National Post (National Edition)
Devoted brother to Pope Benedict was accomplished choirmaster
Monsignor Georg Ratzinger, who has died aged 96, was the elder brother of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, formerly Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger; he was also the most distinguished German choirmaster of his generation.
After a quiet life devoted to music and prayer, Georg found himself, as the only surviving papal sibling, dragged out of retirement at the age of 81 to satisfy the hunger of the world’s media for stories about the new Pope’s background. Though nearly blind and suffering from a heart condition, Mgr Ratzinger gave dozens of interviews, and in particular was able to shed valuable light on the most controversial episode of the Pope’s life: his experience of the Third Reich.
Georg Ratzinger was born at Marktl am Inn in Upper Bavaria on Jan. 15, 1924, three years before his brother Joseph.
The Ratzinger family had already played a significant part in the history of German Catholicism. A great-uncle after whom Georg was named had been a leading 19th-century Bavarian politician, journalist and economist, a close friend of the great liberal Catholic theologian and opponent of papal infallibility, Ignaz von Dollinger.
The two brothers were proud of their celebrated ancestor, especially his defence of the poor and his opposition to child labour.
The branch of the family in which Georg, Joseph and their elder sister Maria Ratzinger grew up was, however, firmly opposed to the Nazis. Their father, a police superintendent, was obliged to move four times during their youth for political reasons.
It was at Traunstein that both brothers entered the seminary. Having hitherto resisted pressure to join the Hitler Youth, first Georg and then Joseph succumbed in 1941. Joseph later explained that he had been able to avoid attendance thanks to a sympathetic Nazi maths teacher.
Neighbours who remembered the Ratzinger boys confirmed that neither of them participated willingly in Nazi organizations. The Ratzingers were not active members of the German resistance, but their refusal to compromise their Catholicism marked them as anti-Nazi. According to Georg, their father took considerable personal risks in order to ensure that his sons were not indoctrinated by Nazi propaganda.
The brothers remained at the seminary until 1942, when it was requisitioned as a military hospital. Georg, by now 18, was drafted into the Wehrmacht, while Joseph returned to the grammar school until 1943, when he was sent to work on anti-aircraft batteries and conscripted a year later.
In 1944, Georg was wounded in battle in Italy, but he was later taken prisoner and held by the Americans at a PoW camp near Naples. Meanwhile Joseph, who never saw action, had been reassigned to his home district. In April 1945 he deserted, narrowly escaping summary execution in the last days of the war.
Within a few weeks of the German surrender, the brothers were reunited with their family in Traunstein. They later returned to the seminary, where they remained until 1947.
After four more years of study in Munich, Georg and Joseph were ordained in the cathedral of Freising on the same day in 1951 by Cardinal Faulhaber.
Music played a large part in the Ratzinger household. Georg later recalled how, in 1941, he heard his first performance of Mozart at a concert given by the Regensburger Domspatzen, the Ratisbon Cathedral choir known as “Sparrows”. He was so ecstatic that he could not sleep all night.
Georg combined church music with work as a diocesan priest. In 1957 he took over the choir at Traunstein, and in 1964 he achieved his life’s ambition when he was appointed choirmaster at Ratisbon Cathedral.
In 1994 Mgr Ratzinger retired as a papal chaplain, prelate and pronotary while also holding German and Austrian civil decorations.
Joseph’s elevation to the papacy did not, as Georg feared, mean an end to their convivial reunions.
Georg Ratzinger was perhaps the closest person to his brother the Pope. This closeness only deepened when Benedict had retired to a former convent in the Vatican gardens, where Georg was a frequent guest.
During Georg’s last illness the Pope Emeritus, by this time very frail, was flown to Germany by the Italian air force, his only trip outside Italy after retirement, to be with his brother at the end.