Newsweek

Long-closed Archives May Shed Light on Pope Pius XII

The opening of long-closed archives may shed light on the actions of the Vatican and Pope Pius XII during World War II

- BY KENNETH R. ROSEN @kenneth_rosen

In April 1938, VATICAN diplomat Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli sent a confidenti­al memorandum to American officials. In the note, he expressed antipathy toward the Nazi regime: “Evidence of good faith” by the Nazis was “completely lacking .... The possibilit­y of an agreement” with the regime was “out of question.” One year later, Pacelli ascended to the papacy, becoming Pope Pius XII. He never spoke of those feelings again.

It was this silence by Pius and the Vatican during the Holocaust—in which more than six million Jews were killed across Europe—that led historians to declare the pope a Nazi sympathize­r. As those communique­s from the 1930s remained unknown during the Second World

War and for many years after, Pius was branded “Hitler’s Pope.”

Seventy-five years since the liberation of Auschwitz in Poland, more than 150 historians and researcher­s will access for the first time the Vatican archives of Pius XII, a record largely shielded by the Vatican for nearly a century. Scholarshi­p on Pius and Italy’s complicity in the Holocaust, were stifled without direct access to the archives, and helped birth warring legends about the wartime pontificat­e.

Ahead of the archives opening on March 2, Cardinal José Tolentino Calaça de Mendonça told reporters that nationalit­y, faith and ideology would not preclude researcher­s from requesting permission to use the Vatican’s Apostolic Library. “The Church has no reason to fear history,” he told reporters.

In an interview with Reuters, Father Norbert Hofmann, the top Vatican official in charge of religious relations with Jews, said, “I don’t think you will find a smoking gun.”

For years the question of whether Pius should be beatified—the final step toward sainthood—hung in the balance as church officials in the United States and Rome were deterred by negative images of the pope, stemming in part from the success of books such as Hitler’s Pope by John Cornwell and Constantin­e’s Sword by James Carroll. The books argued Pius was complicit in Nazi crimes for his silence throughout the war.

“We know that publicly, he was silent, but privately, he may have helped, for example, by providing funding for convents and monasterie­s that were hiding Jews,” Aliza Luft, who will be at the archives this summer researchin­g a book about the Catholic Church in France during the Holocaust, told Newsweek. “I think and hope the archives will show how important moral authoritie­s are in dangerous times.”

Pius led the church during a fraught period, from 1939 to 1958. He held the post at a time when anti-democratic leaders and policies swept across Europe, similar to the rise of alt-right and populist movements today. The Roman Catholic Church has said that Pius never intervened when more than 1,000 Jews were taken from Rome and sent to their deaths, but that he did sequester thousands of Jews in religious institutio­ns nationwide.

More than 8,000 Jews throughout Italy eventually died in Nazi camps, with 30,000 having lived in hiding until Allied forces liberated them.

“We trust that the independen­t scholarly review of these archival

“The much more important question is the role played by the Church (and the Protestant churches as well) in demonizing the Jews in the decades leading up to the Holocaust.”

materials will provide greater clarity as to what positions and steps were taken during this period by the Holy See, and help resolve the persistent debates and controvers­y in this regard,” Rabbi David Rosen, internatio­nal director of interrelig­ious affairs for the American Jewish Committee, wrote in a statement to Newsweek. “Such necessary transparen­cy is also to the credit of the Church and will further enhance the mutual trust and excellent relations between the Catholic Church and the Jewish community built up over the last 55 years.”

Pius’ public stance on the occupation was scrutinize­d for decades. Then in 2003, while researchin­g an unrelated biography, the diplomatic documents and a report by an American consul general from the 1930s were discovered and described in an

“We know that publicly, he was silent, but privately, he may have helped, for example, by providing funding for convents and monasterie­s that were hiding Jews.”

article written by a Jesuit historian.

In 2012, Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust museum and memorial, revised an exhibit about the pope’s actions, changing the language from saying Pius “did not intervene” in actions against the Jews deported from Rome to noting he “did not publicly protest.”

The revision followed the opening of the Pius XI archives, 30,000 volumes where much of what is known about Pius XII originates.

Several archives will be accessible to researcher­s and academics with the opening in March, the largest of which is the Vatican Apostolic Archive. Paramount to understand­ing the political history of those years are also the Vatican Secretaria­t of State and the Vatican Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith archives.

“This is not simply a matter of understand­ing Church history, but getting a better understand­ing of European and world history for these eventful years, not only the years of the war, but the political conflicts and dramas of the postwar years,” David Kertzer, a professor of anthropolo­gy and Italian studies at Brown University whose research focuses primarily on the Italian Fascist regime, wrote in an email.

Kertzer said the focus on the Roman Catholic Church and the pope’s silence about the Jewish genocide was misplaced.

“For me the much more important question is the role played by the Church (and the Protestant churches as well) in demonizing the Jews in the decades leading up to the Holocaust,” he said, “and so allowing tens if not hundreds of thousands of Europeans thinking themselves good Catholics or good Protestant­s to murder Jewish babies, Jewish children, Jewish women, Jewish aged.”

Pope Benedict XVI edged Pius closer to clearing his name toward sainthood in 2009 by determinin­g Pius had lived a “heroic” life. Pope Francis said in 2014 that a miracle attributab­le to Pius, an important qualificat­ion for sainthood, had not been identified, though he called Pius “a great defender of the Jews.”

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 ??  ?? COMPLICIT? Possible sainthood for Pius XII (at right) blessing pilgrims at the Vatican, has been stalled by his image as “Hitler’s Pope.”
COMPLICIT? Possible sainthood for Pius XII (at right) blessing pilgrims at the Vatican, has been stalled by his image as “Hitler’s Pope.”
 ??  ?? BEFORE THE STORM Hitler and Mussolini getting a warm welcome in Rome in 1938. During Pius XII’S pontificat­e, more than 8,000 Jews from Italy were killed in Nazi death camps.
BEFORE THE STORM Hitler and Mussolini getting a warm welcome in Rome in 1938. During Pius XII’S pontificat­e, more than 8,000 Jews from Italy were killed in Nazi death camps.

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