Current:Home > ContactVatican defends wartime Pope Pius XII as conference honors Israeli victims of Hamas incursion -VisionFunds
Vatican defends wartime Pope Pius XII as conference honors Israeli victims of Hamas incursion
View
Date:2025-04-15 11:08:05
ROME (AP) — The Vatican secretary of state on Monday strongly defended World War II-era Pope Pius XII as a friend of the Jews as he opened an historic conference on newly opened archives that featured even Holy See historians acknowledging that anti-Jewish prejudice informed Pius’ silence in the face of the Holocaust.
Cardinal Pietro Parolin’s defensive remarks were delivered before the conference observed a minute of silence to honor victims of the Hamas incursion in Israel. Standing alongside the chief rabbi of Rome, Parolin expressed solidarity with the Israeli victims and “to those who are missing and kidnapped and now in grave danger.”
He said the Vatican was following the war with grave concern, and noted that many Palestinians in Gaza were also losing their lives.
The conference at the Pontifical Gregorian University was remarkable because of its unprecedented high-level, Catholic-Jewish organizers and sponsors: The Holy See, Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust research institute, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, the U.S. and Israeli embassies to the Holy See and Italy’s Jewish community.
The focus was on the research that has emerged in the three years since the Vatican, on orders from Pope Francis, opened the Pius pontificate archives ahead of schedule to respond to historians’ requests for access to the Holy See’s documentation to better understand Pius’ wartime legacy.
Historians have long been divided about Pius’ record, with supporters insisting he used quiet diplomacy to save Jewish lives and critics saying he remained silent as the Holocaust raged. The debate over his legacy has stalled his beatification campaign.
Parolin toed the Vatican’s longstanding institutional defense of the wartime pope, citing previously known interventions by the Vatican secretariat of state in 1916 and 1919 to American Jews that referred to the Jewish people as “our brethren.”
“Thanks to the recent opening of the archives, it has become more evident that Pope Pius XII followed both the path of diplomacy and that of undercover resistance,” Parolin said. “This strategic decision wasn’t an apathetic inaction but one that was extremely risky for everyone involved.”
After he left, however, other historians took the floor and offered a far different assessment of both Pius and the people in the Vatican who were advising him. They cited the new documents as helpful to understanding Pius’ fears, anti-Jewish prejudices and the Vatican’s tradition of diplomatic neutrality that informed Pius’ decisions to repeatedly keep silent even as individual Catholic religious orders in Rome sheltered Jews.
Giovanni Coco, a researcher in the Vatican Apostolic Archives who recently uncovered evidence that Pius knew well that Jews were being sent to death camps in 1942, noted that Pius only spoke of the “extermination” of Jews once in public, in 1943. The word was never again uttered in public by a pontiff until St. John Paul II visited Auschwitz in 1979.
Even after the war, Coco said, “in the Roman Curia the anti-Jewish prejudice was diffuse,” and even turned into flat-out antisemitism in the case of Pius’ top adviser on Jewish affairs, Monsignor Angelo Dell’Acqua.
David Kertzer, a Brown University anthropologist, cited several cases in which Dell’Acqua advised Pius against any public denunciation of the slaughter of European Jews or any official protest with German authorities about the 1943 roundup of Italy’s Jews, including “non-Aryan Catholics,” during the German occupation.
Kertzer said while Pius “personally deplored” the German efforts to murder Italy’s Jews, his overall priority was to “maintain good relations with the occupying forces.”
Rabbi Riccardo Di Segni, the chief rabbi of Rome, said it was one thing to offer a theological justification for the Catholic Church’s anti-Jewish prejudice that informed Pius actions and inactions and quite another to justify it morally.
Sitting next to Parolin, Di Segni rejected as offensive to Jews any judgements that are “absolutist and apologetic at all costs.”
veryGood! (1459)
Related
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Ice-T Reveals Whether He and Coco Austin Will Have Another Baby
- Radio Host Jeffrey Vandergrift's Wife Pens Heartbreaking Message on Her Pain After His Death
- Rosalía and Rauw Alejandro Are Engaged: See Her Ring
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Harry Styles and Emily Ratajkowski Seen Kissing in Tokyo
- The Beatles will release a final record, using John Lennon's voice via an AI assist
- Bindi Irwin Shares Sweet 2nd Birthday Tribute to Daughter Grace Warrior
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- 'The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom' Preview: New devices and powers to explore
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- U.S. citizen and Army veteran Nicholas Maimer killed in Ukraine
- Olympic Gymnast MyKayla Skinner Expecting First Baby With Husband Jonas Harmer
- The secret to Zelda's success: breaking the game in your own way
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Concrete Evidence That Vanessa Hudgens’ Fiancé Cole Tucker Manifested Their Romance
- Discovery of shipwreck off the coast of Australia solves 50-year-old maritime mystery
- Pregnant Da Brat and Wife Jesseca Judy Harris-Dupart Reveal Sex of Baby
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
The surprising case for AI boyfriends
Here’s Why TikTok Is So Obsessed With e.l.f. Makeup — and Why You Will Be, Too
He's the 'unofficial ambassador' of Montana — and isn't buying its TikTok ban
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
3 predictions for the future of space exploration — including your own trips
Russia's Wagner Group accused of using rape and mass-murder to control an African gold mining town
How Ukraine created an 'Army of Drones' to take on Russia