Three Jews and a Pope
By Sister Margherita Marchione, Ph.D. (June 2006)
Recently, a Jewish group invited me to speak. When I mentioned
that my topic would be Pope Pius XII, I was informed that it
would not suit their needs: “My chairman thought it would open
up the wounds of a few holocaust survivors in our group who lost
mothers, fathers, sisters and brothers in the gas chambers. We
have a few, not many, who escaped from Germany. They still are
angry that the Catholic Church did not condemn Adolf Hitler.”
Although this is not true, many Jewish organizations continue to
state that “the Catholic Church did not condemn” the Nazi
leader.
From England, Israel and the USA, three Jewish historians have
refuted this distorted portrayal of world history: Martin
Gilbert, Michael Tagliacozzo, and David Dalin. All three have
taken issue with Daniel Goldhagen, John Cornwell, James Carroll
and other writers of the past century.
As I pointed out in my own books during the past decade, why
would German leaders state: “The Pope has repudiated the
National Socialist New European Order… and makes himself the
mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals.” When Pius XII learned
about the Nazi round-up on October 16, 1943, why did he
immediately send an official, personal protest through the papal
Secretary of State Cardinal Luigi Maglione to German Ambassador
Ernst von Weizsäcker? This protest was published in the
Vatican’s official “Actes.” Why did the Pope provide false
identification papers to potential victims? Why did he order
Vatican buildings, churches, convents and monasteries to open
their doors and find hiding places for Jews and other refugees?
Why would Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Meir state: “When
fearful martyrdom came to our people in the decade of Nazi
terror, the voice of the Pope was raised for the victims.”
Albert Einstein stated. "Only the Church stood squarely across
the path of Hitler's campaign for suppressing the truth." (Time
Magazine, 1940)
How long will honest scholars condone statements by those who
defame Pope Pius XII? Today even hardened detractors of Pius XII
generally consider that, throughout the Second World War, the
pope was hailed as a towering moral hero in the face of
cataclysmic terror: a man solicitous on behalf of Jews and
Gentiles alike who worked tirelessly for peace. Through
diplomacy, personal contact with Heads of State, and the
underground railroad, he protected the Jews and other victims of
the Nazis in a way that no other leader with mighty war weapons
could provide. His charity and love prevailed.
No Pope throughout history did more than Pope John Paul II to
create closer relations with the Jewish community, to oppose
anti-Semitism, and to make certain that the evils of the
Holocaust never occur again. Relations between the Catholic
Church and Jewish people are marked by mutual respect and
understanding. Pope John Paul II visited the Chief Rabbi at the
Synagogue in Rome in 1986 and declared that "the Jews are our
dearly beloved brothers," and indeed "our elder brothers in
faith." He established full diplomatic relations between the
Holy See and the State of Israel. A survivor of both Nazi and
Communist oppression himself, John Paul II has consistently
praised Pope Pius XII for his heroic leadership during World War
II, and led the cause for his canonization. His successor,
Benedict XVI, has followed in his footsteps.
During the early part of the nineteenth century, pogroms were
going on in Poland. On December 30, 1915, the American Jewish
Committee appealed to Pope Benedict XV to use his moral
influence and speak out against anti-Semitism. Eugenio Pacelli,
who was working in the Vatican Secretariate of State, was deeply
involved in the preparation of a pro-Jewish document signed by
Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Gasparri (February 9, 1916).
This statement appeared in the New York Times, April 17, 1916
under the headline: “Papal Bull Urges Equality for Jews.” It was
printed in Civiltà Cattolica, April 28, 1916, v. 2, pp. 358-359,
and in The Tablet, April 29, 1916 v. 127, p. 565.
Twenty years later, during his 1936 visit to America, Cardinal
Pacelli met with two officials of the American Jewish Committee,
Lewis Strauss and Joseph Proskauer, and re-affirmed Benedict
XV’s condemnation of anti-Semitism, promising to make its
teaching better known. These facts are found in the archives of
the American Jewish Committee, and are documented by Naomi
Cohen, in her official history of the AJC, Not Free to Desist: A
History of the American Jewish Committee, 1906-1966, The Jewish
Publication Society of America (Philadelphia, 1972, pp. 180,
214-215, 578, section vii).
Pius XII was sympathetic to Zionism and the creation of a Jewish
state, both before and after he was Pontiff, as a number of
works have shown: Three Popes and the Jews by Pinchas
Lapide (1967); The Papacy and the Middle East (1986); and
Christian Attitudes Toward the State of Israel by Paul
Charles Merkley (2002). (The last fifty years of conflict in the
region seem to confirm Pius XII's fears of ethnic resentments
and hatreds.) On July 30, 1944, Pius XII told the
newly-appointed high commissioner for Palestine “of his
intention not to interfere with the Jewish aspiration to create
a national State in Palestine, saying that he was animated with
great sympathy for the Jews.” (The Tablet of London, Oct.
25, 1958.) And in 1945, during a meeting with Jewish survivors
of the Holocaust, Pius XII told his Jewish audience approvingly:
“Soon, you will have a Jewish state.” (The Jerusalem Post,
October 10, 1958)
Recent followers of the anti-Pius XII myth, Susan Zuccotti (Under
His Very Windows), Michael Phayer (The Catholic Church
and the Holocaust) and David Kertzer (The Popes Against
the Jews) make no mention of compelling documents that
vindicate Pope Pius XII. The evidence in Actes et Documents
(Libreria Editrice Vaticana) points to Pius XII's ceaseless
activities for Peace. He was against Racism, Nationalism,
Anti-Semitism and War. His efforts were on behalf of the
persecuted: Jews, the homeless, widows, orphans, prisoners of
war. It is important to note: 1. The Holy See's February 9, 1916
condemnation of anti-Semitism, which Eugenio Pacelli (the future
Pius XII), then working in the Secretary of State's office,
helped formulate. 2. The January 22, 1943 report written by the
Nazi's Reich Central Security Office, which condemned Pius XII's
1942 Christmas Address for “clearly speaking on behalf of the
Jews” and which accused the Pontiff of being a “mouthpiece of
the Jewish War Criminals.” 3. The Nazi plan, reported in the
July 5, 1998 issue of the Milan newspaper Il Giornale,
which described Hilter's plan to “massacre Pius XII with the
entire Vatican,” because of the “Papal protest in favor of the
Jews.”
One wonders why the New York Times heralds books that
cast Pope Pius as a racist and hypocrite. Compare New York
Times book reviews, editorials and news articles that
question Pope Pius's respected reputation with New York Times
articles and editorials that praised Pius' efforts on behalf of
the Jews? Why not cite the 1943 New York Times editorial?
"…This Christmas more than ever, the Pope is a lonely voice
crying out of the silence of a continent." Pope Pius XII was
widely admired. If his voice of moral authority can be taken out
of the social ratio, the media's voice is empowered.
Testimonials abound. In
1985, Cardinal Pietro Palazzini was honored by Israel’s Yad
Vashem as a “Righteous Gentile.” He explicitly stated that Pius
XII ordered him to save Jews. I interviewed him in 1995. His
testimony is also clearly expressed in his memoirs.: “Amidst the
clash of arms, a voice could be heard—the voice of Pius XII. The
assistance given to so many people could not have been possible
without his moral support, which was much more than quiet
consent”(Il clero e l’occupazione di Roma, 1995).
Maurizio Zarfati, a resident in Acco, Hativath Golani St., 25/21
wrote December 7, 1994, that he was saved with his parents,
brother and sister in the monastery of the Augustinian Oblates
of Santa Maria dei Sette Dolori in via Garibaldi. To permit men
to enter, the Holy Father exempted them from rules of cloister.
The Sisters gave up their rooms and moved to restricted
quarters. … There were 103 Jews.
Soldier Eliyahu Lubisky, a member of the “Kibuz Beth Alpha,”
wrote on August 4, 1944, in the weekly “Hashavua,” N. 178/42,
that “he found more than 10,000 Jews in Rome. The refugees
praised the Vatican for their help. Priests endangered their
lives to save the Jews. The Pope himself participated in this
work of saving Jews.”
Regarding the German occupation of Rome, Michael Tagliacozzo’s
letter to the daily newspaper “Davàr” (Tel Aviv, April 23,
1985), states: “Little known is the precious help of the Holy
See. On the recommendation of Pius XII the religious of every
order did their best to save Jews. In great numbers, especially
the elderly, women and children were welcomed in the convents
that opened their doors offering refuge and assistance. Children
in orphanges were sent to monasteries. Even in the Vatican,
almost under the Pope’s windows, Jews found refuge hiding from
the clutches of the Gestapo. The figures show that about five
thousand were hiding in ecclesiastical institutions (4238 in
convents, parishes and other institutions, while 477 were living
in the extraterritorial buildings protected by the Holy See).
The Pope’s peace efforts,
his denunciation of Nazism, his defense of the Jewish people,
have been clearly documented. U.S. Army Chaplain Morris Kertzer
addressed four thousand Italian Jews in the Rome synagogue and
subsequently sent a report to the United States (June 9, 1944).
Who can dismiss the personal testimonials by Jewish chaplains?
Rabbi André Zaoui expressed gratitude “for the immense good and
incomparable charity that Your Holiness extended generously to
the Jews of Italy and especially the children, women and elderly
of the community of Rome (June 22, 1944).” Jewish military
chaplains have confirmed that Catholics in Italy, inspired by
papal instruction, did much to rescue and shelter the Jewish
victims of Nazi persecution, even providing false passports for
them. Rabbi David de Sola Pool, chairman of the National Jewish
Welfare Board wrote to the Pope: “We have received reports from
our army chaplains in Italy of the aid and protection given...
From the bottom of our hearts we send you the assurances of
undying gratitude.”
Recently Rabbi David Dalin
stated that “to deny the legitimacy of the collective gratitude
of Jews to Pius XII is tantamount to denying their memory and
experience of the Holocaust itself, as well as to denying the
credibility of their personal testimony and judgment about the
Pope’s role in rescuing hundreds of thousands of Jews from
certain death at the hands of the Nazis.”
It is very significant that Pope Pius XII had the nearly
unanimous praise of all his contemporaries, a fact mostly
ignored by his detractors. Most importantly, not one of the
charges against him holds up under careful analysis. He does not
appeal to modern sensibilities largely because he was always
teaching the Gospel and Catholic doctrine to a world deafened by
nationalism and the drums of war. There is absolutely no
evidence that Pope Pius XII did anything wrong or stupid; there
is overwhelming evidence that he did virtually everything right,
and that he acted only after the most careful and penetrating
analysis of every possibility and after fervent prayer.
Testimonials of survivors of the Holocaust also make it
perfectly clear that the Pope was not anti-Semitic or
indifferent to the fate of the Jews and that he did everything
possible to help them. In a letter to me, dated June 18, 1997,
historian and Holocaust survivor, Michael Tagliacozzo, clearly
expressed his sentiments: “In my study of the conditions of the
Jews (The Roman Community during the Nightmare of the
Swastika, November 1963), I pointed out the generous and
vast activity of the Church in favor of the victims. I learned
how great was Pope Pacelli’s paternal solicitude. No honest
person can discount his merits …. Pacelli was the only one who
intervened to impede the deportation of Jews on October 16,
1943, and he did very much to hide and save thousands of us. It
was no small matter that he ordered the opening of cloistered
convents. Without him, many of our own would not be alive.”
Again, August 8, 2004, he reiterated his convictions: “Any
apology on the actions of Pius XII must be considered
superfluous. This is clear to all men of good will and is
entrusted above all to the memory of those Jews, now living, who
have not forgotten the efforts and solicitude of Pope Pacelli….
One must add the countless expressions of gratitude of those
whose lives were saved in the religious houses in Rome, Assisi
and elsewhere. Even if gratitude was expressed directly to the
Institutions who protected them, the merit goes to Pope Pacelli
who, on October 16, 1943, gave orders to open the doors of the
parishes, convents and monasteries to save the Jews from
deportation.”
Albert Einstein concluded
in Time Magazine (December 23, 1940): “Only the Church
stood squarely across the path of Hitler’s campaign for
suppressing the truth.” There are expressions of gratitude, on
the part of Jewish chaplains and Holocaust survivors, who give
witness to the assistance and compassion of the Pope for the
Jews before, during and after the Holocaust. Among countless
other Jewish authorities, Pius XII received praise from Moshe
Sharett, Israeli Chief Rabbi Isaac Herzog, and Pinchas Lapide.
On April 7, 1944, Chief Rabbi Alexander Safran, of Bucharest,
Rumania, presented the following statement to Monsignor Andrea
Cassulo, Papal Nuncio to Rumania: “In the most difficult hours
which we Jews of Rumania 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 experience because of the concern of the Supreme
Pontiff who offered a large sum to relieve the sufferings of
deported Jews ¾sufferings
which had been pointed out to him by you after your visit to
Transnistria. The Jews of Rumania will never forget these facts
of historic importance.”
An American newspaper carried the story of the Thanksgiving
service in Rome’s Jewish Temple that was heard on the radio
(July 30, 1944). The Jewish chaplain of the Fifth American Army
gave a discourse in which, among other things, he said: “If it
had not been for the truly substantial assistance and the help
given to Jews by the Vatican and by Rome’s ecclesiastical
authorities, hundreds of refugees and thousands of Jewish
refugees would have undoubtedly perished before Rome was
liberated.” (L’Osservatore Romano, July 30, 1944).
In the summer of 1945, a petition was presented to Pope Pius XII
by twenty thousand Jewish refugees from Central Europe: “Allow
us to ask the great honor of being able to thank, personally,
His Holiness for the generosity he has shown us when we were
being persecuted during the terrible period of Nazi-Fascism.”
At the end of World War II, Dr. Joseph Nathan, representing the
Hebrew Commission, addressed the Jewish community, expressing
heartfelt gratitude to those who protected and saved Jews during
the Nazi-Fascist persecutions. “Above all,” he stated, “we
acknowledge the Supreme Pontiff and the religious men and women
who, executing the directives of the Holy Father, recognized the
persecuted as their brothers and, with great abnegation,
hastened to help them, disregarding the terrible dangers to
which they were exposed.” (L’Osservatore Romano,
September 8, 1945).
Reuben Resnick, American Director of the Committee to Help Jews
in Italy, declared that “all the members of the Catholic
hierarchy in Italy, from Cardinals to Priests, saved the lives
of thousands of Jews, men, women, and children who were hosted
and hidden in convents, churches, and other religious
institutions” (L’Osservatore Romano, January 5, 1946).
On April 5, 1946, the Italian Jewish community sent the
following message to His Holiness, Pius XII: “The delegates of
the Congress of the Italian Jewish Communities, held in Rome for
the first time after the Liberation, feel that it is imperative
to extend reverent homage to Your Holiness, and to express the
most profound gratitude that animates all Jews for your
fraternal humanity toward them during the years of persecution
when their lives were endangered by Nazi-Fascist barbarism. Many
times priests suffered imprisonment and were sent to
concentration camps, and offered their lives to assist Jews in
every way. This demonstration of goodness and charity that
still animates the just, has served to lessen the shame and
torture and sadness that afflicted millions of human beings.” (L’Osservatore
Romano, April 5, 1946).
There were many demonstrations of thanks and gratitude from the
Jews saved through the assistance of Church institutions. Abramo
Giacobbe Isaia Levi, a man of renowned intellect and a Senator
of the Kingdom of Italy until the promulgation of the racial
laws, was hidden in a convent during the Nazi occupation of
Rome. He and his wife later converted to Christianity. He died
in 1949 and, in his will, left a large sum of money to help
elderly and impoverished Italian Jews. His beautiful estate in
the center of Rome, Villa Levi, was renamed Villa Giorgina, in
memory of his young daughter who died prematurely. In his will
he donated it to Pope Pius XII because he had been “preserved
from the dangers of evil racial persecution, overthrower of
every relationship of human life” and was “grateful for the
protection that was provided me in that turbulent period by the
Sisters of the Infant Mary.”
Popes, Cardinals and Bishops have consistently praised Pope Pius
XII for his heroic leadership, his peace-making efforts and his
commitment as the defender and protector of the victims of war
and hatred which drenched Europe in blood during World War II.
He was a moral beacon to mankind. His voice was heard around the
world. It was the “Voice” of a tireless world leader whose
contribution to humanity during the Holocaust is
incontrovertible. It is time for Catholics to refute the
careless innuendoes and unfounded accusations that have been
leveled against Pope Pius XII whose aspirations toward truth and
goodness and his extraordinary World War II achievements are one
of the great events of our times.
It is very significant that Pope Pius XII had the nearly
unanimous praise of all his contemporaries, a fact mostly
ignored by his detractors. Most importantly, not one of the
charges against him holds up under careful analysis. He does not
appeal to modern sensibilities largely because he was always
teaching the Gospel and Catholic doctrine to a world deafened by
nationalism and the drums of war. There is absolutely no
evidence that Pope Pius XII did anything wrong or stupid; there
is overwhelming evidence that he did virtually everything right,
and that he acted only after the most careful and penetrating
analysis of every possibility and after fervent prayer.
Testimonials of survivors of the Holocaust also make it
perfectly clear that the Pope was not anti-Semitic or
indifferent to the fate of the Jews and that he did everything
possible to help them. In a letter to me, dated June 18, 1997,
historian and Holocaust survivor, Michael Tagliacozzo, clearly
expressed his sentiments: “In my study of the conditions of the
Jews (The Roman Community during the Nightmare of the
Swastika, November 1963), I pointed out the generous and
vast activity of the Church in favor of the victims. I learned
how great was Pope Pacelli’s paternal solicitude. No honest
person can discount his merits …. Pacelli was the only one who
intervened to impede the deportation of Jews on October 16,
1943, and he did very much to hide and save thousands of us. It
was no small matter that he ordered the opening of cloistered
convents. Without him, many of our own would not be alive.”
Again, August 8, 2004, Tagliacozzo reiterated his convictions:
“Any apology on the actions of Pius XII must be considered
superfluous. This is clear to all men of good will and is
entrusted above all to the memory of those Jews, now living, who
have not forgotten the efforts and solicitude of Pope Pacelli….
One must add the countless expressions of gratitude of those
whose lives were saved in the religious houses in Rome, Assisi
and elsewhere. Even if gratitude was expressed directly to the
Institutions who protected them, the merit goes to Pope Pacelli
who, on October 16, 1943, gave orders to open the doors of the
parishes, convents and monasteries to save the Jews from
deportation.”
Several years ago in an interview, Sir Martin Gilbert, perhaps
the foremost contemporary Jewish historian, noted that
“Christians were among the first victims of the Nazis and that
the Churches took a very powerful stand. …” On the question of
Pope Pius XII’s alleged silence, he stated, “So the test for
Pacelli was when the Gestapo came to Rome in 1943 to round up
Jews. And the Catholic Church, on his direct authority,
immediately dispersed as many Jews as they could.” After years
of research that began in 1959, Gilbert wrote Never Again: The
History of the Holocaust that contains an extraordinary chapter
on Pius XII’s humanitarianism. Here Gilbert thanks the Vatican
for what was done to save Jewish lives. We owe this historian a
debt of gratitude.
But how long will honest scholars condone statements by those
who defame Pope Pius XII? Today even hardened detractors of Pius
XII generally consider that, throughout the Second World War,
the pope was hailed as a towering moral hero in the face of
cataclysmic terror: a man solicitous on behalf of Jews and
Gentiles alike who worked tirelessly for peace. His charity and
love prevailed. Through diplomacy, personal contact with Heads
of State, and the underground railroad, he protected the Jews
and other victims of the Nazis in a way that no other leader
with mighty war weapons could provide.
Marc Saperstein, professor of Jewish history and director of the
program in Judaic studies at George Washington University,
clearly stated in an article, “A Medieval and a Modern Pope” (The
Washington Post, April 1, 1998): “The suggestion that
Christian doctrines or practice led directly to the Nazi death
camps is misleading and inappropriate. ... There were limits to
the capacity of the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church to
prevent a world power with military domination over a continent,
from murdering the civilians it defined as its enemies. The
fundamental responsibility for the Holocaust lies with the Nazi
perpetrators. Not with Pope Pius XII. Not with the church. Not
with the teachings of the Christian faith.”
One of the evils that has enveloped the media is the fact that
recent smear campaigns, mounted by misguided Jews and
misinformed Catholics, are being used in what is really an
intra-Catholic argument about the direction of the Church today.
At the same time, Pius XII has unjustly come under attack by the
opposition and a great deal of misinformation about this pontiff
is being circulated. Books, articles and media reports have
leveled sweeping attacks while clearly overlooking historical
sources and factors. If he had denounced Adolf Hitler more
explicitly, the Nazis would have responded with even more
ferocity. Personally and through his representatives, Pius XII
employed all the means at his disposal to save Jews and other
refugees during World War II. As a moral leader and a diplomat
forced to limit his words, he privately took action and, despite
insurmountable obstacles, saved hundreds of thousands of Jews
from the gas chambers. The Pope was loved and respected. Of
those mourning his death in 1958, Jews—who credited Pius XII
with being one of their greatest defenders and benefactors in
their hour of greatest need—stood in the forefront.
In the 60 plus years since World War II, overwhelming numbers
of the Jewish Community have heaped thanks and praise on Pope
Pius XII for his concern and assistance to the Jews in their
difficult years. His supporters include, but are not limited to
this list: Chief Rabbi Alexander Safran, of Bucharest, Rumania,
The Jewish Advocate in Boston, Jewish chaplain of the Fifth
American Army, Dr. Joseph Nathan, representing the Hebrew
Commission, Reuben Resnick, American Director of the Committee
to Help Jews in Italy, Abramo Giacobbe Isaia Levi, Senator of
the Kingdom of Italy, Jewish scholar Jenö Levai, Moshe Sharett,
Israeli Chief Rabbi Isaac Herzog, Jewish scholar Pinchas E.
Lapide, Albert Einstein,
U.S. Army Chaplain Morris Kertzer, Rabbi André Zaoui, Rabbi
David de Sola Pool, chairman of the National Jewish Welfare
Board, Jewish historian and scholar Richard Breitman, Jan
Hermann and Dr. Max Pereles, from the Ferramonti-Tarsia
detention camp, Marc Saperstein, professor of Jewish
history and director of the program in Judaic studies at George
Washington University.
In particular, one must also remember that in the summer of
1945, twenty thousand Jewish refugees from Central Europe
presented the following petition to Pope Pius XII: “Allow us to
ask the great honor of being able to thank, personally, His
Holiness for the generosity he has shown us when we were being
persecuted during the terrible period of Nazi-Fascism.”
Recently, three Jews have come to the defense of Pius XII: Rabbi
David Dalin, professor of history at Ave Maria University;
Historian Sir Martin Gilbert whose books have contributed
immensely to the history of the Holocaust; Michael Tagliacozzo,
historian and Holocaust survivor. Perhaps the greatest testimony
was Hitler himself who consistently complained that Pope Pius
XII was “a mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals.”
The truth of the matter is
that Pope Pius XII condemned Hitler and protested more than 60
times. Politically the pope could do nothing; however, in a
humanitarian effort to save the lives of Jews and other victims
of Nazism, he did more than any other world leader!
Margherita Marchione, PhD, author of: Yours Is a Precious
Witness: Memoirs of Jews and Catholics in Wartime Italy
(1997); Pius XII: Architect for Peace (2000);
Consensus and Controversy: Defending Pius XII (2002);
Shepherd of Souls: A Pictorial Life of Pius XII (2002)
and Man of Peace (2003) Paulist Press. Also, The
Fighting Nun: My Story (Cornwell Books, New York/London,
2000), Pope Pius XII (Ancora Press, Milan, 2003)
and Bilingual Italian-English and Spanish-English Coloring
Books. Crusade of Charity: Pius XII and POWs. Tel.
973-538-2886, Ext. 116 / E-mail Sr.Margherita.Marchione@ATT.NET].
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