Search this Site
Home
Contact
Feedback
Mailing List
Topics
100+ Important Documents in United States History

Anti-Catholicism
Apostolic Fathers of the Church
Articles Worth Your Time
Biographies
& Writings of Notable Catholics
Catholic Apologetics
Catholic Calendar
Catholic News Commentary by Michael Voris, S.T.B.
Catholic Perspectives
Catholic Social Teaching
Christology
Church Around the
World

Church Contacts
Church Documents
Church
History
Church Law
Church Teaching
Demonology
Doctors of the Church
Ecumenism
Eschatology
(Death, Heaven, Purgatory, Hell)
Essays on Science
Evangelization
Fathers of the Church
Free Catholic Pamphlets
Heresies
and Falsehoods
How to Vote Catholic
Let There Be Light
Q & A on the Catholic Faith
Links to Churches and Religions
Links to Newspapers, Radio and Television
Links to Recommended Sites
Links to Specialized Agencies
Links to specialized Catholic News
services
Liturgy
Mariology
Marriage & the Family
Modern Martyrs
Mexican Martyrdom
Moral Theology
****
Pope John Paul II's
Theology of the Body
Movie Reviews (USCCB)
New Age
Occult
Parish Bulletin Inserts
Political Issues
Prayer and
Devotions
Pro-Life
****
Hope after Abortion
Project Rachel
****
Help & Information for Men
****
How to Get Pregnant
Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults
Sacraments
Scripture
Spirituality
The
Golden Legend
Vatican
Vocation Links
& Articles

What the Cardinals believe...
World Religions
Pope John
Paul II
In Memoriam
John Paul II
Beatification
Pope
Benedict XVI
In
Celebration

| |
The Silence of Pius XII: The Origins of the
Black Legend
Giovanni Maria Vian
The controversy of Pius XII’s silence during the second world war – mainly in
the light of the horrendous, genocidal attempt of the Nazis to exterminate
Europe’s Jews, one of the greatest tragedies of the 20th century – is by now a
part of history. A great deal has been written on the subject, and more still
will be written, because of the subject’s indubitable relevance, because of the
passionate interest it provokes even beyond the narrow sphere of specialists in
the field, and because of its undeniable exploitable potential, which is closely
linked to the introduction of the cause of this pope’s canonization.
It is above all this exploitation that has led to the creation of a full-blown
black legend that goes far beyond the possible judgement of the pope’s behaviour
during those tragic conflict years. The goal of this essay is to recall the
origins of the accusations which were made against this pope, which are often
forgotten, and which were first and foremost expressed by Catholics and then
expanded, even as early as during the war years themselves, by Soviet and then
Communist propaganda.
The first person to wonder about “the silence of Pius XII” was Emmanuel Mounier.
This was only a few weeks after the election as pope of the cardinal secretary
of state Eugenio Pacelli on 2 March 1939. The questions arose a propos the
aggression shown by Italy towards Albania in April of that year, and the absence
of a condemnation on the part of the new pope.
In an article written just after this, the French Catholic intellectual pointed
out that although it would be “ridiculous for a believer to challenge the papal
conscience”, nevertheless “the scandal of this silence” had entered “thousands
of hearts”. And he went on to say that “I am not in a position to judge whether
this wasn’t the inevitable price of successful diplomacy […]. I only asked for a
few words. So that the Word may bring life”.
The problem of words not spoken, pointed out so early on by Mounier, would come
to torment the pope’s conscience during the long and terrible six years of war,
which broke out only a few months after the invasion of Poland by the national
socialist Germans and their soviet Russian allies. It was in this context, the
Jesuit historian Burkhart Schneider wrote, that “the pope was criticised for his
apparent silence, which seemed to indicate indifference in the face of
unspeakable suffering”. These criticisms came above all from “Polish communities
in exile”, and thus again from Catholics.
The political and diplomatic line of the Holy See in the preceding decades and
more importantly during the frightful war of 1914-1918 had been attempt, without
too much support from amongst Catholics, at keeping a sort of neutral
impartiality between the conflicting sides. This line had included a
condemnation from pope Benedict XV of the “useless slaughter” and an
honest-to-goodness “diplomacy of assistance”, which in Germany was centred on
Pacelli himself, who was then the nuncio of Munich.
During this new tragic war – caused by the totalitarianism of the Nazis and
Soviets which the Holy See had condemned in 1937 with the encyclicals “Mit
Brennender Sorge” and “Divini Redemptoris” – Pius XII intended to follow that
same policy. But in reality, with his actions the pope made some choices that
cannot be considered neutral.
And so the pope made an unprecedented decision: during the first months of the
conflict, between the autumn of 1939 and the spring of 1940, he supported the
soon-to-be aborted attempt by some German military groups colluding with the
British to overthrow Hitler’s regime. And after Germany’s attack of the Soviet
Union in the middle of 1941, Pius XII fist of all refused to side the Holy See
with what was being pitched as a crusade against communism, and then set about
to temper the opposition that many American Catholics were posing to the
alliance between the United States and Stalin’s Russia.
However, this definitely did not make the pope and his closest advisors change
their minds about communism. They would always have a radically negative opinion
of it, as was made clear in 1943, and culminating in the condemnation published
by the Holy Office in 1949. The idea of Pius XII being “in the pay of the
Americans”, an image spread and supported by the Soviets due to the pope’s
indubitable anti-communist attitude – is totally without historic evidence.
This controversial debate was the fruit of soviet and communist propaganda in
general, and was soon picked up by members of the Russian Orthodox Church. After
1944, this polemic, compounded with Mounier’s earlier questions which by now had
filtered their way to the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See, was
further stoked by accusations against Pope Pacelli and the Vatican with regard
to the Nazi policy of Jewish extermination.
After the war, relations between the two victorious blocs grew progressively
colder and more distant, leading to a soviet hegemony being imposed on nearly
all of the countries of eastern and central Europe, and eventually to the cold
war. In this context, Pius XII was accused of having supported Nazi Germany and
Fascism, of having forgiven them, of having hidden German war crimes, of not
having condemned Hitler’s barbarianisms, of having been silent and of having
sided with the capitalist west.
The pope had already responded to these accusations during the war, on 13 June
1943: “that the pope wanted war, that a pope keeps a war going and provides
money for it to carry on, that a pope does nothing for peace… More horrific and
absurd slander than this has perhaps never been heard”.
After the war, on 24 December 1946, Pius XII explicitly alluded to the
propaganda against the Holy See: “We know very well that all of our words, all
of our intentions, can be misinterpreted and twisted through political
propaganda”.
In 1951, the questions that Mounier had raised a dozen years earlier on the
subject of the Italian aggression towards Albania was turned into a harsh
reproach of Pius XII for not having condemned the monstrous persecution of Jews.
This was in the words of a different French Catholic intellectual, François
Mauriac, who in the following year would go on to be awarded the Nobel prize for
literature.
In the introduction to “Bréviaire de la haine. Le IIIe Reich et les Juifs” by
Léon Poliakov, Mauriac emphasises that the book is first and foremost directed
at Germans, and then writes :
“This breviary has also been written for us French, whose traditional
anti-Semitism has survived the excesses of horror in which Vichy played its own
shy and ignoble part. Above all, to us French Catholics; if we have salvaged any
of our honour, without a doubt we owe it to the heroism and charity that many
bishops, priests and religious showed towards the hounded Jews. But we never had
the comfort of hearing the successor of Galilee, Simon Peter, use clear and
precise words, rather than diplomatic allusions, to condemn the countless
crucifixions of the ‘brothers of the Lord’. During the occupation, one day I
asked the venerable cardinal Suhard, who from the shadows of the other side had
done so much for the persecuted: ‘Your Eminence, command us to pray for the
Jews’. His only answer was to raise his arms heavenwards. Of course, the
occupying powers had ways of pressurising people that could not be resisted, and
the silence of the pope and the upper echelons of the hierarchy were no more
than a disgusting duty to avoid even worse disasters. But this does not excuse
the wide-spread crime of all those who bore witness but did not speak out,
whatever the reasons for their silence were”.
The tone of the Jew Poliakov is less strict. On the subject of the anti-Semitic
tradition and Pius XII’s attitude, and just before elaborating on some arguments
on the “antichristian essence of anti-Semitism”, he expresses the following,
softer opinion:
“It does not fall to an Israelite writer to express judgement on the century-old
dogmas of another religion, but in view of the immense consequences, it is
impossible not to be deeply disturbed. The sense of our perturbation should not
be misunderstood. We are not saying that there was even a trace of anti-Semitism
in the pope’s thoughts. If, unlike many French bishops, he did not make his
voice heard, it was certainly because his jurisdiction extends to all of Europe,
and he had to consider not only the grave threats hanging over the Church, but
also the spiritual conditions of his faithful in all countries”, who were
influenced by the anti-Jewish tradition of Christianity.
This was the context when it came to the turning point of the question of Pius
XII’s silence, when the pope had been dead (9 October 1958) for more than four
years.
The turning point was triggered by the play “Der Stellvertreter [The Vicar]” by
Rolf Hochhuth, which was performed for the first time in Berlin on 20 February
1963. Due to its extreme anti-pope Pacelli opinion and the strong debates it
immediately provoked, it had an enormous influence on the imagine of Pius XII
and the Holy See both in the public opinion and in the historical debate itself.
In the immediate flaring up of the debate, the testimony in defence of the pope
by Giovanni Battista Montini, one of his closest advisors, was especially
significant. Montini had been archbishop of Milan since the end of 1954, and was
then made cardinal by John XXIII in 1958.
Montini’s statement came in the form of an article in defence of Pius XII,
published in the English Catholic magazine “The Tablet” in the issue published
on 11 May 1963. Amongst other things, it underlined the similarity between
Hochhuth’s play and a “communist publication” on the Vatican and the second
world war.
In a letter that reached “The Tablet” on the same day as he was elected pope, on
21 June 1963, when he took the name Paul VI, the cardinal of Milan defended Pius
XII’s behaviour in the face of the persecution and extermination of Jews by the
Nazis. In Hochhuth’s opinion, the pope was partially to blame for these crimes
because he failed to condemn them.
“This attitude of condemnation and protest, for the absence of which the pope is
being reproached, would not only have been futile, it would also have been
dangerous. That’s all,” writes, amongst other things, the former advisor of pope
Pacelli. He concludes:
“Subjects like these and historic people we know should not be played with
through the creative imagination of playwrights, who are lacking in historic
discernment and, God help us, human honesty. Otherwise, just like in the present
case, the drama would be another: that of someone trying to offload the horrible
crimes of German nazism onto a pope who was extremely conscientious in his
duties and aware of history, and who in the opinion of more than one friend was
certainly impartial, but also very loyal to the German people. Equally, Pius XII
had the merit of having been a ‘Vicar’ of Christ who tried to fulfil his mission
as best he could with courage and integrity. Could the same thing be said of
this theatrical injustice, in the context of culture and art?”.
Similar tones and points of criticism against the propaganda-like theories of
the German playwright were found about two years later in an article by the
historian Giovanni Spadolini. It was published on 18 February 1965 after the
first two performances of Hochhuth’s play in Rome, which was immediately banned
and unleashed bitter polemics.
The article by the authoritative intellectual and lay politician began with a
direct attack on the position of the left-wing parties, especially the
communists. “The very party that champions dialogue with Catholics has
proclaimed a sort of crusade for freedom of thought on the basis of this
libellous anticlerical defamation and nationalist self-defence”.
Spadolini recalled Montini’s defence of Pius XII, first in 1963 when he had just
been elected pope, and then again in January 1964 during his historic journey to
the Holy Land, and so again pointed out the elements of political propaganda in
the play that had just been shown in Rome. He said that the then-cardinal of
Milan “had stood up, with the loyalty of an advisor and disciple who does not
forget, against the absurd and unjust indictments of a political propaganda
thinly disguised as moralism”. And when “Paul VI laid foot on Israeli ground in
what was the most significant and revolutionary step of his Palestinian mission,
everyone could tell that the pope wanted to respond to the systematic attacks
from the communist world, which had managed to find complicity or indulgence
even in Catholic hearts – or at least some Catholics who were known even in
Italy”.
In Spadolini’s article, the perceived origins of the accusations against pope
Pacelli are clear: firstly, between 1939 and 1951, there are the two French
Catholic intellectuals Mounier and Mauriac; then there is the soviet propaganda
of the war years, and more generally the communist propaganda in the post-war
period and during the cold war.
The debate was accentuated after the death of Pius XII and during the very
different pontificate of John XXIII, and then exploded definitively during the
time of Paul VI. It then became linked with the contrasting Pacelli and Roncalli
pontificates, which, amongst other factors, in 1965 led to pope Montini
introducing the causes for beatification for this two predecessors
simultaneously:
“In this way, the wish that was expressed for both of theses by so many voices
shall be fulfilled; in this way, their spiritual patrimony shall be kept safe
for history; in this way, it will be ensured that these authentic and dear
characters will not be reinterpreted and will only be remembered through the
cult of true sanctity and thus the glory of God, for our veneration and for that
of future generations”.
With the passing of time, the question of Pius XII’s silence has become
increasingly complicated, because the repeated accusations against pope Pacelli
have turned into a “black legend”. This has certainly not helped the new,
positive relations between the Catholic Church and Judaism. In the meantime, the
origins of the accusations – born in Catholic circles and promoted above all
through soviet and communist propaganda and those who have a sense of nostalgia
for it, and will not forgive Pius XII for his anticommunism.
The link to the magazine of the faculty of ecclesiastic history at the
Pontifical Gregorian University in which this article by Giovanni Maria Vian was
published is:
Archivum Historiae Pontificiae
The piece by Fr Giovanni Sale came out in “La Civiltà Cattolica” of 4 June 2005,
pages 419-432, under the title “Pio XII e la fine della seconda guerra mondiale
[Pius XII and the end of the second world war]”:
La
Civiltà Cattolica
__________
| |
|