In fact, Pius XII was first ever called “Hitler’s Pope” by John
Cornwell, in his 1999 book of that name, a thinly disguised liberal rant
against Saint John Paul II with the ‘thesis’ that the future Pius XII, while a
diplomat in Germany, could have rallied Catholic opposition and toppled
Hitler.
Pure fantasy, like the origin of the whole “Pope supported
Hitler” craze: the 1963 play The Deputy by Rolf Hochhuth, who
was later successfully prosecuted for suggesting that Churchill had
arranged the 1944 air crash that killed General Sikorsky.
Pius
XII directly or indirectly saved between 8500 and 9600 Jews in Rome;
40,000 throughout Italy; 15,000 in the Netherlands; 65,000 in Belgium;
200,000 in France; 200,000 in Hungary; and 250,000 in Romania.
This list
is not exhaustive, and the Dutch figure would have been much higher had
not the Dutch Bishops antagonised the Nazis by issuing the sort of
public denunciation that Pius is castigated for failing to have issued.
After
the War, Pius was godfather when the Chief Rabbi of Rome became a
Catholic, and was declared a Righteous Gentile by the State of Israel,
whose future Prime Minister, Moshe Sharrett, told him that it was his
“duty to thank you, and through you the Catholic Church, for all they
had done for the Jews.”
When Pius died in 1958, then the tributes to him from
Jewish organisations had to be printed over three days by The New York Times,
and even then limited to the names of individuals and their
organisations.
All of this is contained in works of serious scholarship
by Margherita Marchione, Ralph McInerny, Ronald J. Rychlak, and others,
most recently the superlative Rabbi Professor David G. Dalin.
Colonel
Claus Schenk, Count von Stauffenberg, not so long ago given the full Tom
Cruise treatment, was a devout Catholic, with close dynastic connections
to the Bavarian Royal House of Wittelsbach that Jacobites would have on
the Thrones of England, Scotland and Ireland, and to the family of
Saint Philip Howard, martyred Earl of Arundel.
In Austria, Hitler
ordered the murder of the Chancellor, Englebert Dolfuss, who defended,
on the borders of Italy and Germany, Catholic Social Teaching and what
remained of the thoroughly multiethnic Habsburg imperial ethos (to this
day, numerous German, Magyar and Slavic names are found throughout the
former Austria-Hungary) against both the Communists and the Nazis. In
the same tradition was Blessed Franz Jägerstätter.
Examples of
Catholic anti-Nazism could be multiplied practically without end. The
more Catholic an area was, then the less likely it was to vote Nazi, without
any exception whatever.
Not least, the future Pope Benedict XVI’s Maths teacher sent
him to get the Hitler Youth form, and then just kept it on file for
him. “Thus was I able to escape it.” In other words, he was never in it.
Have you got that? He was never in it.
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