ROME, MAR 14 (ZENIT.org).- Following the Pope's Universal Prayer for
Forgiveness (March 12), the media has given space to the opinion of
persons who criticize the Church's role during the Holocaust of the
Jews, carried out during the Second World War. Specifically, critics
point to Pius XII, and his alleged silence on the tragedy. However,
every day new proofs appear of the impressive action organized by this
Pope to rescue the greatest number of Jews persecuted by the Third
Reich.
In this regard, one of the latest historical testimonies is that of
Russian historian Evghenija Tokareva. In a book entitled "Fascism, the
Church, and the Catholic Movement in Italy: 1922-1943," published by the
Institute of World History of the Russian Academy for Sciences, the
author states that Pius XII's attitude toward Nazism "was dictated by
prudence" and assures that "the Vatican was not subject to an
anti-Jewish policy."
This is the first Russian monograph dedicated to the topic. The author
is a young historian who is already famous for other studies,
outstanding among which is a recent essay on Christian Churches and
Totalitarianism, which appeared in a volume including several
collaborators and entitled, "Totalitarianism in 20th Century Europe,"
also published by the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Tokareva, who is very familiar with the tragic experience of the Russian
Orthodox Church, which was subjected to another type of totalitarianism,
analyzes the actions of the Catholic Church in Italy during the fascist
era with a critical spirit and extensive documentation. He pays special
attention to the "Catholic subculture" and the role it played in the
fall of that dictatorship.
In his conclusion, Tokareva writes: "It must be acknowledged that
fascism did not succeed in subjecting the Church, nor was it able to
integrate it in its political system." This is due to the establishment,
independence and strength of the Church and its organizations and to the
limitations "at the juridical and ideological levels that the
totalitarianism of the fascist State was experiencing."
Tokareva thoroughly analyzes the Church's opposition to anti-Semitism,
and reveals that fascism attempted to sow confusion by stating that its
origins were in Christianity itself. In regard to Pius XII's attitude,
who chose to stimulate effective aid to the Jews rather than make verbal
pronouncements, Tokareva believes that it was a prudent decision,
because by so doing he avoided vengeance that could have affected
Catholics and the Jews themselves, which is exactly what happened in the
Netherlands. When the Dutch Bishops criticized the Nazis, the
persecution extended to include Jewish converts. Edith Stein was
martyred as a direct result of that decision.
The Russian historian refers to the Pope's prudence not only as
characterizing his relations with Nazism, but also with the Soviet
Union, another regime responsible for horrific massacres. When Goebbels
silenced Vatican Radio transmissions in 1941, he said they were "more
dangerous for us than those of the communists themselves," Tokareva
added, to emphasize her thesis.
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