Luther and Hitler
Published on June 4, 2008 By Larry Kuperman In Religion

Some time ago I got into a discussion with a fellow blogger about Martin Luther, the founder of the Protestant Reformation and a notorious anti-Semite. I was amazed to find that anyone would defend Marin Luther, a man who urged his followers to kill without mercy, let alone that Luther would be regarded as a "good man." If Luther was so good, then he must have gone to Heaven, right? And if Luther gets in, why not his best known protege, Adolf Hitler?

In 1543, Luther wrote his infamous tract On the Jews and Their Lies, as vile a peice of hate speech as you will find. Previously, Luther had written That Jesus Christ was born a Jew, in which Luther advocated kindness toward the Jews, but only with the aim of converting them to Christianity: what he called Judenmission. However when he realized that the Jews were not going to convert, he turned on them. He advocated stripping the Jews of their property, burning their synagogues and holy books and in the end, killing them. Luther urged his followers to commit murder saying "We are at fault in not slaying them."

For 400 years, Christian preachers continued to echo Luther's words. It was this preaching of hatred that set the stage for the Holocaust and explains why Hitler's ideas won such easy acceptance in Germany and elsewhere. Nazis displayed Luther's tome at the Nuremberg rallies and held Kristallnacht on Luther's birthday in 1938. The Lutheran church would distance itself from its founder saying "It is imperative for the Lutheran Church, which knows itself to be indebted to the work and tradition of Martin Luther, to take seriously also his anti-Jewish utterances, to acknowledge their theological function, and to reflect on their consequences. It has to distance itself from every expression of anti-Judaism in Lutheran theology." But that was in 1998, more than 50 years AFTER the Holocaust.

Adolf Hitler was indebted to the writings of Martin Luther and felt that Luther was a great man.

Adolf Hitler was born on April 20th, 1889. He was the illegitimate child of Alois Hitler and Klara Pölzl. Klara was related to Alois, his half neice, and the couple needed to receive a special dispensation from the Vatican in order to marry. Finally, the dispensation was granted and Klara became Alois' third wife. But since young Adolf was born prior to the marriage, he was Adolf Schicklgruber (his mother's maiden name, they all married a LOT) until he was 39. Alois would not consent to him his bastard son his surname.

Hitler was raised in a religous household. He was baptized in the Roman Catholic church in Austria, attended school at a monastery and became an altar boy. Writing in Mein Kampf, he recalls how he wanted to become a priest. “I had excellent opportunity to intoxicate myself with the solemn splendor of the brilliant church festivals.  As was only natural, the abbot seemed to me, as the village priest had once seemed to my father, the highest and most desirable ideal.” Throughout  most of his life he maintained close ties to the church and in fact received support from the church.

Archbishop Cesare Orsenigo, the papal nuncio in Berlin, came to Hitler's birthday party in 1939, under instructions from Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli, who would become Pope Pius XII, and the celebration of Hitler's birhtday by the church became a tradition. Cardinal Bertram of Berlin was instructed to send “warmest congratulations to the Fuhrer in the name of the bishops and the dioceses in Germany with “fervent prayers which the Catholics of Germany are sending to heaven on their altars.” (Source: Hitler’s Pope: The Secret History of Pius XII, by John Cornwell) But there are well documented photos of meetings between Hitler and representatives of various churches well after the Holocaust began.

Hitler reciprocated. He would say “The National Socialist State professes its allegiance to positive Christianity.  It will be its honest endeavor to protect both the great Christian Confessions in their rights, to secure them from interference with their doctrines, and in their duties to constitute a harmony with the views and the exigencies of the State of today.” Hitler opposed abortion, was anti-homosexual and enforced religous teachings in German schools. He was widely regarded as a model Christian leader...except for that little genocide thing. But maybe that wasn't considered so bad.

There is Biblical support for genocide in the Bible. The first recorded genocide in chronicled in Samuel as follows:

"2 Thus says the Lord of hosts, ‘I have noted what Amalek did to Israel in opposing them on the way when they came up out of Egypt. 3 Now go and strike Amalek and devote to destruction all that they have. Do not spare them, but kill both man and woman, and infant, ox and sheep, camel and donkey." (1 Sam. 15:2-3). Saul the first king of the Israelites is deposed because he fails to follow orders.

Hitler had a lot of support in his war of extermination. Father Charles Coughlin was a radio preacher in the US, based out of Michigan. Millions of people tuned into his broadcasts. In a rally in the Bronx, New York in 1938, Coughlin said "When we get through with the Jews in America, they'll think the treatment they received in Germany was nothing." (By the way, my parents were living in the Bronx at that time, think how terrifying that must have been.) In all fairness, many Catholics opposed Coughlin, but he had the support of Detroit Bishop Michael Gallagher and there was a concern that if the church silenced Coughlin, he would lead a schism. The sense was that the lives of the Jews were not worth risking a drop in membership.

Until the end of World War II, anti-Semitism was tolerated by the Christian churches, if not  felt to be a Christian duty. So maybe Hitler and Luther are hanging out in Heaven with all the other religous haters.


Comments (Page 2)
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on Jun 16, 2008

Who are you to judge his heart?

Hitler's actions were unbiblically founded.

on Jun 16, 2008
The photo above is the Church's official representative conveying birthday greetings to Hitler, what was to become part of an annual event. The Church's opposition to Hitler was so secret that neither Hitler nor the rest of Europe knew about it! (Wow, that's some secret!)


The christian leanings of the Third Riech makes a lot of Christians uncomfortable... but the photographic evidence of it is overwhelming. Every member of the wehrmacht even wore this belt buckle Gott Mit Uns (God With Us).


The pope's very public encyclical, pastoral letters, and sermons tell where Catholic leanings were...

In 1937, Pope Pius XI issued his encyclical, Mit brennender Sorge, which made clear the fundamental irreconcilability of Catholicism and Nazism. It protested the closing and confiscation of Catholic schools, hospitals and seminaries, the seizure of property and goods belonging to the religious orders, the discrediting of religious by means of rigged trials, and the identifying of loyalty to Christianity with disloyalty to the fatherland. In pastoral letters and sermons, the German hierarchy forcefully opposed racism, totalitarianism, euthanasia laws, compulsory membership in Hitler’s youth organizations, and the desecration of churches.

Even Israeli Attorney General Hauser in his introduction to the Eichmann trial, stated, "that the Pope himself intervened personally in support of the Jews arrested in Rome."

There is testimony of countless contemporary witnesses that prove the attacks against the Pope and the Church of anti-Semitism are baseless.

Golda Meir the Israeli prime minister and Israeli rep to the UN spoke on the floor of the General Assembly, "During the ten years of Nazi terror, when our people went through the horrors of martyrdom, the Pope raised his voice to condemn the persecuters and commiserate with the victims."

If that's not enough proof, how about the historical documentation from the Nuremberg trials and other government records made public.

These groundless Catholic urban legends serve only contemporary society who hated Christ before they hated His Church. They bear no reflection to historical reality whatsoever.

on Jun 16, 2008

Ok lulapilgrim... but theres lots of apologies from Catholic Churches... including one from Pope John Paul.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=catholic+church+apologize+for+WWII&btnG=Search

on Jun 17, 2008
Anthony

I read some of your links and thought of Poland today. My husband just got back from Poland. We have a Baptist Pastor friend over there we support. The contol of the RCC is quite disturbing even today. They are not friendly to those outside the faith even now and have quite a bit of control politically and religiously all througout Poland. I can only imagine what it must have been like for the Jews 60 years ago. It must have been wicked for them. By looking at the numbers of those exterminated in Poland it's not that hard to imagine. Any churches outside of their own today in Poland are watched very carefully. These non Catholic churches do not enjoy the same rights or freedoms that the Catholics enjoy.



on Jun 17, 2008
Ok lulapilgrim... but theres lots of apologies from Catholic Churches... including one from Pope John Paul.




I know that a Vatican document was issued in 1998 on the Holocaust titled, "We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah" which was authored by the Commission for Relations with The Jews which was accompanied by a brief cover letter from Pope John Paul II, of happy memory.

The document addressed whether Christians gave every possible assistance to persecuted Jews and non-Jews alike, and the Commission confirmed that "many did, while others did not." The documents authors went on to praise those who did and apologize for those who didn't.

No categorical apology was made in the Pope's name by the Commission that I know of.

As a matter of fact, one news report that followed expressed this following sentiment:

"Against what America, England and the Jewish establishment could have done and didn't do and haven't admitted, the Vatican statement stands like a beacon of light...The leaders of AMerican Jewry did next to nothing to save the Jews of Europe."

Have you ever asked yourself that with all the apologies in vogue, why dwell only on the Jewish holocaust while almost totally ignoring the Christian holocaust committed under the Nazi and Communist regimes and in terms of actual numbers dwarfs (100 million dead) the Jewish one?



on Jun 17, 2008
....Poland. We have a Baptist Pastor friend over there we support. The contol of the RCC is quite disturbing even today.


What control? I don't know of any Church/State police.

Catholics are a majority, but didn't your Baptist friend know that going in?

They are not friendly to those outside the faith even now and have quite a bit of control politically and religiously all througout Poland.


Catholics comprised 75% of the population in 1930 and Catholic life was flourishing up until the German-Soviet Stalinism took over in 1939. Catholic life was paralyzed and all but destroyed. In 1956, even though Poland was freed from Stalinism, official life was still dominiated by the totalitarian atheistic Communism. From 1957-66, there was a battle for domination of the souls of the whole nation. Catholics conducted an intense nation-wide devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary that would ensure the Catholic future of Poland. From then, the CC in Poland has looked with full confidence in God. So considering that Catholics were held under the murderous atheistic Communism who can blame them for sticking together religiously and politically?

I can only imagine what it must have been like for the Jews 60 years ago. It must have been wicked for them. By looking at the numbers of those exterminated in Poland it's not that hard to imagine.


I think if you'll check history KFC, you'll find that the Jews made up 10% of the Polish population in 1930 before the Nazis invaded. They found refuge and congeniality in Catholic Poland calling it their "Jerusalem of the North".

Any churches outside of their own today in Poland are watched very carefully.


I understand that you feel aggrieved that Protestantism doesn't seem to have much success in Poland. The Poles, as I have just explained, are very devoted to Our Lady and as members of the true faith that dates back to 33AD, understand that Protestantism has no worship of God. True worship of God consists of priest, altar, and sacrifice. They know that Protestants rejected the ministerial priesthood and have no consecrated altars. They cannot have the New Law Sacrifice, which is Jesus Christ Himself offered to the Father under the appearances of Bread and Wine because only a properly ordained priest can produce this sacrifice through Transubstantiation, on the altar.

Is it possible to believe that Christ founded a Church to mislead the world, and then after 1500 years approved over 500 contradictory churches founded by men? Poles look out at the Protestants in Poland and see that they chose Luther over Christ for Christ said His Church would never teach error, and Luther said as do modern Protestants that have taken up after him and his doctrines, that it did teach error. If Protestantism is right, Christ is wrong; If Christ is right, then Protestantism and all its adherants are wrong.

You might be a true believer of Protestantism, but the Poles don't want to be bothered.





on Jun 18, 2008
What control? I don't know of any Church/State police.

Catholics are a majority, but didn't your Baptist friend know that going in?


He's Polish. He's lived there his whole life. There are many restrictions on him by the CC which they don't have to adhere to. He has to be very careful or they could shut him down.

In the school system, for instance he can't go in because it's all controlled by the CC. When our group of missionaries went over there they were only allowed to go into the schools because of their English. They love to listen to English and because of that an English speaking person can actually draw crowds.

I think if you'll check history KFC, you'll find that the Jews made up 10% of the Polish population in 1930 before the Nazis invaded. They found refuge and congeniality in Catholic Poland calling it their "Jerusalem of the North".


ok, so you say 10%. What is that in numbers? I've read that before the Nazi's came in there were 3 million Jews. After there were only hundreds left. 10% or not. That's alot of dead Jews.

The Poles, as I have just explained, are very devoted to Our Lady and as members of the true faith that dates back to 33AD, understand that Protestantism has no worship of God. True worship of God consists of priest, altar, and sacrifice. They know that Protestants rejected the ministerial priesthood and have no consecrated altars. They cannot have the New Law Sacrifice, which is Jesus Christ Himself offered to the Father under the appearances of Bread and Wine because only a properly ordained priest can produce this sacrifice through Transubstantiation, on the altar.


This is a bunch of religous balony. If they were so devoted then why are they so mean? They are hateful to the Protestants just like they were to the Jews before that. I know a Pastor's wife who was spit on by a Polish nun because she dared talk about Christ to her.

What was it Jesus said: "That the world may know you for your love?"

The CC church in Poland is nothing more than a modern pre Christian Rome. The only diff is they are no longer physically killing the opposition anymore.







on Jun 18, 2008
There are many restrictions on him by the CC


Like what?

In the school system, for instance he can't go in because it's all controlled by the CC.


Your Baptist friend can't go into Catholic schools to do what? If your answer is to proselytize Protestantism to Catholic children....forget that.

Being the overwhelming majority, it's understandable that the Polish have mostly Catholic schools. What's your beef with that?


It's the same here in the USA. Catholics control their own schools and Protestant doctrines aren't allowed. Much the same as Protestants who control their own schools...Catholic doctrines aren't allowed.

I think if you'll check history KFC, you'll find that the Jews made up 10% of the Polish population in 1930 before the Nazis invaded. They found refuge and congeniality in Catholic Poland calling it their "Jerusalem of the North".


ok, so you say 10%. What is that in numbers? I've read that before the Nazi's came in there were 3 million Jews. After there were only hundreds left. 10% or not. That's alot of dead Jews.


In 1930 just before the Nazi/Communist takeover, Poland's population consisted of 75% Catholic, 10% Jewish, and 3% Protestant. The Jews in 1939 were 3 million and as a result of the mass murders that was reduced to 40,000 at the end of WWII.

You are correct, that is a lot of dead Jews. May I remind you, it was Nazism and not Catholicism that killed them. Catholics and other Christians, by the millions, 100 million as a matter of fact, were slaughtered as well and suffered untold damage under the course of Nazi and Communist persecutions since WWI. While the Nazis went after the Jews because of their ethnicity, the Nazis and other totalitarian Communist systems went after Christians because their aim was not only to control or regulate the Church but to destroy all of Christianity.

Atheistic Communism is still alive and operating well in the world as is Islamo-fascism. They haven't achieved their aim and so the persecutions continue and will until the end of the world. But we have nothing to fear for Christ has overcome the world.

As long as you and others with your anti-Catholic sentiments and baseless propaganda want to continue bashing the Church and Catholicism, I'll be happy to defend them.





on Jun 18, 2008
The Poles, as I have just explained, are very devoted to Our Lady and as members of the true faith that dates back to 33AD, understand that Protestantism has no worship of God. True worship of God consists of priest, altar, and sacrifice. They know that Protestants rejected the ministerial priesthood and have no consecrated altars. They cannot have the New Law Sacrifice, which is Jesus Christ Himself offered to the Father under the appearances of Bread and Wine because only a properly ordained priest can produce this sacrifice through Transubstantiation, on the altar.


This is a bunch of religous balony.


Name, explain what's religious baloney about what I stated....give specifics, dear KFC, specifics.

on Jun 18, 2008

If they were so devoted then why are they so mean? They are hateful to the Protestants


So you say.


And if this be so, what can I say?...you know that we are all sinners and it is unkind to spit at someone else no matter who they are.


They are hateful to the Protestants just like they were to the Jews before that.


Please explain in detail, historic if possible, how the Polish Catholics were hateful to the Jews.

I;ve already explained that the Jews were welcomed to Poland and settled there and thought of Poland as being "the Jerusalem of the North".


on Jun 18, 2008
As long as you and others with your anti-Catholic sentiments and baseless propaganda want to continue bashing the Church and Catholicism, I'll be happy to defend them.


no Lula. It's not bashing anyone. It's talking about the facts. Tell you what. I'll contact my Polish friend Pastor Irek and get back to you. He's got alot to say and I can't remember all of the stuff. He also speaks broken English so I get only about half most of the time anyhow.

on Jun 19, 2008
ok, got my information. Here's a blurb from my personal email in response to a question of first hand experience. I got this from Ric who goes over twice a year and is going again in a couple of weeks. He said:

Hope this information helps you.

The people living around the death camps claim that they didn't know what was going on. Sounds strange when there was so much smoke and ash coming out of the crematoriums. Bob saw when he sas there how close the town is to Aushwitz.

Today the catholic church is tax free in Poland , but the protestant denominations are not.

I don't know of any catholic schools there, but in public schools, the priests come in once a week to talk to the students. Irek is not allowed to do that.

All of this persecution towards protestants is an underlying current in Poland, and people are told that anything but the catholic church is a cult, and people are discouraged from participating with them.

I saw this when I was working with the students at the art school. No one will admit to these things, but they are there.

In Tarnow , before WW2, there was a population of about 40,000 Jews, now there are 7. This did not come about from people leaving the city, they were all sent to the death camps.

Tarnow was the first city to send Jews by train to Auchwitz, and there is a monument to show the spot. Bob saw this when he was there. The gates from the Jewish cemetery in Tarnow are now in the holocaust museum in Washington DC.

These things are a touchy subject in Poland, and no one wants to talk about them.
I hope this is some help to you, but again, they deny these accusations, but even a blind man can see that they exist.
on Jun 19, 2008

lula - i think you (and others like you) need to take on board the fact that many people live their lives unsure of how the world was created, where we came from, who or what was responsible for us etc. These same people can still believe in theories such as evolution and the big bang.

Neither actually state the begining of the universe, or how life itself began. What they do do is sort of map out stages after these events, giving us the ability to see not where we came from, but how we got here.


After that, we are down to philiosphy, is there a god? Is life a simulation? Are there more than one universe? If there is a god, where did he come from?

So that to say the theory of evolution brought about the death of god is absurd, but i can see why you did it, you follow on to say that it inspired people to question morality itself and that we shouldn't do this because it will ultimatley lead to the likes of Adolf Hitler.

I think this sort of approach is an insult to the integrity of humanity, to say that we are little children that need our hands held by something superior, that our entire race is incapable of determining proper morality just because of the actions of a certain invidiuals.

I think the great irony is that if people of my opinion are right (and that is, that i believe the bible to be the word of men and not of god) then it is a perfect example of how we are able to pass on teachings of morality. In conjunction with this, nothing would scare me more than if your beliefs were right and that what is in the bible is truly the words and actions of a supreme being, that brings our entire race almost to the point of extinction save for a boat and puts his own son through the tortuture and abuse he suffered here on earth. Finally if i don't obey the morality layed out for me by this being,  i'll spend the rest of my existance in a firey pit being tortured and put through eternal agony.


Ah i fear i have once again strayed from the beaten path, forgive me. Interesting article Larry, but lula is mostly right on one thing, it was Evolution that justified to hitler his treatment of jews.

on Jun 19, 2008
Please explain in detail, historic if possible, how the Polish Catholics were hateful to the Jews.


They turned a blind eye. I don't even have to go back thru history. Let's look at what's going on now.

Your Baptist friend can't go into Catholic schools to do what? If your answer is to proselytize Protestantism to Catholic children....forget that.

Being the overwhelming majority, it's understandable that the Polish have mostly Catholic schools. What's your beef with that?


The beef is THEY ARE NOT CC SCHOOLS. THEY ARE PUBLIC SCHOOLS.

My husband was over there and talked to a Judge in Warsaw and a Police Chief in Tarnow. They told my husband there is INTENSE persecution of Protestants over there. They are NOT allowed to go to any Protestant church (and they are Protestants) or they will lose their jobs. So they attend house studies during the week instead.

The Catholic Chuches are tax EXEMPT in Poland. The Baptist churches ARE NOT.

The CC owns most of Tarnow and they lease out the buildings. McDonalds is new there...they lease it from the Catholic Church.

So what is this Lula? A business? That's what it sounds like. The CC is very corrupt in Poland. VERY. If so there, I'm sure elsewhere.

Maybe you need to go there. My friend Ric goes twice a year. I can hook you up. It might be good for you to really see what's going on. I don't think you would be pleased.



on Jun 20, 2008
Saint John Chrysostom Adversus Judaeos whicj incited a crowd to burn a synagogue the next day and which were called by theologist John Parkes "the most horrible and violent denunciations of Judaism to be found in the writings of a Christian theologian."


Do you know that Adversus Judaeos means "Orations against the Judaizers"?

Saint John Chrysostom denounced Judaizers, not Hebraic Jews.

What's this you're asserting---that Saint John Chrysostom sermon incited a crowd to burn a synagogue the next day? Could you be more specific? Sounds like hogwash to me!


Basically, nothing that you have said can be supported by other than Church sources. Repeating what you want to be true doesn't make it so,


KFC posts:
I also agree she is looking at what her church history is telling her.


Like I already said, Catholic Church history IS history. How about this from the good ol' Internet?

Furthermore, there were prominent opponents of antisemitism within the Catholic Church. Pope Gregory XVI, for example, spoke out against it in 1837. He rubbed out all the debts of the Jewish community and gave them medical aid during a cholera epidemic "when...[he saw] how poverty and high taxes plunged the [Jewish] community into bankruptcy" (Chadwick, Owen/A History of the Popes 1830-1914/Oxford University Press/2003/p.129).

Also, Pope Leo XIII defending the Jews in a newspaper interview and supported French Jewish officer Captain Alfred Dreyfus, who had been accused of treason. Leo XIII "publicly condemned the anti-Semitic campaign against him".

As the historian Owen Chadwick himself writes: "Protestants everywhere condemned the papacy for the Dreyfus Affair, though the papacy had nothing to do with the matter. So far as he expressed an opinion publicly, Leo XIII was on the side of Dreyfus. In March 1899 he was said to have compared Dreyfus to Jesus on Calvary" (Chadwick, Owen/A History of the Popes 1830-1914/Oxford University Press/2003/p.385).

Moreover, during the pontificate of Pope Pius X, many condemned anti-Semitism: "In the Catholic Church the leaders were against any such anti-Semitic attitudes towards the Jews. In Vienna one cardinal after another, from Rauscher onwards, tried to prevent race-hatred and especially anti-Semitism in the Church. As political anti-Semitism...grew in Vienna, the bishops issued a joint pastoral letter against anti-Semitism and racialism...

In 1895 the rector of the university of Vienna was a Catholic priest, Laurenz Mullner...In a debate on money for the medical school, an anti-Semite attacked the university as Jew-infested. Mullner took the speaker to pieces: 'Read Dante, and what he said about Averroes, a Semite; he was a great spirit. Read Thomas Aquinas, a noble mind and a saint. Even where they do not agree with Jewish scholars they speak in a very different spirit. Every year it is my duty to refute Spinoza. Though I refute him, yet I bow before that great spirit and noble mind.'" (Chadwick, Owen/A History of the Popes 1830-1914/Oxford University Press/2003/p.379,381)

WWI to the eve of the WWII

There were many other actions taken one behalf of the pontiffs to oppose anti-Semitism. In 1916, in the midst of the First World War the American Jews petitioned Pope Benedict XV on behalf of the Polish Jews. To this the pontiff responded in a statement denouncing anti-Semitism: "The Supreme Pontiff.... as Head of the Catholic Church, which, faithful to its divine doctrines and its most glorious traditions, considers all men as brothers and teaches them to love one another, he never ceases to indicate among individuals, as well as among peoples, the observance of the principles of the natural law, and to condemn everything that violates them. This law must be observed and respected in the case of the children of Israel, as well as of all others, because it would not be comformable to justice or to religion itself to derogate from it solely on account of divergence of religious confessions".

Pope Pius XI, who was pontiff prior to the outbreak of the Second World War was particularly opposed to anti-Semitism:

Sept. 6, 1938, he says to some Belgian pilgrims that anti-Semitism "is a hateful movement, a movement that we cannot, as Christians, take any part in...Anti-Semitism is inadmissible" (Chadwick, Ibid.).

In the 1939 issue of B'nai B'rith's National Jewish Monthly features him on the frontcover and writes, "Regardless of their personal beliefs, men and women everywhere who believe in democracy and the rights of man have hailed the firm and uncompromising stand of Pope Pius XI against Fascist brutality, paganism, and racial theories. In his annual Christmas message to the College of Cardinals, the great Pontiff vigorously denounced Fascism...The first international voice in the world to be raised in stern condemnation of the ghastly injustice perpetrated upon the Jewish people by brutal tyrannies was Pope Pius XI" (Chadwick, Ibid.).

"Also of note is Pius XI's support for British efforts to help Jewish and other refugees...the Holy See sent out requests to its representatives throughout the world to assist those fleeing oppression and racial persecution;see Cardinal Pacelli's circular telegrams of November 30, 1938, and January 10, 1939 in Actes et Documents 6,pp.48-50, and Pius XI's letter to the cardinal archbishops of Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Quebec, and Buenos Aires, pp. 50ff" (Pius War, p.119).


Jan. 1939, The Jewish National Monthly reports "the only bright spot in Italy has been the Vatican, where fine humanitarian statements by the Pope have been issuing regularly".
"When Mussolini's anti-Semitic decrees began depriving Jews of employment in Italy, Pius XI, on his own initiative, admitted Professor Vito Volterra, a famous Italian Jewish mathematician, into the Pontifical Academy of Science...(see 'Scholars at the Vatican,' Commonweal, December 4, 1942, pp.187-188).

When Lord Rothschild, a prominent British leader, organized a protest meeting in London against Kristallnacht...Eugenio Pacelli, Vatican secretary of state, acting on behalf of Pius XI, who was then ill, sent a statement of solidarity with the persecuted Jews; the statement was read publicly at the meeting" (Pius War,p.119).

When Pius XI passed away on February 10, 1939, the world praised him for his opposition to the Nazi and Fascism regimes, as well as for his opposition to anti-Semitism (Quotes below from: Ibid. p.120,121).
Feb. 12, 1939, Bernard Joseph wrote on behalf of the Executive Jewish Agency to the Latin patriarch of
Jerusalem: "'In Common with the whole of civilized humanity, the Jewish people mourns the loss of one of the greatest exponents of the cause of international peace and good will...More than once did we have occasion to be deeply grateful...for the deep concern which he expressed for the fate of the persecuted Jews of Central Europe. His noble efforts on their behalf will ensure for him for all time a warm place in the memories of the Jewish people wherever they live' (Pinchas Lapide, Three Popes and the Jews , p.116)"

Feb. 17, 1939, the Jewish historian Cecil Roth publishes the obituary "Pope Pius and the Jews: A Champion of Toleration" in the Jewish Chronicle of London, in which he "wrote movingly of his private audience with the aged pontiff, during which Pius XI assured Roth of the papacy's opposition to anti-Semitism. Roth hailed Pius XI as that 'courageous voice raised unfalteringly and unwearingly...protesting oppression, condemning racial madness...This was an aspect which he appreciated to the full, and earned his memory an undying claim to the gratitude fo the Jewish people'" (Pius War, p.120-121)

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