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Defending Pope Pius Xii


kamiller42

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The media can always find someone crying foul over Pope Pius XII.

[quote]
[b]Holocaust hangs over pope's visit to Rome synagogue[/b]

ROME (AFP) – The role of the Roman Catholic Church during the Holocaust hung over a landmark visit Sunday by Pope Benedict XVI to Rome's main synagogue.

"Unfortunately many remained indifferent" as the Nazis slaughtered millions of Jews before and during World War II, the German-born pope said in a speech often punctuated by applause in the cavernous temple.

But [b]silence greeted his assertion that the Holy See "performed actions of support, often hidden and discreet."[/b]
...
[url="http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100117/wl_afp/vaticanpopejewsrome_20100117183215"]Source[/url]
[/quote]

Well, I came across a nice selection of quotes from prominent Jewish people who lived during that time. It's a nice collection on Michael Savage's site.

[quote]Praise for Pope Pius XII's Stand Against Nazism and the Holocaust

"Only the Church protested against the Hitlerian onslaught on liberty. Up till then I had not been interested in the Church, but today I feel a great admiration for the Church, which alone has had the courage to struggle for spiritual truth and moral liberty."

Albert Einstein in Time Magazine 1940, quoted in Three Popes and the Jews by Pinchas E. Lapide (New York: Hawthorn, 1967), p. 251.

"The repeated interventions of the Holy Father on behalf of Jewish Communities in Europe has evoked the profoundest sentiments of appreciation and gratitude from Jews throughout the world."

Rabbi Maurice Perlzweig, Political director of the World Jewish Congress. Written February 18 1944 in a letter to Msgr. Amleto Cicognani, the apostolic delegate in Washington, D.C.

"In the most difficult hours of which we Jews of Romania have passed through, the generous assistance of the Holy See…was decisive and salutary. It is not easy for us to find the right words to express the warmth and consolation we experienced because of the concern of the supreme pontiff, who offered a large sum to relieve the sufferings of deported Jews…. The Jews of Romania will never forget these facts of historic importance."

Rabbi Alexander Safran, chief rabbi of Romania note to Monsignor Andrea Cassulo, Papal Nuncio to Romania, April 7 1944

"The people of Israel will never forget what His Holiness and his illustrious delegates, inspired by the eternal principles of religion, which form the very foundation of true civilization, are doing for our unfortunate brothers and sisters in the most tragic hour of our history, which is living proof of Divine Providence in this world."

Rabbi Isaac Herzog, chief rabbi of the British Mandate of Palestine, March 1945.

"The Church and the papacy have saved Jews as much and in as far as they could save Christians.... Six million of my co-religionists have been murdered by the Nazis, but there could have been many more victims, had it not been for the efficacious intervention of Pius XII."

Dr. Raphael Cantoni, director of the Italian Jewish Assistance Committee, American Jewish Yearbook 1944-1945, 233.

"What the Vatican did will be indelibly and eternally engraved in our hearts. Priests and even high prelates did things that will forever be an honor to Catholicism."

Israel [Zolli], former Chief Rabbi of Rome, 1948.

[url="http://www.michaelsavage.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=9680"]And many more[/url].
[/quote]
Not sure if originated with him, but it does look like good reference material.

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Happy_Catholic

I don't like how people can get on the bandwagon and blame someone who's dead, of something they did or did not do over 60 years ago.

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KeenanParkerII

I was watching that visit on TV over breakfast, and it was rather shocking. I always heard of stories about the Catholic Church helping Jews during WW2, not the contrary. My Great Grandpa/Gramma were Jewish and they told me stories of the Jews singing their praise songs, and when the Nazi's came they would start singing Ave Maria! :lol_roll:

God Bless his holiness, Pope Pius XII. :)

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How Pius XII Protected Jews



By Jimmy Akin

The twentieth century was marked by genocides on an monstrous scale. One of the most terrible was the Holocaust wrought by Nazi Germany, which killed an estimated six million European Jews and almost as many other victims.

During this dark time, the Catholic Church was shepherded by Pope Pius XII, who proved himself an untiring foe of the Nazis, determined to save as many Jewish lives as he could. Yet today Pius XII gets almost no credit for his actions before or during the war.

Anti-Catholic author Dave Hunt writes, "The Vatican had no excuse for its Nazi partnership or for its continued commendation of Hitler on the one hand and its thunderous silence regarding the Jewish question on the other hand. . . . [The popes] continued in the alliance with Hitler until the end of the war, reaping hundreds of millions of dollars in payments from the Nazi government to the Vatican."[1]

Jack Chick, infamous for his anti-Catholic comic books, tells us in Smokescreens, "When World War II ended, the Vatican had egg all over its face. Pope Pius XII, after building the Nazi war machine, saw Hitler losing his battle against Russia, and he immediately jumped to the other side when he saw the handwriting on the wall. . . . Pope Pius XII should have stood before the judges in Nuremberg. His war crimes were worthy of death."[2]

One is tempted simply to dismiss these accusations, so wildly out of touch with reality, as the deluded ravings of persons with no sense of historical truth. This would underestimate the power of such erroneous charges to influence people: Many take these writers at their word.

Stepping out of the nightmare fantasyland of Hunt and Chick and back into sunlight of the real world, we discover that, not only was Pius XII no friend of the Nazis, but that his opposition to them began years before the War, before he was elected to the papacy, when he was still Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli, the Vatican Secretary of State.

On April 28, 1935, four years before the War even started, Pacelli gave a speech that aroused the attention of the world press. Speaking to an audience of 250,000 pilgrims in Lourdes, France, the future Pius XII stated that the Nazis "are in reality only miserable plagiarists who dress up old errors with new tinsel. It does not make any difference whether they flock to the banners of social revolution, whether they are guided by a false concept of the world and of life, or whether they are possessed by the superstition of a race and blood cult."[3] It was talks like this, in addition to private remarks and numerous notes of protest that Pacelli sent to Berlin in his capacity as Vatican Secretary of State, that earned him a reputation as an enemy of the Nazi party.

The Germans were likewise displeased with the reigning pontiff, Pius XI, who showed himself to be a unrelenting opponent of the new German "ideals"—even writing an entire encyclical, Mit Brennender Sorge (1937), to condemn them. When Pius XI died in 1939, the Nazis abhorred the prospect that Pacelli might be elected his successor.

Dr. Joseph Lichten, a Polish Jew who served as a diplomat and later an official of the Jewish Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith, writes: "Pacelli had obviously established his position clearly, for the Fascist governments of both Italy and Germany spoke out vigorously against the possibility of his election to succeed Pius XI in March of 1939, though the cardinal secretary of state had served as papal nuncio in Germany from 1917 to 1929. . . . The day after his election, the Berlin Morgenpost said: ‘The election of cardinal Pacelli is not accepted with favor in Germany because he was always opposed to Nazism and practically determined the policies of the Vatican under his predecessor.’ "[4]

Former Israeli diplomat and now Orthodox Jewish Rabbi Pinchas Lapide states that Pius XI "had good reason to make Pacelli the architect of his anti-Nazi policy. Of the forty-four speeches which the Nuncio Pacelli had made on German soil between 1917 and 1929, at least forty contained attacks on Nazism or condemnations of Hitler’s doctrines. . . . Pacelli, who never met the Führer, called it ‘neo-Paganism.’ "[5]

A few weeks after Pacelli was elected pope, the German Reich’s Chief Security Service issued a then-secret report on the new Pope. Rabbi Lapide provides an excerpt:

"Pacelli has already made himself prominent by his attacks on National Socialism during his tenure as Cardinal Secretary of State, a fact which earned him the hearty approval of the Democratic States during the papal elections. . . . How much Pacelli is celebrated as an ally of the Democracies is especially emphasized in the French Press."[6]

Unfortunately, joy in the election of a strong pope who would continue Pius XI’s defiance of the Nazis was darkened by the ominous political developments in Europe. War finally came on September 1, 1939, when German troops overran Poland. Two days later Britain and France declared war on Germany.

Early in 1940, Hitler made an attempt to prevent the new Pope from maintaining the anti-Nazi stance he had taken before his election. He sent his underling, Joachim von Ribbentrop, to try to dissuade Pius XII from following his predecessor’s policies. "Von Ribbentrop, granted a formal audience on March 11, 1940, went into a lengthy harangue on the invincibility of the Third Reich, the inevitability of a Nazi victory, and the futility of papal alignment with the enemies of the Führer. Pius XII heard von Ribbentrop out politely and impassively. Then he opened an enormous ledger on his desk and, in his perfect German, began to recite a catalogue of the persecutions inflicted by the Third Reich in Poland, listing the date, place, and precise details of each crime. The audience was terminated; the Pope’s position was clearly unshakable."[7]

The Pope secretly worked to save as many Jewish lives as possible from the Nazis, whose extermination campaign began its most intense phase only after the War had started. It is here that the anti-Catholics try to make their hay: Pius XII is charged either with cowardly silence or with outright support of the Nazi extermination of millions of Jews.

Much of the impetus to smear the Vatican regarding World War II came, appropriately enough, from a work of fiction—a stage play called The Deputy, written after the War by a little-known German Protestant playwright named Rolf Hochhuth.

The play appeared in 1963, and it painted a portrait of a pope too timid to speak out publicly against the Nazis. Ironically, even Hochhuth admitted that Pius XII was materially very active in support of the Jews. Historian Robert Graham explains: "Playwright Rolf Hochhuth criticized the Pontiff for his (alleged) silence, but even he admitted that, on the level of action, Pius XII generously aided the Jews to the best of his ability. Today, after a quarter-century of the arbitrary and one-sided presentation offered the public, the word ‘silence’ has taken on a much wider connotation. It stands also for ‘indifference,’ ‘apathy,’ ‘inaction,’ and, implicitly, for anti-Semitism."[8]

Hochhuth’s fictional image of a silent (though active) pope has been transformed by the anti-Catholic rumor mill into the image of a silent and inactive pope—and by some even into an actively pro-Nazi monster. If there were any truth to the charge that Pius XII was silent, the silence would not have been out of moral cowardice in the face of the Nazis, but because the Pope was waging a subversive, clandestine war against them in an attempt to save Jews.

"The need to refrain from provocative public statements at such delicate moments was fully recognized in Jewish circles. It was in fact the basic rule of all those agencies in wartime Europe who keenly felt the duty to do all that was possible for the victims of Nazi atrocities and in particular for the Jews in proximate danger of deportation to ‘an unknown destination.’ "[9] The negative consequences of speaking out strongly were only too well known.

"In one tragic instance, the Archbishop of Utrecht was warned by the Nazis not to protest the deportation of Dutch Jews. He spoke out anyway and in retaliation the Catholic Jews of Holland were sent to their death. One of them was the Carmelite philosopher, Edith Stein."[10]

While the armchair quarterbacks of anti-Catholic circles may have wished the Pope to issue, in Axis territory and during wartime, ringing, propagandistic statements against the Nazis, the Pope realized that such was not an option if he were actually to save Jewish lives rather than simply mug for the cameras.

The desire to keep a low profile was expressed by the people Pius XII helped. A Jewish couple from Berlin who had been held in concentration camps but escaped to Spain with the help of Pius XII, stated: "None of us wanted the Pope to take an open stand. We were all fugitives, and fugitives do not wish to be pointed at. The Gestapo would have become more excited and would have intensified its inquisitions. If the Pope had protested, Rome would have become the center of attention. It was better that the Pope said nothing. We all shared this opinion at the time, and this is still our conviction today."[11]

While the U.S., Great Britain, and other countries often refused to allow Jewish refugees to immigrate during the war, the Vatican was issuing tens of thousands of false documents to allow Jews to pass secretly as Christians so they could escape the Nazis. What is more, the financial aid Pius XII helped provide the Jews was very real. Lichten, Lapide, and other Jewish chroniclers record those funds as being in the millions of dollars—dollars even more valuable then than they are now.

In late 1943, Mussolini, who had been at odds with the papacy all through his tenure, was removed from power by the Italians, but Hitler, fearing Italy would negotiate a separate peace with the Allies, invaded, took control, and set up Mussolini again as a puppet ruler. It was in this hour, when the Jews of Rome themselves were threatened—those whom the Pope had the most direct ability to help—that Pius XII really showed his mettle.

Joseph Lichten records that on September 27, 1943, one of the Nazi commanders demanded of the Jewish community in Rome payment of one hundred pounds of gold within thirty-six hours or three hundred Jews would be taken prisoner. When the Jewish Community Council was only able to gather only seventy pounds of gold, they turned to the Vatican.

"In his memoirs, the then Chief Rabbi Zolli of Rome writes that he was sent to the Vatican, where arrangements had already been made to receive him as an ‘engineer’ called to survey a construction problem so that the Gestapo on watch at the Vatican would not bar his entry. He was met by the Vatican treasurer and secretary of state, who told him that the Holy Father himself had given orders for the deficit to be filled with gold vessels taken from the Treasury."[12]

Pius XII also took a public stance concerning the Jews of Italy: "The Pope spoke out strongly in their defense with the first mass arrests of Jews in 1943, and L’Osservatore Romano carried an article protesting the internment of Jews and the confiscation of their property. The Fascist press came to call the Vatican paper ‘a mouthpiece of the Jews.’ "[13]

Prior to the Nazi invasion, the Pope had been working hard to get Jews out of Italy by emigration; he now was forced to turn his attention to finding them hiding places. "The Pope sent out the order that religious buildings were to give refuge to Jews, even at the price of great personal sacrifice on the part of their occupants; he released monasteries and convents from the cloister rule forbidding entry into these religious houses to all but a few specified outsiders, so that they could be used as hiding places. Thousands of Jews—the figures run from 4,000 to 7,000—were hidden, fed, clothed, and bedded in the 180 known places of refuge in Vatican City, churches and basilicas, Church administrative buildings, and parish houses. Unknown numbers of Jews were sheltered in Castel Gandolfo, the site of the Pope’s summer residence, private homes, hospitals, and nursing institutions; and the Pope took personal responsibility for the care of the children of Jews deported from Italy."[14]

Rabbi Lapide records that "in Rome we saw a list of 155 convents and monasteries—Italian, French, Spanish, English, American, and also German—mostly extraterritorial property of the Vatican . . . which sheltered throughout the German occupation some 5,000 Jews in Rome. No less than 3,000 Jews found refuge at one time at the Pope’s summer residence at Castel Gandolfo; sixty lived for nine months at the Jesuit Gregorian University, and half a dozen slept in the cellar of the Pontifical Bible Institute."[15]

Notice in particular that the Pope was not merely allowing Jews to be hidden in different church buildings around Rome. He was hiding them in the Vatican itself and in his own summer home, Castel Gandolfo. His success in protecting Italian Jews against the Nazis was remarkable. Lichten records that after the War was over it was determined that only 8,000 Jews were taken from Italy by the Nazis[16] —far less than in other European countries. In June,1944, Pius XII sent a telegram to Admiral Miklos Horthy, the ruler of Hungary, and was able to halt the planned deportation of 800,000 Jews from that country.

The Pope’s efforts did not go unrecognized by Jewish authorities, even during the War. The Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem, Isaac Herzog, sent the Pope a personal message of thanks on February 28, 1944, in which he said: "The people of Israel will never forget what His Holiness and his illustrious delegates, inspired by the eternal principles of religion which form the very foundations of true civilization, are doing for us unfortunate brothers and sisters in the most tragic hour of our history, which is living proof of divine Providence in this world."[17]

Other Jewish leaders chimed in also. Rabbi Safran of Bucharest, Romania, sent a note of thanks to the papal nuncio on April 7, 1944: "It is not easy for us to find the right words to express the warmth and consolation we experienced because of the concern of the supreme pontiff, who offered a large sum to relieve the sufferings of deported Jews. . . . The Jews of Romania will never forget these facts of historic importance."[18]

The Chief Rabbi of Rome, Israel Zolli, also made a statement of thanks: "What the Vatican did will be indelibly and eternally engraved in our hearts. . . . Priests and even high prelates did things that will forever be an honor to Catholicism."[19]

After the war, Zolli became a Catholic and, to honor the Pope for what he had done for the Jews and the role he had played in Zolli’s conversion, took the name "Eugenio"—the Pope’s given name—as his own baptismal name. Zolli stressed that his conversion was for theological reasons, which was certainly true, but the fact that the Pope had worked so hard on behalf of the Jews no doubt played a role in inspiring him to look at the truths of Christianity.

Lapide writes: "When Zolli accepted baptism in 1945 and adopted Pius’s Christian name of Eugene, most Roman Jews were convinced that his conversion was an act of gratitude for wartime succor to Jewish refugees and, repeated denials not withstanding, many are still of his opinion. Thus, Rabbi Barry Dov Schwartz wrote in the summer issue, 1964, of Conservative Judaism: ‘Many Jews were persuaded to convert after the war, as a sign of gratitude, to that institution which had saved their lives.’ "[20]

In Three Popes and the Jews Lapide estimated the total number of Jews that had been spared as a result of Pius XII’s throwing the Church’s weight into the clandestine struggle to save them. After totaling the numbers of Jews saved in different areas and deducting the numbers saved by other causes, such as the praiseworthy efforts of some European Protestants, "The final number of Jewish lives in whose rescue the Catholic Church had been the instrument is thus at least 700,000 souls, but in all probability it is much closer to . . . 860,000."[21] This is a total larger than all other Jewish relief organizations in Europe, combined, were able to save. Lapide calculated that Pius XII and the Church he headed constituted the most successful Jewish aid organization in all of Europe during the war, dwarfing the Red Cross and all other aid societies.

This fact continued to be recognized when Pius XII died in 1958. Lapide’s book records the eulogies of a number of Jewish leaders concerning the Pope, and far from agreeing with Jack Chick that he deserved death because of his "war crimes," Jewish leaders praised the man highly:[22]

"We share the grief of the world over the death of His Holiness Pius XII. . . . During the ten years of Nazi terror, when our people passed through the horrors of martyrdom, the Pope raised his voice to condemn the persecutors and to commiserate with their victims" (Golda Meir, Israeli representative to the U.N. and future prime minister of Israel).

"With special gratitude we remember all he has done for the persecuted Jews during one of the darkest periods in their entire history” (Nahum Goldmann, president of the World Jewish Congress).

"More than anyone else, we have had the opportunity to appreciate the great kindness, filled with compassion and magnanimity, that the Pope displayed during the terrible years of persecution and terror" (Elio Toaff, Chief Rabbi of Rome, following Rabbi Zolli’s conversion).

Finally, let us conclude with a quotation from Lapide’s record that was not given at the death of Pius XII, but was given after the War by the most well-known Jewish figure of this century, Albert Einstein: "Only the Catholic Church protested against the Hitlerian onslaught on liberty. Up till then I had not been interested in the Church, but today I feel a great admiration for the Church, which alone has had the courage to struggle for spiritual truth and moral liberty."[23]



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FOOTNOTES:
[1] Dave Hunt, A Woman Rides the Beast (Eugene, Oregon: Harvest House, 1994), 284.
[2] Jack Chick, Smokescreens (China, California: Chick Publications, 1983), 45.
[3] Robert Graham, S.J., ed., Pius XII and the Holocaust (New Rochelle, New York: Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, 1988), 106.
[4] Joseph Lichten, "A Question of Moral Judgement: Pius XII and the Jews," in Graham, 107.
[5] Pinchas E. Lapide, Three Popes and the Jews (New York: Hawthorn, 1967), 118.
[6] Ibid., 121.
[7] Lichten, 107.
[8] Graham, 18.
[9] Ibid., 19.
[10] Lichten, 30.
[11] Ibid., 99.
[12] Ibid., 120.
[13] Ibid., 125.
[14] Ibid., 126.
[15] Lapide, 133.
[16] Lichten, 127.
[17] Graham, 62.
[18] Lichten, 130.
[19] American Jewish Yearbook 1944-1945, 233.
[20] Lapide, 133.
[21] Ibid., 215.
[22] Ibid., 227-228.
[23] Ibid., 251.

source: http://www.catholic.com/library/HOW_Pius_XII_PROTECTED_JEWS.asp


The Framing of Pius XII

Catholic Apologists Are Fighting Back

By Matthew Bunson




This Rock
Volume 17, Number 3
March 2006

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Reasons for Hope
By Cherie Peacock
Letters
Getting Started with the Fathers of the Church
By Marcellino D'Ambrosio
Where to Get Started
The Scandal of the Decades: The Rosary and the Bible
By Edward Sri
Further Reading
The Framing of Pius XII
By Matthew Bunson
Recent Defenses of Pius XII
Does the Catholic Church Hate Women?
By Christopher Kaczor
What Did Jesus Do?
Women in the Church
If You're Looking for Further Reading about:
Catholic Pioneer Conquers Public School Prejudice
By Fr. Michael P. Orsi
Damascus Road
Helping the Spiritually Blind
By Joanna Bogle
By the Book
Statues of Limitations
By Tim Staples
Truth Be Told
Crusading for Truth
By Robert P. Lockwood
Up a Notch
The Eucharist
By Jan Wakelin
Classic Apologetics
Questions and Answers
By Cecily Hastings
Quick Questions
Last Writes
By Karl Keating

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The publication of John Cornwell’s Hitler’s Pope in 1999 resurrected the dispute over Pope Pius XII, the Catholic Church, and the long and complex history of Catholic-Jewish relations. The book was justifiably condemned for its appalling research, biased interpretation of events, and anti-Catholic (and especially anti-papal) agenda. But what made it so additionally egregious was the mainstream media’s acceptance of Cornwell’s fallacious attack as gospel truth. As the Washington Post proclaimed:

The title tells the tale. And a chilling tale it is: Eugenio Pacelli, then the Vatican’s all-powerful secretary of state, made it possible for Adolf Hitler to achieve total power in Germany and, as Pope Pius XII, went on to appease him, maintaining inexplicable public silence as the Nazis destroyed and massacred millions of European Jews before and during World War II. . . . Had Pius XII publicly condemned Hitler’s acts—and even top Germany military commanders in Italy secretly urged him to do so toward the end of the war—many millions of lives might have been saved.
The slander perpetrated by Cornwell and a number of authors who followed him came as no surprise. The roots of the attack—made all the more grotesque by the claim of Cornwell to be a "practicing Catholic"—go back to Rolf Hochhuth’s 1963 play The Deputy. A leftist writer who merely parroted the anti-papal propaganda of the Soviet Union, Hochhuth found a willing audience in the West. The accusations against Pius XII, therefore, essentially originated in a scurrilous work of fiction written more than a decade after the war. Since then, the holy and beloved Pius XII has become the favorite target of anti-Catholics—and dissident Catholics who see him as the chief villain in modern Catholicism and the model for all that is wrong with the Catholic Church.

In the immediate wake of Hitler’s Pope, the task of defending Pius XII fell to a small but dedicated cadre of scholars and Catholic apologists such as Sr. Margherita Marchione, frequent This Rock author Ronald Rychlak, and the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights. After valiantly leading the fight to exonerate Pope Pius and provide a thorough critique of Cornwell’s book, these first defenders were joined by a host of other writers and apologists. In the end, while Cornwell and other anti-papal zealots did severe damage to the name and reputation of Pope Pius XII, they also created a backlash and helped galvanize a movement of apologists.


New Attack, Same Result


This background is crucial in appreciating the December 28, 2004, publication of a front-page story in the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera entitled "Pius XII ordered: do not give back the Jewish children: The future Pope Roncalli disobeyed," by Alberto Melloni, professor of contemporary history at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. The article was yet another effort to discredit Pius XII on the Holocaust/anti-Semitic charge and derail the pontiff’s beatification and canonization. This time, though, Catholic apologists, scholars, and journalists were ready to answer and debunk the slander with striking speed and accuracy.

The story was built around the leak of an unpublished document dated October 23, 1946, supposedly drafted by the Holy Office and approved by Pius XII and sent to Archbishop Angelo Roncalli (the future Pope John XXIII), then-nuncio to France, regarding Jewish children who found refuge in Catholic homes and institutions. Jewish officials were requesting their return. The note in question was unsigned, the author is unknown, and it was not on Vatican letterhead. Curiously, the text was not in Italian (as was customary for Vatican communications to its nuncios) but in French, making more apparent that it lacked any official status as a message from the Holy Office or Vatican Secretariat of State. The French text boasted seemingly explosive and horrendous instructions:
With regard to the Jewish children who, during the German occupation, have been entrusted to Catholic institutions and families and whom Jewish institutions are reclaiming to be entrusted to them, the Holy Congregation of the Holy Office has taken a decision that can be summarized as follows:
Avoid, as much as possible, to answer in writing to Jewish authorities, but do it orally.
Each time that it will be necessary to respond, it must be said that the Church must make its inquiries to study each case separately.
The children who have been baptized could not be entrusted to institutions that would not be in a position to ensure their Christian education.
For the children who have lost their relatives, given that the Church looked after them, it would not be appropriate that they would be abandoned by the Church or entrusted to persons who have no rights over them, at least until they are in a position to dispose of themselves. This, obviously, for the children who would not have been baptized.
If the children were entrusted by relatives, and if the relatives reclaim them now, inasmuch as the children have not been baptized, they can be returned to them.
It is to be noted that this decision of the Holy Congregation of the Holy Office has been approved by the Holy Father.
The document was immediately seized upon by media and declared proof positive of the pontiff’s rampant anti-Semitism and indifference. On December 29, the Guardian newspaper in England added, "The letter deals a new and crushing blow to the reputation of the wartime pope, Pius XII." On January 9, 2005, the New York Times presented its own article on the basis of the "discovery," essentially repeating the charges made by Melloni, and placed on its web site an English version of the French letter under the title "1946 Letter from the Vatican."

But within days of the original article in Corriere della Sera, the entire story was proved to be based on a dubious piece of evidence. Leading the charge were two of Italy’s leading experts on Pius XII, Andrea Tornielli and Matteo L. Napolitano, co-authors of Il Papa che salvo gli Ebrei (The Pope Who Saved the Jews). In a front-page article for the January 11 edition of Il Giornale, Tornielli published the original Vatican document and compared it to the French translation. In the same issue of Il Giornale, Napolitano castigated Melloni for his erroneous and misleading use of the memo.


The Case of the Missing Pages


As revealed by Tornielli, the controversial text proved to be only one page of a three-page document. The other two pages were attached in the archives but were never revealed by Melloni or the New York Times.

Page 2 is a typewritten memo from Msgr. Tardini of Holy Office to the Apostolic Nunciature in Paris entitled "The problem of Jewish children welcomed by Catholic charities during the war." The letter is dated September 28, 1946, and it reads as follows:
The Most Eminent Fathers decided that if possible, there should be no response to the request of the Grand Rabbi of Jerusalem. In any event, if it is necessary to say something, it should be done orally, given the danger of abuse and distortion of anything written from the Holy See on the subject. Eventually, it will be necessary to explain that the Church must do its own research and observations in order to discern case by case, it being evident that children who were baptized cannot be entrusted to institutions that cannot guarantee their Christian education. Furthermore, also those children who were not baptized and who no longer have living relatives, having been entrusted to the Church who received them, as long as they are not able to decide for themselves, they cannot be abandoned by the Church or delivered to parties who have no right to them. It would be something else if the children were requested by their relatives. The decision of the Eminent Fathers and the criteria here presented were referred to the Holy Father in an audience of March 28, and His Holiness deigned to provide his august approval.
The third page is also a typewritten letter and bears the same reference number (4516) and date as page 2 and the notation of the Apostolic Nunciature of France. In French, it reads:
With regard to the Jewish children who, during the German occupation, have been entrusted to Catholic institutions and families and whom Jewish institutions are reclaiming to be entrusted to them, the Holy Congregation of the Holy Office has taken a decision that is here reported in its entirety.
It then repeats the memo on page 2 in Italian, and at the bottom is a note in French: "Excerpt of a letter of His Excellency Msgr. Tardini dated September 28, 1946 Prot. 6972/46."

As the complete three-page document shows, Tardini sent a letter to Roncalli on September 28, 1946, regarding the Holy Office’s response to requests from Jewish Institutions (but not families) asking for the Jewish children. The memo makes clear that if Jewish children were reclaimed by family members, these children—whether baptized or not—were to be reunited with their Jewish families. (The original three-page document can be viewed at www.vaticanfiles.net/intelligence2.htm.)

Clearly missing in the Italian original is the most inflammatory point in the French text, namely, that unbaptized children cannot be returned to their families. In truth, Pope Pius had approved the decision that Jewish children were to be returned to their families regardless of their baptismal status. But that didn’t stop Melloni, who claimed to have discovered the poor French translation while suppressing the real documents on which it was loosely based. Pius XII, as Rychlak wrote on Beliefnet.com, "was being framed."


Apologists to the Rescue


The refutation of the original attack came within days of the articles in Corriere and the Times. It began with the articles in Il Giornale on January 11 and continued over the succeeding weeks. Rychlak wrote his article for Beliefnet.com, and Inside the Vatican, in its January-February 2005 issue, reprinted Rychlak’s original article and added "Another Anti-Papal Hoax" by William Doino. Fr. Peter Gumpel, S.J., the relator for the cause of Pope Pius XII, gave many interviews on the errors in Melloni’s article and the continuing progress of the cause.

Equally helpful were the efforts by media critics in condemning the mainstream media’s shabby tactics. On April 16, 2005, Accuracy In Media released Sherrie Gossett’s article " New York Times Publicizes Phony Memo from the Pope’s Pope," which castigated the newspaper for its poor research and asked, "Are New York Times staffers now under the impression the Vatican is in Paris? Or perhaps they think Rome is in Paris?" Newsmax.com, a conservative news outlet, also detailed the egregious episode.

But even after the complete refutation of the lies in the Melloni and Times articles, the war against the Pope (and the papacy) continued. National Public Radio gave a platform to Melloni to repeat his false charges on its All Things Considered (January 21, 2005) but failed to mention the articles in Il Giornale or present an opposing opinion. The New Republic, in its January 31 edition, permitted anti-papal polemicist Daniel Goldhagen to repeat his wild claims of a Catholic conspiracy to kidnap Jewish children.

Still, the rapidity of the exposure of the original articles’ distortions is evidence that the truth is being heard. Credit goes to scholars such as Rychlak, Gumpel, and others, but the episode also points to the long road ahead for historical Catholic apologetics. The task now is to develop even more effective means of Catholic social communications to respond immediately to the attacks and be proactive in making broadly known the truth of Pope Pius XII’s record and the heroic deeds of the Church during World War II to save tens of thousands of Jews from the Nazis.


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Matthew Bunson is the general editor of Our Sunday Visitor’s Catholic Almanac, a senior fellow of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology founded by Scott Hahn, and a moderator of the online Church history forum for EWTN. He is a paid consultant on Catholic issues to USA Today and is frequently consulted by MSNBC, CNN, CBS Radio, and the BBC. He is the author of more than thirty books.


source: http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/2006/0603fea3.asp

If I'm called to marriage and have a son I soooo want to name him after this pope and then go all apologetics mode to explain why he was cool and not a horrible man. :D

Edited by tinytherese
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It's amazing that folks slam the pope on false accusations of not supporting and aiding the Jews, and yet companies like IBM, which continued business out of their German affiliate during the War, manufacturing the machines used for records in the concentration camps, escape public opinion almost entirely unscathed.

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[quote name='Didymus' date='20 January 2010 - 01:07 AM' timestamp='1263967641' post='2040625']
It's amazing that folks slam the pope on false accusations of not supporting and aiding the Jews, and yet companies like IBM, which continued business out of their German affiliate during the War, manufacturing the machines used for records in the concentration camps, escape public opinion almost entirely unscathed.
[/quote]

Ironic that the company that developed Zyklon B as a pesticide, IG Farben, is now manufacturing hormonal (abortifacient) contraception and abortifacients.

~Sternhauser

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