, in audience with Pope Pius XII, following the 1944 Liberation of Rome During World War II Pius saw his primary obligation as being to ensure the continuation of the "
Church visible" and its divine mission. Pius XII lobbied world leaders to prevent the outbreak of World War II and then expressed his dismay that war had come in his October 1939
Summi Pontificatus encyclical. He followed a strict public policy of Vatican neutrality for the duration of the conflict mirroring that of
Pope Benedict XV. In 1939, Pius XII turned the Vatican into a centre of aid which he organized from various parts of the world. At the request of the Pope, an information office for prisoners of war and refugees operated in the Vatican under
Giovanni Battista Montini, which in the years of its existence from 1939 until 1947 received almost 10 million (9,891,497) information requests and produced more than 11 million (11,293,511) answers about missing persons. McGoldrick (2012) concludes that during the war: Pius XII had genuine affection for Germany, though not the criminal element into whose hands it had fallen; he feared Bolshevism, an ideology dedicated to the annihilation of the church of which he was head, but his sympathies lay with the Allies and the democracies, especially the United States, into whose war economy he had transferred and invested the Vatican's considerable assets.
Outbreak of war Summi Pontificatus Summi Pontificatus was the first papal encyclical issued by Pope Pius XII, in October 1939 and established some of the themes of his pontificate. During the drafting of the letter, the Second World War commenced with the German/Soviet
invasion of Poland—the "dread tempest of war is already raging despite all Our efforts to avert it". The papal letter denounced antisemitism, war, totalitarianism, the attack on Catholic Poland and the Nazi persecution of the church. Pope Pius XII reiterated church teaching on the "principle of equality"—with specific reference to Jews: "there is neither Gentile nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision". The forgetting of solidarity "imposed by our common origin and by the equality of rational nature in all men" was called "pernicious error". Catholics everywhere were called upon to offer "compassion and help" to the victims of the war. The Pope declared determination to work to hasten the return of peace and trust in prayers for justice, love and mercy, to prevail against the scourge of war. The letter also decried the deaths of noncombatants. Pius wrote of "Christians unfortunately more in name than in fact" having shown "cowardice" in the face of persecution by these creeds, and endorsed resistance: and a time requiring "charity" for victims who had a "right" to compassion. Against the invasion of Poland and killing of civilians he wrote:
Invasion of Poland In
Summi Pontificatus, Pius expressed dismay at the killing of non-combatants in the Nazi/Soviet
invasion of Poland and expressed hope for the "resurrection" of that country. The Nazis and Soviets commenced a
persecution of the Catholic Church in Poland. In April 1940, the Vatican advised the U.S. government that its efforts to provide humanitarian aid had been blocked by the Germans and that the Holy See had been forced to seek indirect channels through which to direct its aid.
Michael Phayer, a critic of Pius XII, assesses his policy as having been to "refuse to censure" the "German" invasion and annexation of Poland. This, Phayer wrote, was regarded as a "betrayal" by many Polish Catholics and clergy, who saw his appointment of
Hilarius Breitinger as the apostolic administrator for the
Wartheland in May 1942, an "implicit recognition" of the breakup of Poland; the opinions of the
Volksdeutsche, mostly German Catholic minorities living in occupied Poland, were more mixed. Phayer argues that Pius XII—both before and during his papacy – consistently "deferred to Germany at the expense of Poland", and saw Germany—not Poland—as critical to "rebuilding a large Catholic presence in Central Europe". In May 1942,
Kazimierz Papée, Polish ambassador to the Vatican, complained that Pius had failed to condemn the recent wave of atrocities in Poland; when Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione replied that the Vatican could not document individual atrocities, Papée declared, "when something becomes notorious, proof is not required". Although Pius XII received frequent reports about atrocities committed by or against Catholics, his knowledge was incomplete; for example, he wept after the war on learning that Cardinal
August Hlond had banned German liturgical services in Poland. There was a well-known case of Jewish rabbis who, seeking support against the Nazi persecution of Polish Jews in the
General Government (Nazi-occupied Polish zone), complained to the representatives of the Catholic Church. The church's attempted intervention caused the Nazis to retaliate by arresting rabbis and deporting them to a death camp. Subsequently, the
Catholic Church in Poland abandoned direct intervention, instead focusing on organizing underground aid, with huge international support orchestrated by Pope Pius XII and his Holy See. The Pope was informed about
Nazi atrocities committed in Poland by both officials of the Polish Church and the
Polish Underground. Those intelligence materials were used by Pius XII on 11 March 1940 during a formal audience with Minister of Foreign Affairs
Joachim von Ribbentrop when the Pope was "listing the date, place, and precise details of each crime" as described by
Joseph L. Lichten after others.
Early actions to end conflict With Poland overrun, but France and the
Low Countries yet to be attacked, Pius continued to hope for a negotiated peace to prevent the spread of the conflict. The similarly minded US President
Franklin D. Roosevelt re-established
American diplomatic relations with the Vatican after a 70-year hiatus and dispatched
Myron C. Taylor as his personal representative. Pius warmly welcomed Roosevelt's envoy and peace initiative, calling it "an exemplary act of fraternal and hearty solidarity... in defence against the chilling breath of aggressive and deadly godless anti-Christian tendencies". American correspondence spoke of "parallel endeavours for peace and the alleviation of suffering". Despite the early collapse of peace hopes, the Taylor mission continued at the Vatican. In the spring of 1940, a group of German generals seeking to overthrow Hitler and make peace with the British approached Pope Pius XII, who acted as an interlocutor between the British and the abortive plot. According to Toland, a lawyer from Munich named
Joseph Muller made a clandestine trip to Rome in October 1939, met with Pius XII and found him willing to act as intermediary. The Vatican agreed to send a letter outlining the bases for peace with England and the participation of the Pope was used to try to persuade the senior German generals
Franz Halder and
Walther von Brauchitsch to act against Hitler. Pius warned the Allies of the planned German invasion of the Low Countries in 1940. In Rome in 1942, U.S. envoy Myron C. Taylor, thanked the Holy See for the "forthright and heroic expressions of indignation made by Pope Pius XII when Germany invaded the Low countries". After Germany invaded the
Low Countries during 1940, Pius XII sent expressions of sympathy to Queen
Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, King
Leopold III of Belgium, and
Charlotte, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg. When Mussolini learned of the warnings and the telegrams of sympathy, he took them as a personal affront and had his ambassador to the Vatican file an official protest, charging that Pius XII had taken sides against Italy's ally Germany. Mussolini's foreign minister
Galeazzo Ciano claimed that Pius XII was "ready to let himself be deported to a concentration camp, rather than do anything against his conscience". When, in 1940, the Nazi Foreign Minister von Ribbentrop led the only senior Nazi delegation permitted an audience with Pius XII and he asked why the Pope had sided with the Allies, Pius replied with a list of recent Nazi atrocities and religious persecutions committed against Christians and Jews, in Germany, and in Poland, leading
The New York Times to headline its report "Jews Rights Defended" and write of "burning words he spoke to Herr Ribbentrop about religious persecution". During the meeting, von Ribbentrop suggested an overall settlement between the Vatican and the Reich government in exchange for Pius XII instructing the German bishops to refrain from political criticism of the German government, but no agreement was reached. were critical to the financing of the papacy during World War II. At a special mass at St. Peter’s for the victims of the war, held in November 1940, soon after the commencement of the
London Blitz bombing by the
Luftwaffe, Pius preached in his homily: "may the whirlwinds, that in the light of day or the dark of night, scatter terror, fire, destruction, and slaughter on helpless folk cease. May justice and charity on one side and on the other be in perfect balance, so that all injustice be repaired, the reign of right restored". Later he appealed to the Allies to spare Rome from aerial bombing, and visited wounded victims of the
Allied bombing of 19 July 1943.
Widening conflict Pius attempted, unsuccessfully, to dissuade the Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini from joining Hitler in the war. In April 1941, Pius XII granted a private audience to
Ante Pavelić, the leader of the
newly proclaimed Croatian state (rather than the diplomatic audience Pavelić had wanted). Pius was criticised for his reception of Pavelić: an unattributed British
Foreign Office memo on the subject described Pius as "the greatest moral coward of our age". The Vatican did not officially recognise Pavelić's regime. While Pius XII did not publicly condemn the expulsions and forced conversions to Catholicism perpetrated on Serbs by Pavelić, the Holy See did expressly repudiate the forced conversions in a memorandum dated 25 January 1942, from the Vatican Secretariat of State to the Yugoslavian Legation. The Pope was well informed of
Catholic clergy involvement with the Ustaše regime, even possessing a list of clergy members who had "joined in the slaughter", but decided against condemning the regime or taking action against the clergy involved, fearing that it would lead to schism in the Croatian church or undermine the formation of a future Croatian state. Pius XII would elevate
Aloysius Stepinac—a Croatian archbishop convicted of collaborating with the
Ustaše by the newly established
Yugoslav Communist regime—to the cardinalate in 1953. Phayer agrees that Stepinac's was a "show trial", but states "the charge that he [Pius XII] supported the Ustaša regime was, of course, true, as everyone knew", and that "if Stepinac had responded to the charges against him, his defense would have inevitably unraveled, exposing the Vatican's support of the
genocidal Pavelić". Throughout 1942, the
Yugoslav government in exile sent letters of protest to Pius XII asking him to use all possible means to stop the massacres against the
Serbs in the Croat state, however Pius XII did nothing. In 1941, Pius XII interpreted
Divini Redemptoris, an
encyclical of Pope Pius XI, which forbade Catholics to help Communists, as not applying to military assistance to the
Soviet Union. This interpretation assuaged American Catholics who had previously opposed
Lend-Lease arrangements with the Soviet Union. In March 1942, Pius XII established diplomatic relations with the
Empire of Japan and received ambassador
Ken Harada, who remained in that position until the end of the war. In June 1942, diplomatic relations were established with the
Nationalist government of China. This step was envisaged earlier, but delayed due to Japanese pressure to establish relations with the pro-Japanese
Wang Jingwei regime. The first
Chinese Minister to the Vatican, Hsieh Shou-kang, was only able to arrive at the Vatican in January 1943, due to difficulties of travel resulting from the war. He remained in that position until late 1946. The pope employed the new technology of radio and a series of Christmas messages to preach against selfish nationalism and the evils of modern warfare and offer sympathy to the victims of the war. According to Rittner, the speech remains a "lightning rod" in debates about Pius XII. The Nazis themselves responded to the speech by stating that it was "one long attack on everything we stand for. ... He is clearly speaking on behalf of the Jews. ... He is virtually accusing the German people of injustice toward the Jews, and makes himself the mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals."
The New York Times wrote that "The voice of Pius XII is a lonely voice in the silence and darkness enveloping Europe this Christmas. ... In calling for a 'real new order' based on 'liberty, justice and love', ... the Pope put himself squarely against Hitlerism." Historian Michael Phayer claims, however, that "it is still not clear
whose genocide or
which genocide he was referring to". Speaking on the 50th anniversary of Pius's death in 2008, the German Pope
Benedict XVI recalled that the Pope's voice had been "broken by emotion" as he "deplored the situation" with a "clear reference to the deportation and extermination of the Jews". Several authors have
alleged a plot to kidnap Pius XII by the Nazis during their
occupation of Rome in 1943 (Vatican City itself was not occupied); the British historian
Owen Chadwick and the Jesuit
ADSS editor
Robert A. Graham each concluded such claims were an intentional creation of the British
Political Warfare Executive. However, in 2007, subsequently to those accounts,
Dan Kurzman published a work in which he establishes that the plot was a fact. In 1944, Pius XII issued a Christmas message in which he warned against rule by the masses and against secular conceptions of liberty and equality.
Final stages As the war was approaching its end in 1945, Pius advocated a lenient policy by the
Allied leaders in an effort to prevent what he perceived to be the mistakes made at the end of World War I. On 23 August 1944, he met the
British prime minister,
Winston Churchill, who was visiting Rome. At their meeting, the Pope acknowledged the justice of punishing war criminals, but expressed a hope that the people of Italy would not be punished, preferring that they should be made "full allies" in the remaining war effort.
Holocaust , Pius XII's nuncio to Germany throughout World War II, with Hitler and
Joachim von Ribbentrop . Nazi persecution of Catholics was at its
most severe in
occupied Poland. During the Second World War, after Nazi Germany commenced its mass-murder of Jews in occupied Soviet territory, Pius XII employed diplomacy to aid victims of the Holocaust and directed the church to provide discreet aid to Jews. Upon his death in 1958, among many Jewish tributes, the Chief Rabbi of Rome
Elio Toaff, said: "Jews will always remember what the Catholic Church did for them by order of the Pope during the Second World War. When the war was raging, Pius spoke out very often to condemn the false race theory." An alternative view criticizes Pius XII, emphasizing a lack of public statements denouncing Nazi atrocities. The Holy See was among the earliest sovereigns to learn about Nazi atrocities, but Pius XII remained reluctant to publicly speak against Nazi Germany despite continued to receive requests for statements from bishops in the Nazi occupied countries (particularly Poland). In his 1939
Summi Pontificatus first papal encyclical, Pius reiterated Catholic teaching against racial persecution and antisemitism and affirmed the ethical principles of the "
Revelation on Sinai". At Christmas 1942, once evidence of the mass-murder of Jews had emerged, Pius XII
voiced concern at the murder of "hundreds of thousands" of "faultless" people because of their "nationality or race" and intervened to attempt to block Nazi deportations of Jews in various countries. Diplomats from the Allied countries viewed the message as falling short of the direct condemnation of the Nazi extermination of Jews, which they had sought. Hitler biographer John Toland, while scathing of Pius's cautious public comments in relation to the mistreatment of Jews, concluded that the Allies' own record of action against the Holocaust was "shameful", while "The Church, under the Pope's guidance, had already saved the lives of more Jews than all other churches, religious institutions and rescue organizations combined". In 1939, the Pope employed a Jewish cartographer, Roberto Almagia, to work on old maps in the
Vatican Library. Almagia had been at the
Sapienza University of Rome since 1915 but was dismissed after
Benito Mussolini's antisemitic legislation of 1938. The pope's appointment of two Jews to the
Pontifical Academy of Sciences as well as the hiring of Almagia were reported by
The New York Times in the editions of 11 November 1939 and 10 January 1940. Pius later engineered an agreement—formally approved on 23 June 1939—with the
President of Brazil Getúlio Vargas to issue 3,000
visas to "non-
Aryan Catholics". However, over the next 18 months, Brazil's Conselho de Imigração e Colonização (CIC) continued to tighten the restrictions on their issuance, including requiring a
baptismal certificate dated before 1933, a substantial monetary transfer to the
Banco do Brasil, and approval by the Brazilian Propaganda Office in Berlin. The programme was cancelled 14 months later, after fewer than 1,000 visas had been issued, amid suspicions of "improper conduct" (i.e., continuing to practice Judaism) among those who had received visas. In April 1939, after the submission of
Charles Maurras and the intervention of the Carmel of
Lisieux, Pius XII ended his predecessor's ban on
Action Française, a virulently
antisemitic organization. Following the German/Soviet invasion of Poland, the Pope's first encyclical,
Summi Pontificatus reiterated Catholic teaching against racial persecution and rejected antisemitism, quoting scripture singling out the "principle of equality"—with specific reference to Jews: "there is neither Gentile nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision" and direct affirmation of the Jewish
Revelation on Sinai. The forgetting of solidarity "imposed by our common origin and by the equality of rational nature in all men" was called "pernicious error". The letter also decried the deaths of noncombatants.
Cardinal Secretary of State Luigi Maglione received a request from
Chief Rabbi of
Palestine Isaac Herzog in the spring of 1940 to intercede on behalf of
Lithuanian Jews about to be deported to Germany. In 1941, Cardinal
Theodor Innitzer of
Vienna informed Pius of
Jewish deportations in Vienna. Later that year, when asked by the
Vichy regime Head of State
Philippe Pétain if the Vatican objected to antisemitic laws, Pius responded that the church condemned antisemitism, but would not comment on specific rules.
Valerio Valeri, the
nuncio to France, was "embarrassed" when he learned of this publicly from Pétain and personally checked the information with Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione who confirmed the Vatican's position. In June 1942, Pius XII personally protested against the mass deportations of Jews from France, ordering the papal nuncio to protest to Pétain against "the inhuman arrests and deportations of Jews". In September 1941, Pius XII objected to a
Slovak Jewish Code, which, unlike the earlier Vichy codes, prohibited intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews. reiterating the neutrality policy that Pius had invoked as early as September 1940. On 18 September 1942, Pius XII received a letter from Monsignor Montini (future
Pope Paul VI), saying "the massacres of the Jews reach frightening proportions and forms". Myron C. Taylor passed a U.S. Government memorandum to Pius on 26 September 1942, outlining intelligence received from the
Jewish Agency for Palestine, which said that Jews from across the
Nazi Empire were being systematically "butchered". Taylor asked if the Vatican might have any information that might "tend to confirm the reports", and, if so, what the Pope might be able to do to influence public opinion against the "barbarities". Cardinal Maglione handed Harold Tittmann a response to the letter on 10 October. The note thanked Washington for passing on the intelligence, and confirmed that reports of severe measures against the Jews had reached the Vatican from other sources, though it had not been possible to "verify their accuracy". Nevertheless, Maglione stated, "every opportunity is being taken by the Holy See, however, to mitigate the suffering of these unfortunate people". According to
David Kertzer's
The Pope at War, Monsignor
Domenico Tardini "told the British envoy to the Vatican in mid-December [1942] that the Pope couldn't speak out about Nazi atrocities because the Vatican hadn't been able to verify the information". In December 1942, when Tittmann asked Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione if Pius would issue a proclamation similar to the Allied declaration "German Policy of Extermination of the Jewish Race", Maglione replied that the Vatican was "unable to denounce publicly particular atrocities". Pius XII directly explained to Tittman that he could not name the Nazis without at the same time mentioning the Bolsheviks. On 14 December 1942, the German Jesuit and
German resistance activist
Lothar König wrote to Reverend
Robert Leiber, the Pope's private secretary and a liaison to the Resistance, to inform him that his sources had confirmed approximately 6,000 Polish and Jewish people were being killed every day in "
SS-
furnaces" located in an area of what was then
German-occupied Poland and is now part of western Ukraine. It also referenced the Nazi death camps at
Auschwitz and
Dachau. Following the Nazi/Soviet invasion of Poland, Pius XII's
Summi Pontificatus called for the sympathy of the whole world towards Poland, where "the blood of countless human beings, even noncombatants" was being spilled. In late 1942, Pius XII advised German and Hungarian bishops to speak out against the massacres on the
Eastern Front. In his 1942 Christmas Eve message, he expressed concern for "those hundreds of thousands, who ... sometimes only by reason of their nationality or race, are marked down for death or progressive extinction. On 7 April 1943, Msgr. Tardini, one of Pius XII's closest advisors, advised Pius XII that it would be politically advantageous after the war to take steps to help Slovak Jews. In January 1943, Pius XII declined to denounce publicly the Nazi discrimination against the Jews, following requests to do so from
Władysław Raczkiewicz, president of the
Polish government-in-exile, and Bishop
Konrad von Preysing of Berlin. According to Toland, in June 1943, Pius XII addressed the issue of mistreatment of Jews at a conference of the
Sacred College of Cardinals and said: "Every word We address to the competent authority on this subject, and all Our public utterances have to be carefully weighed and measured by Us in the interests of the victims themselves, lest, contrary to Our intentions, We make their situation worse and harder to bear". The Vatican offered to loan 15 kilos, but the offer proved unnecessary when the Jews received an extension. Soon afterward, when deportations from Italy were imminent, 477 Jews were hidden in the Vatican itself and another 4,238 were protected in Roman monasteries and convents. Eighty percent of Roman Jews were saved from deportation. Phayer argues that the German diplomats in Rome were the "initiators of the effort to save the city's Jews", but holds that Pius XII "cooperated in this attempt at rescue", while agreeing with Zuccotti that the Pope "did not give orders" for any Catholic institution to hide Jews. On 30 April 1943, Pius XII wrote to Bishop
Konrad von Preysing of Berlin to say: "We give to the pastors who are working on the local level the duty of determining if and to what degree the danger of reprisals and of various forms of oppression occasioned by episcopal declarations ...
ad maiora mala vitanda (to avoid worse) ... seem to advise caution. Here lies one of the reasons, why We impose self-restraint on Ourselves in our speeches; the experience, that we made in 1942 with papal addresses, which We authorized to be forwarded to the Believers, justifies our opinion, as far as We see. ... The Holy See has done whatever was in its power, with charitable, financial and moral assistance. To say nothing of the substantial sums which we spent in American money for the fares of immigrants." On 28 October 1943,
Ernst von Weizsäcker, the German Ambassador to the Vatican, telegraphed Berlin that "the Pope has not yet let himself be persuaded to make an official condemnation of the deportation of the Roman Jews. ... Since it is currently thought that the Germans will take no further steps against the Jews in Rome, the question of our relations with the Vatican may be considered closed." In March 1944, through the papal
nuncio in Budapest,
Angelo Rotta, the Pope urged the
Hungarian government to moderate its treatment of the Jews. The Pope ordered Rotta and other papal legates to hide and shelter Jews. After
George Mantello, Jewish First Secretary of El Salvador in Switzerland, received the
Auschwitz Protocol with much delay around June 22, 1944 he immediately publicized its summary. From about June 24, 1944 in Switzerland that led to large-scale grassroots protests, Sunday masses and about 400 articles in the papers about the barbarism against Europe's Jews. These unprecedented events created so much "noise" that it attracted international attention to the large-scale daily deportation of Hungary's Jews to Auschwitz since May 1944. Protests by the King of Sweden, the International Red Cross, the United States, Britain and the Vatican forced Hungary's Regent
Miklos Horthy to order cessation of most deportations of Jews from Hungary to Auschwitz on July 6, 1944 and termination of transports three days later. That saved many of the Jews of Hungary. In 1944, Pius appealed to 13 Latin American governments to accept "emergency passports", although it also took the intervention of the
United States Department of State for those countries to honor the documents. The
Kaltenbrunner Report to Hitler, dated 29 November 1944, against the backdrop of the
20 July 1944 Plot to assassinate Hitler, states that the Pope was somehow a conspirator, specifically naming Eugenio Pacelli (Pope Pius XII), as being a party in the attempt.
Jewish orphans controversy In 2005,
Corriere della Sera published a document dated 20 November 1946 on the subject of Jewish children baptized in war-time France. The document ordered that baptized children, if orphaned, should be kept in Catholic custody and stated that the decision "has been approved by the Holy Father". Nuncio Angelo Roncalli (who became
Pope John XXIII, and was recognized by
Yad Vashem as
Righteous Among the Nations) ignored this directive.
Abe Foxman, the national director of the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL), who had himself been baptized as a child and had undergone a custody battle afterwards, called for an immediate freeze on Pius's beatification process until the relevant
Vatican Secret Archives and baptismal records were opened. Two Italian scholars, Matteo Luigi Napolitano and
Andrea Tornielli, confirmed that the memorandum was genuine, although the reporting by the
Corriere della Sera was misleading, as the document had originated in the French Catholic Church archives rather than the Vatican archives and strictly concerned itself with children without living blood relatives who were supposed to be handed over to Jewish organizations. Writings from released Vatican records revealed that Pius XII was personally but secretly involved in hiding the
Finaly children from their Jewish family in an ultimately failed attempt to keep them Catholic after their secret baptism done against the wishes of their family. The French Catholic Church received very bad press from the affair, and several nuns and monks were jailed for the kidnapping before the children were discovered and spirited away to Israel. Only recently was the Pope's personal involvement revealed. ==Post–World War II==