life. The horror of that night
has, however, never left him, nor has his abhorrence of Nazism and
anti–Semitism. One can sense it in the scorn with which he pronounces the word
“Nazi.”
Gumpel’s experiences during World
War II led directly to his decision to enter the priesthood. He joined the
Jesuits in 1944. He studied in England for four years and earned several
degrees, including a doctorate in the history of Church doctrine. He began
teaching at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, and in 1972 he was
assigned to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints. He also served on the
faculty at the Gregorian and at the Pontifical Oriental Institute.
That Goldhagen would call this good
man an anti–Semite is depressingly unsurprising. Goldhagen’s analysis of
matters like this is shockingly biased. (Witness the way Pacelli’s 1933
promise not to interfere “in Germany’s internal political affairs” is
converted into “the Church’s intention to let the Germans have a free hand
with the Jews.”) His evidence in this case comes from truncated quotations
that have been taken out of context. In fact, Gumpel has repeatedly condemned
anti–Semitism and affirmed his allegiance to the teachings of Vatican II.
The charge that Gumpel is a
“historical falsifier” is perhaps even more outrageous, if that is possible.
Goldhagen provides no evidence to support it. Indeed, he leaves the reader
entirely in the dark about what it is that Gumpel is alleged to have falsified.
This practice of blackening someone’s reputation by publicly making
unspecified and unsubstantiated charges in a situation where the person has
little chance of offering a defense is nothing short of slander.
The
New Republic’s Obligation
Pope John Paul II has made it a
priority to undertake the very serious work of bringing Catholics and Jews
closer together. The Church, most prominently through the Holy Father, has
frequently apologized for sins of the past. Sincere efforts have also been made
to rid the Church of hostility toward people of other faiths, most obviously at
Vatican II.
Goldhagen mocks these efforts. He is
particularly harsh on the 1998 Vatican document, We Remember: A Reflection on
the Shoah. That statement explained the difference between anti–Judaism,
of which the Vatican admitted “Christians have also been guilty,” and the
racial anti–Semitism embraced by the Nazis. This latter evil contradicts core
Catholic beliefs, and the Church has always condemned it. Goldhagen, however,
rejects the distinction.
Goldhagen seems to want nothing less
than a renunciation of Christianity. He accuses Pope Pius XII of collaborating
with the Nazis and treats the Cross as a symbol of oppression. He lectures about
how portions of the New Testament were fabricated and asserts that the very term
“New Testament” is offensive. His agenda–driven approach, coupled with
sloppy fact–checking and poor analysis, results in one of the most unjust
broadside attacks launched against Catholics in a mainstream publication in
several generations.
The New Republic owed its
readers, and more importantly the Catholic people against whom Goldhagen made
his reckless charges, the duty of investigating his claims at least minimally
before publishing them. While some difference in analysis is certainly to be
expected on this topic, Goldhagen’s factual errors and his evident malice go
beyond all bounds of reason. Eugene Fisher of the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops, a leader in the promotion of good will between Jews and Christians,
called this article “a travesty. And a hate crime.” He was right.
At one point in the article,
Goldhagen presents a series of questions, rhetorically asking whether Pope Pius
XII’s supporters can answer them. His response to each of his own questions
is, “No good answer.” In fact, for each question (with the sole exception of
the one about Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg, which is a non sequitur)
there are perfectly good answers, and they are easily accessible. Goldhagen
simply ignores them.
Why did the New Republic
choose to pass off to its readers this fabrication as scholarly history? The
only apparent answer is that the editors were so anxious to vilify Catholics,
their Church, and Pope Pius XII—so willing to join in Goldhagen’s vicious
attacks—that they did not want to learn the truth: Goldhagen’s thesis is
based upon selective sources, doctored quotations, sloppy inaccuracies,
half–truths, and outright falsehoods. People of good will, regardless of their
faith, are right to reject it.
Ronald J. Rychlak is Professor of Law
and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs at the University of Mississippi School
of Law. He is the author of Hitler, the War, and the Pope (Genesis).
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