The pope at war The secret history of Pius XII, Mussolini, and Hitler

David I. Kertzer, 1948-

Book - 2022

"When Pope Pius XII died in 1958, his papers were sealed in the Vatican Secret Archives, leaving unanswered questions about what he knew and did during World War II. Those questions have only grown and festered, making Pius XII one of the most controversial popes in Church history, especially now as the Vatican prepares to canonize him. In 2020, Pius XII's archives were finally opened, and David I. Kertzer--widely recognized as one of the world's leading Vatican scholars--has been mining this new material ever since, revealing how the pope came to set aside moral leadership in order to preserve his church's power. Based on thousands of never-before-seen documents not only from the Vatican, but from archives in Italy, Ger...many, France, Britain, and the United States, The Pope at War paints a new, dramatic portrait of what the pope did and did not do as war enveloped the continent and as the Nazis began their systematic mass murder of Europe's Jews. The book clears away the myths and sheer falsehoods surrounding the pope's actions from 1939 to 1945, showing why the pope repeatedly bent to the wills of Hitler and Mussolini"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Random House [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
David I. Kertzer, 1948- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxxvii, 621 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 581-590) and index.
ISBN
9780812989946
9780812989953
  • Maps
  • List of Illustrations
  • Cast of Characters
  • Foreword
  • Prologue: The Twisted Cross
  • Part 1. War Clouds
  • Chapter 1. Death of a Pope
  • Chapter 2. The Conclave
  • Chapter 3. Appealing to the Führer
  • Chapter 4. The Peacemaker
  • Chapter 5. "Please do not Talk to Me about Jews"
  • Chapter 6. The Nazi Prince
  • Chapter 7. Saving Face
  • Chapter 8. War Begins
  • Chapter 9. The Prince Returns
  • Chapter 10. A Papal Curse
  • Chapter 11. Man of Steel
  • Chapter 12. A Problematic Visitor
  • Part 2. On the Path to Axis Victory
  • Chapter 13. An Inopportune Time
  • Chapter 14. An Honorable Death
  • Chapter 15. A Short War
  • Chapter 16. Surveillance
  • Chapter 17. The Feckless Ally
  • Chapter 18. The Greek Fiasco
  • Chapter 19. A New World Order
  • Chapter 20. Hitler to the Rescue
  • Chapter 21. The Crusade
  • Chapter 22. A New Prince
  • Chapter 23. Best to Say Nothing
  • Part 3. Changing Fortunes
  • Chapter 24. Escaping Blame
  • Chapter 25. Papal Premiere
  • Chapter 26. Disaster Foretold
  • Chapter 27. A Thorny Problem
  • Chapter 28. An Awkward Request
  • Chapter 29. The Good Nazi
  • Chapter 30. Deposing the Duce
  • Chapter 31. Musical Chairs
  • Chapter 32. Betrayal
  • Part 4. The Sky Turned Black
  • Chapter 22. Fake News
  • Chapter 34. The Pope's Jews
  • Chapter 35. Baseless Rumors
  • Chapter 36. Treason
  • Chapter 37. A Gratifying Sight
  • Chapter 38. Malevolent Reports
  • Chapter 39. A Gruesome End
  • Epilogue
  • Final Thoughts: The Silence of the Pope
  • Acknowledgments
  • Archival Sources and Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • References
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Kertzer (anthropology and Italian studies, Brown Univ.) has written 12 previous books, including The Pope and Mussolini (2014), which won the Pulitzer Prize in 2015. His latest book is a meticulously researched account that should become the definitive study of Pope Pius XII's tenure during WW II. Drawing on newly declassified Vatican documents, Kertzer reveals how the controversial wartime pope set aside his moral leadership in order to protect Italy's Catholic Church by not speaking out against Nazi Germany's deadly violence against the Jews or the Nazi atrocities against Catholic Poland's population, and by ignoring the excesses of Mussolini's Fascist government. Fearful of retribution from the Axis powers and the threat of communism spreading throughout Europe, Pius XII's clergy made its peace with Hitler and Mussolini. Barring a small number of brave priests who hid Jews, the Pope looked away as Italian Jews were deported to death camps. The pope did speak out to plead (unsuccessfully) that the Nazis spare Italian Jews who were baptized as Catholics in the roundup of Jews who were deported to Auschwitz. Supplemented by an extensive bibliography and illustrations, this volume is written in an unencumbered style. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers, advanced undergraduates, and graduate students. --Jack Robert Fischel, emeritus, Millersville University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Drawing on recently unsealed documents from the Vatican archives, Pulitzer winner Kertzer (The Pope and Mussolini) delivers a devastating look at how Pope Pius XII put the preservation of the Catholic Church ahead of "courageous moral leadership" during WWII. The new evidence includes notes from secret meetings between Pius XII and a Nazi envoy that centered on the treatment of German Catholics while ignoring the invasion of Poland and other matters, and reports from the pope's nuncios across Europe that reveal just how much he knew about the Holocaust. Kertzer also reveals that when tensions arose between Italian Fascists and the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, the pope ordered it not to publish articles that were "in apparent contrast with the supreme interests of the country." Despite the urgent pleas of priests, rabbis, and Allied diplomats, Pius XII refused to condemn "the Nazis' ongoing extermination of Europe's Jews," including the deportation of more than 1,000 Roman Jews to Auschwitz in 1943 (only 16 survived). Kertzer acknowledges that Pius XII initially had legitimate concerns that the Axis dictators would soon be in control of Europe, and therefore needed to tread lightly, but as the tide turned and evidence of atrocities mounted, his approach never changed. "As a moral leader," Kertzer concludes, "Pius XII must be judged a failure." Scrupulous and authoritative, this is a damning case built by a master prosecutor. Photos. Agent: Wendy Strothman, Strothman Agency. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A deeply troubling indictment of the cautious pope who acceded in 1939 and remained "neutral" during the Fascist and Nazi wartime regimes. In this meticulously researched book, historian Kertzer, who has written extensively on modern papal history (The Pope and Mussolini, The Popes Against the Jews, etc.), makes good use of newly opened wartime archives, sealed since Pius XII's death in 1958. The evidence of Pius' silence in the face of repeated calls to stop the atrocities against the Jews and others by the Nazis and Fascists is absolutely damning. Eugenio Pacelli had been Pius XI's loyal secretary of state, and he spent considerable time appeasing the Nazis since they came to power in 1933--e.g., engineering a concordat with Hitler. Pius XI, who in the early years of his papacy helped Mussolini solidify his dictatorship, eventually became alarmed with the Italian dictator's ever tightening embrace of the Nazi regime and was indeed becoming outspokenly problematic for the two closest Axis powers. When Pius XI died in February 1939, the ever cautious, scholarly, German-speaking Pacelli became pope--and the best ally the two dictators could hope for. Throughout World War II, he maintained a timorous disposition in the face of their increasing aggression--Kertzer reminds us that "Hitler had long viewed the Duce as his role model"--despite the piles of documentation that reveal how he was frequently informed of the brutalities committed by the Nazis and their willing collaborators. During this time, countless victims beseeched him to stand up and do something as a moral leader. The pope, casting himself as a peacemaker, managed to play his cards skillfully even when the Allies invaded and took pains not to bomb the Vatican. As a result, the institution of the Catholic Church emerged largely unscathed from the war, effectively scrubbing clean its Fascist and Nazi collaboration. Kertzer is to be commended for bringing it all to light in page-turning fashion. A riveting history and valuable lesson for our time about the perils of neutrality. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Death of a Pope Eugenio Pacelli sat in a chair beside the simple brass bed, watching as the once-robust pope, his face shrunken, labored to breathe beneath his oxygen mask. It was late at night, and although Cardinal Pacelli, the Vatican secretary of state, was accustomed to sleeping little, he decided to return to his rooms, two floors below in the vast Apostolic Palace, to get some rest. Awakened at four a.m. with news that the pope's condition had worsened, he rushed back to the pope's austere bedroom. Sweat poured down the pope's pallid face as he gasped for air. The cardinal got down on his knees and asked the dying pope for his blessing. It was early morning, February 10, 1939. For Pacelli, whom the pope had elevated to the cardinalate and appointed to the church's most influential position after that of the pontiff himself, it was a scene of great sadness. But there was much to be done, for the pope had also appointed Pacelli to be chamberlain, and it was now his job to ensure that all proceeded as it should until the cardinals could elect a successor. Pacelli's relations with the pope had been close but not particularly warm. Their personalities could scarcely have been more different and perhaps this was one reason Pius XI had valued him so highly. The tempestuous pope, prone to say what he thought and often seemingly impervious to the opinions of others, depended on the highly disciplined, diplomatic Pacelli to calm the waters he roiled. The Vatican secretary of state had found himself caught in the middle. Not only did Mussolini's and Hitler's ambassadors complain to him about Pius XI and seek his help, but so did many high-ranking churchmen, worried that the pontiff was becoming reckless in his old age. True to his position and his vows, the cardinal would not fail to carry out the instructions the pope gave him. But he found ways to take the sting out of the pope's more acerbic remarks about the Italian and German regimes. Pacelli was a skilled diplomat and, despite a certain natural shyness, took great satisfaction in traveling the globe in a way no secretary of state before him had ever done. During his travels, he enjoyed meeting not only with the church's ecclesiastical elite but with the politically powerful in secular governments. In the fall of 1936, he became the first Vatican secretary of state to visit the United States, spending two months touring the country, picking up honorary degrees at several Catholic universities, and after thousands of miles crisscrossing the country by air, meeting with the American president. The following year the cardinal was the guest of honor at the dedication of a new basilica in France, taking a side trip to meet with France's president and prime minister. A couple of weeks after Hitler visited Rome in May 1938, Pacelli left Italy again, this time going to Budapest, where he was the featured speaker at a Eucharistic Congress. His message everywhere was the same: The world was in crisis. It had turned its back on the cross of Christ. Only by returning to the bosom of the church would it be saved. While Pius XI was apt to bang his fist on his table and raise his voice in dressing down those foreign envoys whose countries' actions had displeased him, Pacelli sought to win foreign diplomats over by stressing what they had in common. Insofar as he felt the need to register complaints, he did so in a way that suggested he was speaking more in sorrow than in anger. Relations between Pius XI and the Führer had begun promisingly enough when Hitler came to power in 1933. Indeed, the pope initially harbored some hopes for him, impressed by the strength of his anti-Communist views. Pacelli, who had spent twelve years as papal nuncio, or ambassador, in Germany and knew the country well, remarked at the time that while Hitler was clearly a remarkably talented agitator, it remained to be seen whether he was "a man of government." For his part, Germany's new leader was eager for the church to end its support of Germany's Catholic Center Party, the largest non-Marxist party standing in the way of his dictatorship. He made a series of conciliatory gestures, pledging to protect religious education and to guarantee a privileged place for the church in German society. It was amid these assurances that Germany's bishops fell in line with the new government head, and the Center Party was allowed to die. Their understanding was codified with the signing, in Pacelli's Vatican office only months after Hitler came to power, of a new concordat between Germany and the Holy See. The deal was a huge boost for Hitler's credibility not only domestically but also internationally, as the papal nuncio in Berlin himself pointed out a few years later in talking with Germany's secretary of state: "It does not seem possible to me that Signor Hitler has forgotten that, barely seven months after his arrival in power, when diffidence and hostility surrounded him both internally and externally, the Holy See extended its hand to him, contributing with its great spiritual authority to increasing faith in him and strengthening his prestige." Characteristically, Mussolini took credit for the agreement, having, he said, given Hitler his successful "recipe" for how to ingratiate himself to the Vatican. Hitler had long viewed the Duce as his role model. At a Munich rally held only days after Mussolini became Italy's prime minister in 1922, Hitler, then still one of many extremist claimants for attention in the German political firmament, was introduced as "Germany's Mussolini." "It marked," observed Hitler's British biographer, Ian Kershaw, "the symbolic moment when Hitler's followers invented the Führer cult." Over the next years, as Hitler plotted his rise to power, he kept a bust of Mussolini in his office. "Men like Mussolini are only born once every thousand years," he remarked after meeting the Duce for the first time in 1934. At the pope's urging, Mussolini took advantage of that meeting in Venice to offer Hitler his advice: it was best to keep the church happy. Following his meeting with Hitler, Mussolini wrote to Pius XI, reporting what he had told the Führer. He decided it best not to mention, he confided to his ambassador to the Holy See, "all the idiotic things that Hitler said about Jesus Christ being of the Jewish race, etc." What was important was that by the end of their conversation, Hitler made clear he did not want a religious war. It would be the first of many times the pope and Cardinal Pacelli would call on the Duce to speak with Hitler on their behalf. Pius XI's hopes for the German dictator did not last long. The Nazis soon began replacing Catholic parochial schools with state schools, abolishing Catholic youth groups, and limiting church activities to the purely sacramental. "The pope," a Vatican police informant in late 1934 reported, "has a strong personal antipathy toward Hitler. If it were not for Pacelli who is trying to bring more balance to the situation, the Secretariat of State would be even less tolerant of him." Pacelli too would lose patience with Hitler when, in 1935, he launched show trials of large numbers of Roman Catholic clergy, charged with a variety of sexual and financial crimes. The German bishops urged the pope to act, suggesting he issue an encyclical to protest Hitler's failure to abide by the terms of the concordat. Although Cardinal Pacelli, worried about antagonizing the Führer, advised against such a public protest, Pius XI went ahead. On March 21, 1937, Palm Sunday, bishops and priests throughout the Reich read the encyclical, Mit brennender Sorge ("With deep anxiety"), to their congregations, a shocking development in a country where any criticism of the Nazi regime risked violent reprisal. Predictably, Hitler was furious not only because of the pope's attack but by his ability to have the text secretly distributed and then read in churches throughout the Reich. Hitler's occupation of Austria in March 1938 and its subsequent annexation into the Third Reich had been an embarrassment for Mussolini, for he had considered Austria as something of an Italian protectorate, a buffer between Italy and the powerful German state. Making matters worse, the Führer had informed him of the invasion only a few hours in advance. The next day Hitler triumphally entered Vienna to the ringing of the city's church bells, a celebratory touch ordered by the city's archbishop. With millions more Catholics now under Hitler's rule, the pope and his secretary of state looked all the more urgently to Mussolini for help. Five days after Hitler's entry into Vienna, Cardinal Pacelli wrote Mussolini, thanking him "for Your moderating action with Signor Hitler, Chancellor of the German Reich, and for Your intervention against the continuation of the policy of religious persecution in Germany." Hitler's regard for Mussolini, already considerable, had grown further when, shortly after the Führer's spring 1938 visit to Italy, the Duce announced his new "racial" policy. Mussolini soon rolled out the first of Italy's anti-Jewish racial laws, closely resembling those Hitler had put into effect in Germany three years earlier. "After Italy's new policy regarding the Jewish problem," Hitler remarked, "the spirit of the Axis is complete." Excerpted from The Pope at War: The Secret History of Pius XII, Mussolini, and Hitler by David I. Kertzer All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.