Complicity of Pope Pius XII in the Holocaust
Long-buried Vatican files reveal a new and shocking indictment
of World War II's Pope Pius XII: that in pursuit of absolute
power he helped Adolf Hitler destroy German Catholic political
opposition, betrayed the Jews of Europe, and sealed a deeply
cynical pact with a 20th-century devil.
One evening several years ago when I was having dinner with a
group of students, the topic of the papacy was broached, and the
discussion quickly boiled over. A young woman asserted that
Eugenio Pacelli, Pope Pius XII, the Pope during World War II,
had brought lasting shame on the Catholic Church by failing to
denounce the Final Solution. A young man, a practicing Catholic,
insisted that the case had never been proved.
Raised as a Catholic during the papacy of Pius Xll - his picture
gazed down from the wall of everyclassroom during my childhood -
I was only too familiar with the allegation. It started in 1963
with a play by a young German author named Rolf Hochhuth, Der
Stellvertreter (The Deputy) which was staged on Broadway in
1964. It depicted Pacelli as a ruthless cynic, interested more
in the Vatican's stockholdings than in the fate of the Jews.
Most Catholics dismissed Hochhuth's thesis as implausible, but
the play sparked a controversy which has raged to this day.
Disturbed by the anger brought out in that dinner altercation,
and convinced, as I had always been,of Pius XII's innocence, I
decided to write a new defense of his reputation for a younger
generation. I believed that Pacelli's evident holiness was proof
of his good faith. How could such a saintly pope have betrayed
the Jews? But was it possible to find a new and conclusive
approach to the issue? The arguments had so far focused mainly
on his wartime conduct; however, Pacelli's Vatican career had
started 40 years earlier. It seemed to me that a proper
investigation into Pacelli's record would require a more
extensive chronicle than any attempted in the past. So I applied
for access to archival material in the Vatican, reassuring those
who had charge of crucial documents that I was on the side of my
subject.
Six years earlier, in a book entitled A Thief in the Night, I
had defended the Vatican against charges that Pope John Paul I
had been murdered by his own aides. Two key officials granted me
access to secret material: depositions under oath gathered 30
years ago to support the process for Pacelli's canonization, and
the archive of the Vatican Secretariat of State, the foreign
office of the Holy See. I also drew on German sources relating
to Pacelli's activities in Germany during the 1920s and 1930s,
including his dealings with AdoIf Hitler in 1933. For months on
end I ransacked Pacelli's files, which dated back to 1912, in a
windowless dungeon beneath the Borgia Tower in Vatican City .
Later I sat for several weeks in a dusty office in the Jesuit
headquarters, close to St. Peter's Square in Rome, mulling over
a thousand pages of transcribed testimony given under oath by
those who had known Pacelli well during his lifetime, including
his critics.
By the middle of 1997, 1 was in a state of moral shock. The
material I had gathered amounted not to an exoneration but to an
indictment more scandalous than Hochhuth's. The evidence was
explosive. It showed for the first time that PaceIli was
patently, and by the proof of his own words, anti-Jewish. It
revealed that he had helped Hitler to power and at the same time
undermined
potential Catholic resistance in Germany. It showed that he had
implicitly denied and trivialized the Holocaust,despite having
reliable knowledge of its true extent. And, worse, that he was a
hypocrite, for after the war he had retrospectively taken undue
credit for speaking out boldly against the Nazi persecution of
the Jews.
In the "Holy Year" of 1950, a year in which many millions of
pilgrims flocked to Rome tocatch a glimpse of Pacelli, he was at
the zenith of his papacy. This was the Pius people now in their
mid-50s and older remember from newsreels and newspaper
photographs. He was 74 years old and still vigorous. Six feet
tall, stick thin at 125 pounds, light on his feet, regular in
habits, he had hardly altered physically from the day of his
coronation 11 years earlier. He had beautiful tapering hands, a
plaintive voice, large dark eyes and an aura of holiness. It was
his extreme pallor that first arrested those who met him. His
skin "had surprisingly transparent effect," observed the writer
Gerrado Pallenberg, "as if reflecting from the inside a cold,
white flame." His charisma was stunning. "His presence radiated
a benignity, calm and sanctity that I have certainly never
before sensed in any human being." recorded the English writer
James Lees-Milne. "I immediately fell head over heels in love
with him. I was so affected I could scarcely speak without tears
and was conscious that my legs were trembling."
But there was another side to his character, little known to the
faithful. Although he was a man of selfless, monklike habits of
prayer and simplicity, he was a believer in the absolute
leadership principle. More than any other Vatican official of
the century, he had promoted the modern ideology of autocratic
papal control, the highly centralized, dictatoria1 authority he
himself assumed on March 2, 1939, and maintained until his death
in October 1958. There was a time before the advent of modern
communications when Catholic authority was widely distributed,
in the collective decisions of the church's councils and in
collegial power-sharing between the Pope and the bishops. The
absolutism of the modern papacy is largely an invention of the
late 19th century It developed rapidly in the first decades of
this century in response to the perception of the centrifugal
breakup of the church under an array of contemporary pressures:
materialism, increasing sexual freedom, religious skepticism,
and social and political liberties.
From his young manhood on, Pacelli played a leading role in
shaping the conditions and scope of modern papal power. Eugenio
Pacelli was born in Rome in 1876, into a family of church
lawyers who served the Vatican. He had an older sister and
brother and a younger sister. His parents, devout Catholics,
shared an apartment in central Rome with his grandfather, who
had been a legal adviser to Pius IX, the longest-serving Pope in
history. There was only one small brazier to supply heat for the
whole family, even in the depths of winter. Eugenio was a modest
youth, who never appeared before his siblings unless he was
fully dressed in a jacket and tie. He would always come to the
table with a book, which he would read after having asked the
family's permission.
From an early age he acted out the ritual of the Mass, dressed
in robes supplied by his mother. He had a gift for languages and
a prodigious memory. He was spindly and suffered from a
"fastidious stomach." He retained a youthful piety all his life.
Politically and legally, however, he was capable of great
subtlety and cunning. The Pacelli's were fiercely loyal to the
injured merit of the papacy. From 1848, the Popes had
progressively lost to the emerging nation-state of Italy their
dominions, which had formed, since time immemorial, the midriff
of the Italian peninsula. Six years before Eugenio's birth, the
city of Rome itself had been seized, leaving the papacy in
crisis. How could the Popes regard themselves as independent now
that they were mere citizens of an upstart kingdom? Eugenio's
grandfather and father believed passionately that the Popes
could once again exert a powerful unifying authority over the
church by the application of ecclesiastical and international
law.
In 1870, at a gathering in Rome of a preponderance of the
world's bishops, known as the First Vatican Council, the Pope
was dogmatically declared infallible in matters of faith and
morals. He was also declared the unchallenged primate of the
faithful. The Pope may have lost his temporal dominion, but
spiritually he was solely in charge of his universal church.
During the first two decades of this century, papal primacy and
infallibility began to creep even beyond the ample boundaries
set by the First Vatican Council. A powerful legal instrument
transformed the 1870 primacy dogma into an unprecedented
principle of papal power. Eugenio Pacelli, by then a brilliant
young Vatican lawyer, had a major part in the drafting of that
instrument, which was known as the Code of Canon Law.
Pacelli had been recruited into the Vatican in 1901, at the age
of 24, to specialize in international affairs and church law.
Pious, slender, with dark luminous eyes, he was an instant
favorite. He was invited to collaborate on the reformulation of
church law with his immediate superior, Pietro Gaspam, a
world-famous canon lawyer. Packaged in a single manual, the Code
of Canon Law was distributed in 1917 to Catholic bishops and
clergy throughout the world. According to this code, in the
future all bishops would be nominated by the Pope; doctrinal
error would be tantamount to heresy; priests would be subjected
to strict censorship in their writings; papal letters to the
faithful would be regarded as infallible (in practice if not in
principle}: and an oath would be taken by all candidates for the
priesthood to submit to the sense as well as the strict wording
of doctrine as laid down by the Pope.
But there was a problem. The church had historically granted the
dioceses in the provincial states of Germany a large measure of
local discretion and independence from Rome. Germany had one of
the largest Catholic populations in the world, and its
congregation was well educated and sophisticated, with hundreds
of Catholic associations and newspapers and many Catholic
universities and publishing houses. The historic autonomy of
Germany's Catholic Church was enshrined in ancient church-state
treaties known as concordats.
Aged 41 and already an archbishop, PaceIli was dispatched to
Munich as papal nuncio, or ambassador, to start the process of
eliminating all existing legal challenges to the new papal
autocracy. At the same time ,he was to pursue a Reich Concordat,
a treaty between the papacy and Germany as a whole which would
supersede all local agreements and become a model of Catholic
church-state relations. A Reich Concordat would mean formal
recognition by the German government of the Pope's right to
impose the new Code of Canon Law on Germany's Catholics. Such an
arrangement was fraught with significance for a largely
Protestant Germany. Nearly 400 years earlier, in Wittenberg,
Martin Luther had publicly burned a copy of Canon Law in
defiance of the centralized authority of the church. It was one
of the defining moments of the Reformation, which was to divide
Western Christendom into Catholics and Protestants. In May 1917,
Pacelli set off for Germany via Switzerland in a private railway
compartment, with an additional wagon containing 60 cases of
special foods for his delicate stomach. The Pope at that time,
Benedict XV, was shocked at this extravagance, but PaceIli had
favored status as the Vatican's best diplomat. Shortly after he
settled in Munich, he acquired a reputation as a vigorous relief
worker. He traveled through war-weary Germany extending charity
to people of all religions and none.
In an early letter to the Vatican, however he revealed himself
to be less than enamored of Germany's Jews. On September 4,
1917. PaceIli informed Pietro Gaspam, who had become cardinal
secretary of state in the Vatican -- the equivalent of foreign
minister and prime minister -- that a Dr. Werner, the chief
rabbi of Munich, had approached the nunciature begging a favor.
In order to celebrate the festival of Tabernacles, beginning on
October 1, the Jews needed palm fronds, which normally came from
Italy. But the Italian government had forbidden the exportation,
via Switzerland, of a stock of palms which the Jews had
purchased and which were being held up in Como. "The Israelite
Community," continued Pacelli, "are seeking the intervention of
the Pope in the hope that he will plead on behalf of the
thousands of German Jews." The favor in question was no more
problematic than the transportation of Pacelli's 60 cases of
food-stuffs had been a few months earlier. Pacelli informed
Gaspam that he had warned the rabbi that "wartime delays in
communication" would make things difficult. He also told Gaspam
that he did not think it appropriate for the Vatican "to assist
them in the exercise of their Jewish cult." His letter went by
the slow route overland in the diplomatic bag. Gaspatti replied
by telegram on September 18 that he entirely trusted Pacelli's
"shrewdness," agreeing that it would not be appropriate to help
Rabbi Werner. PaceIli wrote back on September 28, 1917,
informing Gasparri that he had again seen the Rabbi, who "was
perfectly convinced of the reasons I had given him and thanked
me warmly for all that I had done on his behalf." Pacelli had
done nothing except thwart the rabbi's request. The episode,
small in itself, belies subsequent claims that Pacelli had a
great love of the Jewish religion and was always motivated by
its best interests.
Eighteen months later he revealed his antipathy toward the Jews
in a more blatantly anti-Semitic fashion when he found himself
at the center of a local revolution as Bolshevik groups
struggled to take advantage of the chaos in postwar Munich.
Writing to Gasparri, Pacelli described the revolutionaries and
their chief, Eugen Levien in their headquarters in the former
royal palace. The letter has lain in the Vatican secret archive
like a time bomb until now: "The scene that presented itself at
the palace was indescribable. The confusion totally chaotic, the
filth completely nauseating; soldiers and armed workers coming
and going; the building, once the home of a king, resounding
with screams, vile language, profanities. Absolute hell. An army
of employees were dashing to and fro, giving out orders, waving
bits of paper, and in the midst of all this, a gang of young
women, of dubious appearance, Jews like all the rest of them,
hanging around in all the offices with provocative demeanor and
suggestive smiles. The boss of this female gang was Levien's
mistress, a young Russian woman, a Jew and a divorcee, who was
in charge. And it was to her that the nunciature was obliged to
pay homage in order to proceed. This Levien is a young man,
about 30 or 35, also Russian and a Jew. Pale, dirty, with vacant
eyes, hoarse voice, vulgar, repulsive, with a face that is both
intelligent and sly." This association of Jewishness with
Bolshevism confirms that Pacelli, from his early 40s, nourished
a suspicion of and contempt for the Jews for political reasons.
But the repeated references to the Jewishness of these
individuals, along with the catalogue of stereotypical epithets
deploring their physical and moral repulsiveness, betray a scorn
and revulsion consistent with anti-Semitism. Not long after
this, Pacelli campaigned to have black French troops removed
from the Rhineland, convinced that they were raping women and
abusing children - even though an independent inquiry sponsored
by the U.S. Congress, of which Pacelli was aware, proved this
allegation false. Twenty-three years later, when the Allies were
about to enter Rome, he asked the British envoy to the Vatican
to request of the British Foreign Office that no Allied colored
troops would be among the small number that might be garrisoned
in Rome after the occupation.
Pacelli spent 13 years in Germany attempting to rewrite the
state Concordats one by one in favor of the power of the Holy
See and routinely employing diplomatic blackmail. Germany was
caught up in many territorial disputes following the redrawing
of the map of Central Europe after the First World War. Pacelli
repeatedly traded promises of Vatican support for German control
of disputed regions in return for obtaining terms advantageous
to the Vatican in Concordats. The German government's official
in charge of Vatican affairs at one point recorded the "ill
feeling" prompted by Pacelli's "excessive demands." Both
Catholics and Protestants in Germany resisted reaching an
agreement with Pacelli on a Reich Concordat because the nuncio's
concept of a church-state relationship was too authoritarian..
In his negotiations, Pacelli was not concerned about the fate of
non-Catholic religious communities or institutions, or about
human rights. He was principally preoccupied with the interests
of the Holy See. Nothing could have been better designed to
deliver Pacelli into the hands of Hitler later, when the future
dictator made his move in 1933.
In June 1920, Pacelli became nuncio to all of Germany, with
headquarters in Berlin as well as in Munich, and immediately
acquired a glittering reputation in diplomatic circles. He was a
favorite at dinner parties and receptions, and he was known to
ride horses on the estate of a wealthy German family. His
household was run by a pretty young nun from southern Germany
named Sister Pasqualina Lehnert. Pacelli's sister Elisabetta,
who battled with the nun for Pacelli's affections, described
Pasqualina as "scaltrissima"-- extremely cunning. In Munich it
had been rumored that he cast more than priestly eyes on this
religious housekeeper. Pacelli insisted that a Vatican
investigation into this "horrible calumny" be conducted at the
highest level, and his reputation emerged unbesmirched.
Meanwhile, he had formed a close relationship with an individual
named Ludwig Kaas. Kaas was a representative of the solidly
Catholic German Center Party, one of the largest and most
powerful democratic parties in Germany. Though it was unusual
for a full-time politician, he was also a Roman Catholic priest.
Five years Pacelli's junior, dapper, bespectacled, and
invariably carrying a smart walking stick, Kaas, known as "the
prelate," became an intimate collaborator of Pacelli's on every
aspect of Vatican diplomacy in Germany. With Pacelli's
encouragement, Kaas eventually became the chairman of the Center
Party, the first priest to do so in the party's 60-year history.
Yet while Kaas was officially a representative of a major
democratic party, he was increasingly devoted to Pacelli to the
point of becoming his alter ego. Sister Pasqualina stated after
Pacelli's death that Kaas, who "regularly accompanied Pacelli on
holiday" was linked to him in "adoration, honest love and
unconditional loyalty." There were stories of acute jealousy and
high emotion when Kaas became conscious of a rival affection in
Pacelli's secretary, the Jesuit Robert Leiber, who was also
German.
Kaas was a profound believer in the benefits of a Reich
Concordat, seeing a parallel between papal absolutism and the
FÜHRER- PRINZIP, the Fascist leadership principle. His views
coincided perfectly with Pacelli's on church-state politics, and
their aspirations for centralized papal power were identical.
Kaas's adulation of PaceIli, whom he put before his party,
became a crucial element in the betrayal of Catholic democratic
politics in Germany.
In 1929, Pacelli was recalled to Rome to take over the most
important role under the Pope, Cardinal Secretary of State.
Sister Pasqualina arrived uninvited and cunningly, according to
Pacelli's sister, and along with two German nuns to assist her,
took over the management of his Vatican residence. Almost
immediately Kaas, although he was still head of the German
Center Party, started to spend long periods--months at a time
--in Pacelli's Vatican apartments Shortly before Pacelli's
return to Rome, his brother, Francesco had successfully
negotiated on behalf of Pius Xl, the current Pope, a concordat
with Mussolini as part of an agreement known as the Lateran
Treaty.
The rancor between the Vatican and the state of Italy was
officially at an end. A precondition of the negotiations had
involved the destruction of the parliamentary Catholic Italian
Popular party. Pius XI disliked political Catholicism because he
could not control it. Like his predecessors, he believed that
Catholic party politics brought democracy into the church by the
back door. The result of the demise of the Popular Party was the
wholesale shift of Catholics into the Fascist Party and the
collapse of democracy in Italy. Pius XI and his new secretary of
state, Pacelli, were determined that no accommodation be reached
with Communists anywhere in the world - this was the time of
persecution of the church in Russia, Mexico, and later Spain
-but totalitarian movements and regimes of the right were a
different matter.
Hitler, who had enjoyed his first great success in the elections
of September 1930, was determined to seek a treaty with the
Vatican similar to that struck by Mussolini, which would lead to
the disbanding of the German Center Party. In his political
testament, Mein Kampf, he had recollected that his fear of
Catholicism went back to his vagabond days in Vienna. The fact
that German Catholics, politically united by the Center Party,
had defeated Bismarck's Kulturkampf- the "culture struggle"
against the Catholic Church in the 1870s--constantly worried
him. He was convinced that his movement could succeed only if
political Catholicism and its democratic networks were
eliminated.
Hitler's fear of the Catholic Church was well grounded. Into the
early 1930s the German Center Party, the German Catholic
bishops, and the Catholic media had been mainly solid in their
rejection of National Socialism. They denied Nazis the
sacraments and church burials, and Catholic journalists
excoriated National Socialism daily in Germany's 400 Catholic
ewspapers. The hierarchy instructed priests to combat National
Socialism at a local level whenever it attacked Christianity.
The Munich-based weekly Der Gerade Weg The Straight Path) told
its readers, "Adolf Hitler preaches the law of lies. You who
have fallen victim to the deceptions of one obsessed with
despotism, wake up!"
The vehement front of the Catholic Church in Germany against
Hitler, however, was not at one with the view from inside the
Vatican--a view that was now being shaped and promoted by
Eugenio Pacelli. In 1930 the influential Catholic politician
Heinrich Briining, a First World War Veteran, became the leader
of a brief new government coalition, dominated by the majority
Socialists and the Center Party. The country was reeling from
successive economic crises against the background of the world
slump and reparations payments to the Allies. In August 1931,
Briining visited Pacelli in the Vatican, and the two men
quarreled. Brüning tells in his memoirs how Pacelli lectured
him, the German chancellor, on how he should reach an
understanding with the Nazis to "form a right-wing
administration" in order to help achieve a Reich Concordat
favorable to the Vatican. When Brüning advised him not to
interfere in German politics, Pacelli threw a tantrum. Brüning
parting shot that day was the ironic observation-chilling in
hindsight-- that he trusted that "the Vatican would fare better
at the hands of Hitler ... than with himself, a devout
Catholic." Briining was right on one score. Hitler proved to be
the only chancellor prepared to grant Pacelli the sort of
authoritarian concordat he was seeking. But the price was to be
catastrophic for Catholic Germany and for Germany as a whole.
After Hitler came to power in January 1933, he made the
concordat negotiations with Pacelli a priority. The negotiations
proceeded over six months with constant shuttle diplomacy
between the Vatican and Berlin. Hitler spent more time on this
treaty than on any other item of foreign diplomacy during his
dictatorship. The Reich Concordat granted Pacelli the right to
impose the new Code of Canon Law on Catholics in Germany and
promised a number of measures favorable to Catholic education,
including new schools. In exchange, Pacelli collaborated in the
withdrawal of Catholics from political and social activity. The
negotiations were conducted in secret by Pacelli, Kaas, and
Hitler's deputy chancellor, Franz von Papen, over the heads of
German bishops and the faithful. The Catholic Church in Germany
had no say in setting the conditions. In the end, Hitler
insisted that his signature on the concordat would depend on the
Center Party's voting for the Enabling Act, the legislation that
was to give him dictatorial powers. It was Kaas, chairman of the
party but completely in thrall to Pacelli, who bullied the
delegates into acceptance. Next, Hitler insisted on the
"voluntary" disbanding of the Center Party, the last truly
parliamentary force in Germany. Again, Pacelli was the prime
mover in this tragic Catholic surrender.
The fact that the party voluntarily disbanded itself, rather
than go down fighting, had a profound psychological effect,
depriving Germany of the last democratic focus of potential
noncompliance and resistance: In the political vacuum created by
its surrender, Catholics in the millions joined the Nazi Party,
believing that it had the support of the Pope. The German
bishops capitulated to Pacelli's policy of centralization, and
German Catholic democrats found themselves politically
leaderless. After the Reich Concordat was signed, Pacelli
declared it an unparalleled triumph for the Holy See. In an
article in L 'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican-controlled
newspaper, he announced that the treaty, indicated the total
recognition and acceptance of the church's law by the German
state. But Hitler was the true victor and the Jews were the
concordat's first victims. On July 14, 1933, after the
initialing of the treaty, the Cabinet minutes record Hitler as
saying that the concordat had created an atmosphere of
confidence that would be "especially significant in the struggle
against international Jewry." He was claiming that the Catholic
Church had publicly given its blessing, at home and abroad, to
the policies of National Socialism, including its anti-Semitic
stand. At the same time, under the terms of the concordat,
Catholic criticism of acts deemed political by the Nazis, could
now be regarded as "foreign interference." The great German
Catholic Church, at the insistence of Rome, fell silent. In the
future all complaints against the Nazis would be channeled
through Pacelli. There were some notable exceptions, for example
the sermons preached in 1933 by Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber,
the Archbishop of Munich, in which he denounced the Nazis for
their rejection of the Old Testament as a Jewish text.
The concordat immediately drew the German church into complicity
with the Nazis. Even as Pacelli was granted special advantages
in the concordat for German Catholic education, Hitler was
trampling on the educational rights of Jews throughout the
country. At the same time, Catholic priests were being drawn
into Nazi collaboration with the attestation bureaucracy, which
established Jewish ancestry. Pacelli, despite the immense
centralized power he now wielded through the Code of Canon Law,
said and did nothing. The attestation machinery would lead
inexorably to the selection of millions destined for the death
camps.
As Nazi anti-Semitism mounted in Germany during the 1930's,
Pacelli failed to complain, even on behalf of Jews who had
become Catholics, acknowledging that the matter was a matter of
German internal policy. Eventually, in January 1937, three
German cardinals and two influential bishops arrived at the
Vatican to plead for a vigorous protest over Nazi persecution of
the Catholic Church, which had been deprived of all forms of
activity beyond church services. Pins XI at last decided to
issue an encyclical, a letter addressed to all the faithful of
the world. Written under Pacelli's direction, it was called Mit
Brennender Sorge (With Deep Anxiety), and it was a forthright
statement of the plight of the church in Germany. But there was
no explicit condemnation of anti-Semitism, even in relation to
Jews who had converted to Catholicism. Worse still, the subtext
against Nazism (National Socialism and Hitler were not mentioned
by name) was blunted by the publication five days later of an
even more condemnatory encyclical by Pins XI against Communism.
The encyclical Mit Brennender Sorge, though too little and too
late, revealed that the Catholic Church all along had the power
to shake the regime. A few days later, Hermann Göring, one of
Hitler's closest aides and his commander of the Luffwaffe,
delivered a two-hour harangue to a Nazi assembly against the
Catholic clergy. However, Roman centralizing had paralyzed the
German Catholic Church and its powerful web of associations.
Unlike the courageous grass-roots activism that had combated
Bismarck's persecutions in the 1870s, German Catholicism now
looked obediently to Rome for guidance. Although Pacelli
collaborated in the writing and the distribution of the
encyclical, he quickly undermined its effects by reassuring the
Reich's ambassador in Rome. "Pacelli received me with decided
friendliness," the diplomat reported back to Berlin, "and
emphatically assured me during the conversation that normal and
friendly relations with us would be restored as soon as
possible."
In the summer of 1938, as Pius XI lay dying he became belatedly
anxious about anti-Semitism throughout Europe. He commissioned
another encyclical, to be written exclusively on the Jewish
question. The text, which never saw the light of day, has only
recently been discovered. It was written by three Jesuit
scholars, but Pacelli presumably had charge of the project. It
was to be called Humani Generis Unitas (The Unity of the Human
Race). For all its good intentions and its repudiation of
violent anti-Semitism, the document is replete with the
anti-Jewishness that Pacelli had displayed in his early period
in Germany. The Jews, the text claims, were responsible for
their own fate. God had chosen them to make way for Christ's
redemption, but they denied and killed him. And now, "blinded by
their dream of worldly gain and material success," they deserved
the "worldly and spiritual ruin" that they had brought down upon
themselves. The document warns that that to defend the Jews as
"Christian principles and humanity" demand could involve the
unacceptable risk of being ensnared by secular politics--not
least an association with Bolshevism. The encyclical was
delivered in the fall of 1938 to the Jesuits in Rome, who sat on
it. To this day we do not know why it was not completed and
handed to Pope Pius XI. For all its drawbacks, it was a clear
protest against Nazi attacks on Jews and so might have done some
good. But it appears likely that the Jesuits, and Pacelli, whose
influence as secretary of state of the Vatican was paramount
since the Pope was moribund, were reluctant to inflame the Nazis
by its publication. Pacelli, when he became pope, would bury the
document deep in the secret archives.
On February 10, 1939, Pius XI died, at the age of 81. Pacelli,
then 63, was elected Pope by the College of Cardinals in just
three ballots, on March 2. He was crowned on March 12, on the
eve of Hitler's march into Prague. Between his election and his
coronation he held a crucial meeting with the German cardinals.
Keen to affirm Hitler publicly, he showed them a letter of good
wishes which began, "To the Illustrious Herr Adolf Hitler."
Should he, he asked them, style the Führer "Most Illustrious"?
He decided that that might be going too far. He told the
cardinals that Pius XI had said that keeping a papal nuncio in
Berlin "conflicts with our honor." But his predecessor, he said,
had been mistaken. He was going to maintain normal diplomatic
relations with Hitler. The following month, at Pacelli's express
wish, Archbishop Cesare Orsenigo, the Berlin nuncio, hosted a
gala reception in honor of Hitler's 50th birthday. A birthday
greeting to the Führer from the bishops of Germany would become
an annual tradition until the war's end.
Pacelli's coronation was the most triumphant in a hundred years.
His style of papacy, for all his personal humility, was
unprecedented and pompous. He always ate alone. Vatican
bureaucrats were obliged to take phone calls from him on their
knees. When he took his afternoon walk, the gardeners had to
hide in the bushes. Senior officials were not allowed to ask him
questions or present a point of view.
As Europe plunged toward war Pacelli cast himself in the role of
judge of judges. But he continued to seek to appease Hitler by
attempting to persuade the Poles to make concessions over
Germany's territorial claims. After Hitler's invasion of Poland,
on September 1, 1939, he declined to condemn Germany, to the
bafflement of the Allies.
His first public statement, the encyclical known in the
English-speaking world as Darkness over the Earth, was full of
papal rhetoric and equivocations. Then something extraordinary
occurred, revealing that whatever had motivated Pacelli in his
equivocal approach to the Nazi onslaught in Poland did not
betoken cowardice or a liking for Hitler. In November 1939, in
deepest secrecy, Pacelli became intimately and dangerously
involved In what was probably the most viable plot to depose
Hitler during the war. The plot centered on a group of anti-Nazi
generals, committed to returning Germany to democracy. The coup
might spark a civil war, and they wanted assurances that the
West would not take advantage of the ensuing chaos. Pius XII
agreed to act as go-between for the plotters and the Allies. Had
his complicity in the plot been discovered it might have proved
disastrous for the Vatican and for many thousands of German
clergy. As it happened, leaders in London dragged their feet,
and the plotters eventually fell silent. The episode
demonstrates that, while Pacelli seemed weak to some,
pusillanimity and indecisiveness were hardly in his nature.
Pacelli's first wartime act of reticence in failing to speak out
against Fascist brutality occurred in the summer of 1941,
following Hitler's invasion of Yugoslavia and the formation of
the Catholic and Fascist state of Croatia. In a wave of
appalling ethnic cleansing, the Croat Fascist separatists, known
as the Ustashe, under the leadership of Ante Pavelic, the Croat
Führer, embarked on a campaign of enforced conversions,
deportations, and mass extermination targeting a population of
2.2 million Serb Orthodox Christians and a smaller number of
Jews and Gypsies. According to the Italian writer Carlo Falconi,
as early as April, in a typical act of atrocity, a band of
Ustashe had rounded up 331 Serbs. The victims were forced to dig
their own graves before being hacked to death with axes. The
local priest was forced to recite the prayers for the dying
while his son was chopped to pieces before his eyes. Then the
priest was tortured. His hair and beard were torn off, his eves
were gouged out. Finally he was skinned alive. The very next
month Pacelli greeted Pavelic at the Vatican. Throughout the
war, the Croat atrocities continued. By the most recent
scholarly reckoning 487,000 Orthodox Serbs and 27,000 Gypsies
were massacred; in addition, approximately 30,000 out of a
population of 45,000 Jews were killed. Despite a close
relationship between the Ustashe regime and the Catholic
bishops, and a constant flow of information about the massacres,
Pacelli said and did nothing. In fact, he continued to extend
warm wishes to the Ustashe leadership. The only feasible
explanation for Pacelli's silence was his perception of Croatia
as a Catholic bridgehead into the East. The Vatican and the
local bishops approved of mass conversion in Croatia (even
though it was the result of fear rather than conviction),
because they believed that this could spell the beginning of a
return {?} of the Orthodox Christians there to papal allegiance.
Pacelli was not a man to condone mass murder, but he evidently
chose to turn a blind eye on Ustashe atrocities rather than
hinder a unique opportunity to extend the power of the papacy.
{Note from
emperors-clothes.com: This is a very generous
interpretation. In fact the Catholic Church, controlled the
Independent State of Croatia. At one point it was in fact
directly run by Archbishop Stepinac who answered to Pius XII.
Stepinac has, in turn, been beatified by the current pope, in a
Croatian ceremony attended by Croatian President Franjo
Tudjman.}
Pacelli came to learn of the Nazi plans to exterminate the Jews
of Europe shortly after they were laid in January 1942. The
deportations to the death camps had begun in December 1941 and
would continue through 1944. All during 1942, Pacelli received
reliable information on the details of the Final Solution, much
of it supplied by the British, French, and American
representatives resident in the Vatican. On March 17, 1942,
representatives of Jewish organizations assembled in Switzerland
sent a memorandum to Pacelli via the papal nuncio in Bern,
cataloguing violent anti-Semitic measures in Germany and in its
allied and conquered territories.
Their plea focused attention on Slovakia, Croatia, Hungary, and
unoccupied France, where, they believed, the Pope's intervention
might yet be effective. Apart from an intervention in the case
of Slovakia, where the president was Monsignor Josef Tiso, a
Catholic priest, no papal initiatives resulted. During the same
month, a stream of dispatches describing the fate of some 90,000
Jews reached the Vatican from various sources in Eastern Europe.
The Jewish organizations' long memorandum would be excluded from
the wartime documents published by the Vatican between 1965 and
1981. On June 16, 1942, Harold Tittmann, the U.S. representative
to the Vatican, told Washington that Pacelli was diverting
himself, ostrichlike, into purely religious concerns and that
the moral authority won for the papacy by Pius XI was being
eroded. At the end of that month, the London Daily Telegraph
announced that more than a million Jews had been killed in
Europe and that it was the aim of the Nazis "to wipe the race
from the European continent." The article was re-printed in The
New York Times. On July 21 there was a protest rally on behalf
of Europe's Jews in New York's Madison Square Garden. In the
following weeks the British, American, and Brazilian
representatives to the Vatican tried to persuade Pacelli to
speak out against the Nazi atrocities. But still he said
nothing.
In September 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt sent his
personal representative, the former head of U.S. Steel, Myron
Taylor, to plead with PaceIli to make a statement about the
extermination of the Jews. Taylor traveled hazardously through
enemy territory to reach the Vatican. Still Pacelli refused to
speak. Pacelli's excuse was that he must rise above the
belligerent parties. As late as December 18, Francis d'Arcy
Osborne, Britain's envoy in the Vatican, handed Cardinal
Domenico Tardini, Pacelli's deputy secretary of state, a dossier
replete with information on the Jewish deportations and mass
killings in hopes that the Pope would denounce the Nazi regime
in a Christmas message. On December 24, 1942, having made draft
after draft, Pacelli at last said something. In his Christmas
Eve broadcast to the world on Vatican Radio, he said that men of
goodwill owed a vow to bring society "back to its immovable
center of gravity in divine law." He went on: "Humanity owes
this vow to those hundreds of thousands who, without any fault
of their own, sometimes only by reason of their nationality and
race, are marked for death or gradual extinction." That was the
strongest public denunciation of the Final Solution that Pacelli
would make in the whole course of the war.
It was not merely a paltry statement. The chasm between the
enormity of the liquidation of the Jewish people and this form
of evasive language was profoundly scandalous. He might have
been referring to many categories of victims at the hands of
various belligerents in the conflict. Clearly the choice of
ambiguous wording was intended to placate those who urged him to
protest, while avoiding offense to the Nazi regime. But these
considerations are over-shadowed by the implicit denial and
trivialization. He had scaled down the doomed millions to
"hundreds of thousands" without uttering the word "Jews," while
making the pointed qualification "sometimes only by reason of
their nationality or race." Nowhere was the term "Nazi''
mentioned. Hitler himself could not have wished for a more
convoluted and innocuous reaction from the Vicar of Christ to
the greatest crime in history.
But what was Pacelli's principal motivation for this
trivialization and denial? The Allies' diplomats in the Vatican
believed that he was remaining impartial in order to earn a
crucial role in future peace negotiations. In this there was
clearly a degree of truth. But a recapitulation of new evidence
I have gathered shows that Pacelli saw the Jews as alien and
undeserving of his respect and compassion. He felt no sense of
moral outrage at their plight. The documents show that:
He had nourished a striking antipathy toward the Jews as early
as 1917 in Germany, which contradicts later claims that his
omissions were performed in good faith and that he "loved" the
Jews and respected their religion.
From the end of the First World War to the lost encyclical of
1938, Pacelli betrayed a fear and contempt of Judaism based on
his belief that the Jews were behind the Bolshevik plot to
destroy Christendom.
Pacelli acknowledged to representatives of the Third Reich that
the regime's anti-Semitic policies were a matter of Germany's
internal politics. The Reich Concordat between Hitler and the
Vatican, as Hitler was quick to grasp, created an ideal climate
for Jewish persecution.
Pacelli failed to sanction protest by German Catholic bishops
against anti-Semitism, and he did not attempt to intervene in
the process by which Catholic clergy collaborated in racial
certification to identify Jews.
After Pius XI's Mit Brennender Sorge, denouncing the Nazi regime
(although not by name), Pacelli attempted to mitigate the effect
of the encyclical by giving private diplomatic reassurances to
Berlin despite his awareness of widespread Nazi persecution of
Jews.
Pacelli was convinced that the Jews had brought misfortune on
their own heads: intervention on their behalf could only draw
the church into alliances with forces inimical to Catholicism.
Pacelli's failure to utter a candid word on the Final Solution
proclaimed to the world that the Vicar of Christ was not roused
to pity or anger. From this point of view, he was the ideal Pope
for Hitler's unspeakable plan. His denial and minimization of
the Holocaust were all the more scandalous in that they were
uttered from a seemingly impartial moral high ground.
There was another, more immediate indication of Pacelli's moral
dislocation. It occurred before the liberation of Rome, when he
was the sole Italian authority in the city. On October 16, 1943,
SS troops entered the Roman ghetto area and rounded up more than
1,000 Jews, imprisoning them in the very shadow of the Vatican.
How did Pacelli acquit himself'? On the morning of the roundup,
which had been prompted by AdoIf Eichmann, who was in charge of
the organization of the Final Solution from his headquarters in
Berlin, the German ambassador in Rome pleaded with the Vatican
to issue a public protest. By this stage of the war, Mussolini
had been deposed and rescued by AdoIf Hitler to run the puppet
regime in the North of Italy.. The German authorities in Rome,
both diplomats and military commanders, fearing a backlash of
the Italian populace, hoped that an immediate and vigorous papal
denunciation might stop the SS in their tracks and prevent
further arrests. Pacelli refused. In the end, the German
diplomats drafted a letter of protest on the Pope's behalf and
prevailed on a resident German bishop to sign it for Berlin's
benefit.
Meanwhile, the deportation of the imprisoned Jews went ahead on
October 18. When U.S. chargé d 'affaires Harold Tittmann visited
Pacelli that day, he found the pontiff anxious that the
"Communist" Partisans would take advantage of a cycle of papal
protest, followed by SS reprisals, followed by a civilian
backlash. As a consequence, he was not inclined to lift a finger
for the Jewish deportees, who were now traveling in cattle cars
to the Austrian border bound for Auschwitz. Church officials
reported on the desperate plight of the deportees as they passed
slowly through city after city. Still Pacelli refused to
intervene.
In the Jesuit archives in Rome, I found a secret document sworn
to under oath by Karl Wolff, the SS commander in Italy. The text
reveals that Hitler had asked Wolff in the fall of 1943 to
prepare a plan to evacuate the Pope and the Vatican treasures to
Liechtenstein. After several weeks of investigation, Wolff
concluded that an attempt to invade the Vatican and its
properties, or to seize the Pope in response to a papal protest,
would prompt a backlash throughout Italy that would seriously
hinder the Nazi war effort. Hitler therefore dropped his plan to
kidnap Pacelli, acknowledging what Pacelli appeared to ignore,
that the strongest social and political force in Italy in late
1943 was the Catholic Church, and that its potential for
thwarting the SS was immense.
Pacelli was concerned that a protest by him would benefit only
the Communists. His silence on the deportation of Rome's Jews,
in other words, was not an act of cowardice or fear of the
Germans. He wanted to maintain the Nazi-occupation status quo
until such time as the city could be liberated by the Allies.
But what of the deported Jews? Five days after the train had set
off from the Tiburtina station in Rome, an estimated 1,060 had
been gassed at Auschwitz and Birkenau - 149 men and 47 women
were detained for slave labor, but only 15 survived the war, and
only one of those was a woman, Settimia Spizzichino, who had
served as a human guinea pig of Dr. Josef Mengele, the Nazi
medical doctor who performed atrocious experiments on human
victims. After the liberation, she was found alive in a heap of
corpses. But there was a more profound failure than Pacelli's
unwillingness to help the Jews of Rome rounded up on October 16.
Pacelli's reticence was not just a diplomatic silence in
response to the political pressures of the moment, not just a
failure to be morally outraged. It was a stunning religious and
ritualistic silence. To my knowledge, there is no record of a
single public papal prayer, lit votive candle, psalm,
lamentation, or Mass celebrated in solidarity with the Jews of
Rome either during their terrible ordeal or after their deaths.
This spiritual silence in the face of an atrocity committed at
the heart of Christendom, in the shadow of the shrine of the
first apostle, persists to this day and implicates all
Catholics. This silence proclaims that Pacelli had no genuine
spiritual sympathy even for the Jews of Rome, who were members
of the community of his birth. And yet, on learning of the death
of AdoIf Hitler, Archbishop Adolf Bertram of Berlin ordered all
the priests of his archdiocese "to hold a solemn Requiem in
memory of the Führer."
There were nevertheless Jews who gave Pacelli the benefit of the
doubt. On Thursday, November 29, 1945, Pacelli met some 80
representatives of Jewish refugees who expressed their thanks
"for his generosity toward those persecuted during the
Nazi-Fascist period ."One must respect a tribute made by people
who had suffered and survived, and we cannot belittle Pacelli's
efforts on the level of charitable relief, notably his directive
that enclosed religious houses in Rome should take in Jews
hiding from the SS.
By the same token, we must respect the voice of Settimia
Spizzichino, the sole Roman Jewish woman survivor from the death
camps. Speaking in a BBC interview in 1995 she said. "1 came
back from Auschwitz on my own. . I lost my mother, two sisters
and one brother. Pius XII could have warned us about what was
going to happen. We might have escaped from Rome and joined the
partisans. He played right into the Germans' hands. It all
happened right under his nose. But he was an anti-Semitic pope,
a pro-German pope. He didn't take a single risk. And when they
say the Pope is like Jesus Christ, it is not true. He did not
save a single child."
We are obliged to accept these contrasting views of Pacelli are
not mutually exclusive. It gives a Catholic no satisfaction to
accuse a Pope of acquiescing in the plans of Hitler. But one of
the saddest ironies of Pacelli's papacy centers on the
implications of his own pastoral self-image. At the beginning of
a promotional film he commissioned about himself during the war,
called The Angelic Pastor, the camera frequently focuses on the
statue of the Good Shepherd in the Vatican gardens. The parable
of the good shepherd tells of the pastor who so loves each of
his sheep that he will do all, risk all, go to any pains, to
save one member of his flock that is lost or in danger. To his
everlasting shame, and to the shame of the Catholic Church,
Pacelli disdained to recognize the Jews of Rome as members of
his Roman flock, even though they had dwelled in the Eternal
City since before the birth of Christ. And yet there was still
something worse. After the liberation of Rome, when every
perception of restraint on his freedom was lifted, he claimed
retrospective moral superiority for having spoken and acted on
behalf of the Jews. Addressing a Palestinian group on August 3,
1946, he said, "We disapprove of all recourse to force...Just as
we condemned on various occasions in the past the persecutions
that a fanatical anti-Semitism inflicted on the Hebrew people."
His grandiloquent self-exculpation a year after the war had
ended showed him to be not only an ideal pope for the Nazis
Final Solution but also a hypocrite. The postwar period of
Pacelli's papacy, through the 1950s, saw the apotheosis of the
ideology of papal power as he presided over a triumphant
Catholic Church in open confrontation with Communism. But it
could not hold. The internal structures and morale of the church
in Pacelli's final years began to show signs of fragmentation
and decay, leading to a yearning for reassessment and renewal.
In old age he became increasingly narrow-minded, eccentric. and
hypochondriacal. He experienced religious visions, suffered from
chronic hiccups, and received monkey-brain-cell injections for
longevity. He had no love for, or trust in those who had to
follow him. He failed to replace his secretary of state when lie
died and for years he declined to appoint a full complement of
cardinals. He died at the age of 82 on October 9,1958. His
corpse decomposed rapidly in the autumnal Roman heat. At his
lying-in-state, a guard fainted from the stench. Later, his nose
turned black and fell off. Some saw in this sudden corruption of
his mortal remains, a symbol of the absolute corruption of his
papacy.
The Second Vatican Council was called by John XXIII who
succeeded Pacelli, in 1958, precisely to reject Pacelli's
monolith in preference for a collegial, decentralized, human,
Christian community, the Holy Spirit, and love. The guiding
metaphor of the church of the future was of a "pilgrim people of
God." Expectations ran high, but there was no lack of contention
and anxiety as old habits and disciplines died hard. There were
signs from the very outset that papal and Vatican hegemony would
not easily acquiesce, that the Old Guard would attempt a
comeback. As we approach the end of this century, the hopeful
energy of the Second Vatican Council, or Vatican II, as it came
to be called, appears to many a spent force. The church of Pius
XII is reasserting itself in confirmation of a pyramidal church
model: faith in the primacy of the man in the white robe
dictating in solitude from the pinnacle. In the twilight years
of John Paul II's long reign, the Catholic Church gives a
pervasive impression of dysfunction despite his historic
influence on the collapse of Communist tyranny in Poland and the
Vatican's enthusiasm for entering its third millennium with a
cleansed conscience. As the theologian Professor Adrian Hastings
comments, "The great tide powered by Vatican II has, at least
institutionally, spent its force. The old landscape has once
more emerged and Vatican II is now being read in Rome far more
in the spirit of the First Vatican Council and within the
context of Pius XII's model of Catholicism.'' A future titanic
struggle between the progressives and the traditionalists is in
prospect, with the potential for a cataclysmic schism,
especially in North America, where a split has opened up between
bishops compliant with Rome and academic Catholicism, which is
increasingly independent and dissident. Pacelli, whose
canonization process is now well advanced, has become the icon,
40 years after his death, of those traditionalists who read and
revise the provisions of the Second Vatican Council from the
viewpoint of Pacelli's ideology of papal power--an ideology that
has proved disastrous in the century's history.[1861]
-------------------------------------
According to Phelps: "Jesuit Temporal Coadjutors deny the Jewish
Eurasian mass-murder by the Nazis. The whole reason that
Jesuit Coadjutors Tzar Nicholas I, Alexander III and Nicholas II
created the Pale of Settlement was to corral the Jews for their
future annihilation by Hitler and Stalin working together. New
York and London financed the massacre while SMOM John J. McCloy
refused to bomb Auschwitz and FDR refused to admit Jews on the
ship St. Louis into the US from Cuba. But tens of thousands of
Nazis could be brought into the US after the war in the name of
fighting the very Soviet communism FDR had built.
"Adolf Hitler, The Pope's Fuehrer. Pius XII was a Jesuit
Pontiff who carried out the largest enforcement of the Council
of Trent in the history of the Jesuit Order. Four Jesuits
worked for years trying to cover-up his crimes."